ANIMALI FANTASTICI E DOVE TROVARLI: EDDIE REDMAYNE, COLIN FARRELL E SAMANTHA MORTON NELLO SPIN-OFF DI HARRY POTTER, PRIMO CAPITOLO DI UNA NUOVA TRILOGIA
Preview in English by Kim Newman ("Sight & Sound") - Dal 15 NOVEMBRE
(Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them; USA/REGNO UNITO/PALESTINA 2016; Avventura Fantasy; Produz.: Heyday Films e Warner Bros.; Distribuz.: Warner Bros. Pictures Italia)
Titolo in italiano: Animali fantastici e dove trovarli
Titolo in lingua originale:
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Anno di produzione:
2016
Anno di uscita:
2016
Regia: David Yates
Sceneggiatura:
J.K. Rowling
Soggetto: Basato su Gli animali fantastici: dove trovarli (Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them), il libro pubblicato da J. K. Rowling, autrice della saga di Harry Potter, nel 2001.
Kamil Lemieszewski (Jan Kowalski) Lucie Pohl (Segretaria) Jorge Leon Martinez (Passeggero della nave spagnola) Jenn Murray (Chastity) Joelle Koissi (Cittadina di New York) Sam Redford (Agente di dogana) Akin Gazi (Auror) Lasco Atkins (Pedone) Fanny Carbonnel (Mrs. Goldstein)
Musica: James Newton Howard
Costumi: Colleen Atwood
Scenografia: Stuart Craig e James Hambidge
Fotografia: Philippe Rousselot
Montaggio: Mark Day
Effetti Speciali: David Watkins (supervisore)
Makeup: Laura Viana da Silva e Polly Mossman
Casting: Candy Marlowe e Fiona Weir
Scheda film aggiornata al:
06 Novembre 2018
Sinossi:
IN BREVE:
Animali fantastici e dove trovarli è un’avventura tutta nuova che ci riporta nel fantastico mondo creato da J.K. Rowling. Il premio Oscar® Eddie Redmayne (La teoria del tutto) è l’interprete principale, nel ruolo del “magizoologo” di questo mondo fantastico, Newt Scamander, con la regia di David Yates, regista degli ultimi quattro film della saga campione d’incassi di Harry Potter.
Animali fantastici e dove trovarli inizia nella New York del 1926 con Newt Scamander che ha appena terminato un viaggio in giro per il mondo per cercare e documentare una straordinaria gamma di creature magiche. Arrivato a New York per una breve pausa, pensa che tutto stia andando per il verso giusto… se non fosse per un No-Maj (termine americano per Babbano) di nome Jacob, una valigetta lasciata nel posto sbagliato, e per la fuga di alcuni degli Animali Fantastici di Newt, che potrebbero causare molti problemi sia nel mondo magico che in quello babbano.
SHORT SYNOPSIS:
The adventures of writer Newt Scamander in New York's secret community of witches and wizards seventy years before Harry Potter reads his book in school.
Commento critico (a cura di Kim Newman, Sight & Sound)
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them review: a fiddly start for J.K. Rowling’s wizarding prequels
The Harry Potter author extends her Wizarding World to Prohibition-era New York with this ambitious if sometimes awkward offcut, the first of five planned movies based on her 2001 whimsical bestiary.
Having seen the seven-book/eight-film Harry Potter saga to its conclusion, J.K. Rowling and Warner Brothers were unable to resist returning to the well and here kick off a prequel series. Rowling’s Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (whose proceeds mostly go to charity) is not a novel but a whimsical bestiary – purporting to be one of Harry’s annotated Hogwarts textbooks. This film script (Rowling’s first) is essentially a screen original, furthering the creatrix’s expansion into other media (which also includes co-authoring a one-generation-on stage sequel, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child).
There are a few tiny continuity elements – tousle-haired Newt has
been expelled from Hogwarts but was evidently an earlier favourite pupil of headmaster Albus Dumbledore, and his new romance is complicated by a prior entanglement with an ancestor of supporting Potter villain Bellatrix Lestrange – but this not only goes back in time to explore more of the history of Rowling’s universe but relocates it to a surprisingly grey, Prohibition-era New York City.
Here, the faintly infuriating Jim Dale-ish English clod-hero runs up against a ripe selection of Yank stereotypes: a cheery Oliver Hardy-shaped baker (Dan Fogler), carried along for the wild ride after his case of doughnut samples becomes mixed up with Newt’s portable Tardis of monsters; a cigar-chomping speakeasy-proprietor gnome (Ron Perlman – his presence a reminder that Guillermo del Toro marked out some of this territory in 2008 in Hellboy II: The Golden Army) who packs his wand in a shoulder holster; a dizzy telepathic flapper (Alison Sudohl)
whose squeaky voice evokes 1920s singer Helen Kane, inspiration for the cartoon character Betty Boop; a Citizen Kane-like press baron (Jon Voight) with political connections, barely present in this plot but liable to be a grudge-holding major antagonist in sequels; an anti-magic campaigner/abuser of orphans (Samantha Morton) who combines the puritanical witch-hunting zeal of Cotton Mather with the saloon-smashing no-fun ethos that led to Prohibition; and a nattily dressed FBI type (Colin Farrell) with a severe short-back-and-sides who – in a faint echo of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone – is only a placeholder for a major villain to come (Johnny Depp, swivel-eyed like a blond Peter Lorre).
With dependable David Yates – who handled the wind-up of the Potter series – back on board, and the now-mandatory showstopping effects (a touch less magical, it has to be said, than the more visionary sorcery-in-New-York of Doctor Strange), this seems to
aim for acceptable rather than outstanding. Its actual plot, which focuses on Credence (an agonised Ezra Miller, looking like Walerian Borowczyk’s Mr Hyde) and his djinn-like tortured spirit, takes a backseat to non sequitur japes with well-realised beasts who dash about doing not terribly uproarious slapstick (a duck-billed kleptomaniac marsupial keeps making Newt look like a master crook, a glowing-snouted rhino mutant wants to mate and isn’t too choosy what species it couples with).
It remains tricky to spin a film – let alone a series – out of a non-narrative book, and Rowling and Yates fall back on soap-like tricks (a romance paused to blossom, an as yet unrevealed master-villain scheme) to set gears in motion. It’s spectacular and promising, though at first exposure its characters (human and otherwise) are often as grating as charming, with Eddie Redmayne and Katherine Waterston relatively new to blockbuster material after eye-catching work in
more challenging, less-seen drama and not yet entirely comfortable running goggle-eyed after billion-pixel mythical creatures and continuing franchise glory.