Finished Fantastic Beasts. Loved it. Can't wait to see more of this series.
I think the "big bad" of the story was sort of random and felt like it was just put in there for the sake of having something bad to overcome. I also feel like the story did nothing to tie it together with Grindewald directly.
It's easy to make comparisons between the first Harry Potter books/films and this first film in the Fantastic Beasts series, but things don't quite work as well when you're using the same formula outside the confines of a magical wizard school in which children's book logic allows you to hand wave a lot of stuff.
But still I love this film. It seems like this series is going to go into the nitty gritty of how you explain that there is a wizard world co-existing with the muggle world. The power dynamic, the philosophy of how to handle all that power, etc.
I was left sort of baffled by the end of the film by sheer scope of the wizard's power. The potential they demonstrated when rebuilding makes you wonder why things like war, famine, disease, etc. exist at all? Much like the religious paradox of why a kind and loving god would allow people to suffer across the globe, Fantastic Beasts makes one question what ever policy is in place that so separates humans and wizards. Which I take will be a major theme in the series.
For those that have watched the film, what do you think the plan is going forward?
This post has been edited by Apt: 22 April 2017 - 07:37 PM