
Fate of one. Future of all.
Gellert Grindelwald has escaped imprisonment and has begun gathering followers to his cause—elevating wizards above all non-magical beings. The only one capable of putting a stop to him is the wizard he once called his closest friend, Albus Dumbledore. However, Dumbledore will need to seek help from the wizard who had thwarted Grindelwald once before, his former student Newt Scamander, who agrees to help, unaware of the dangers that lie ahead. Lines are drawn as love and loyalty are tested, even among the truest friends and family, in an increasingly divided wizarding world.
- 6.8
- 2018
- Released
- 2h 14m

Eddie Redmayne
Newt Scamander
Katherine Waterston
Tina Goldstein
Dan Fogler
Jacob Kowalski
Alison Sudol
Queenie Goldstein
Johnny Depp
Grindelwald
Jude Law
Albus Dumbledore
Ezra Miller
Credence Barebone
Zoë Kravitz
Leta Lestrange
Callum Turner
Theseus Scamander
Claudia Kim
Nagini
Carmen Ejogo
Seraphina Picquery
Jessica Williams
Eulalie Hicks
William Nadylam
Yusuf Kama
Ingvar E. Sigurðsson
Grimmson
Ólafur Darri Ólafsson
Skender
Kevin Guthrie
Abernathy
Brontis Jodorowsky
Nicolas Flamel
Derek Riddell
Torquil Travers
David Sakurai
Krall
Fiona Glascott
Minerva McGonagall
Wolf Roth
Spielman
Victoria Yeates
Bunty
Poppy Corby-Tuech
Rosier
Cornell John
Arnold Guzman
Claudius Peters
Nagel
Bart Soroczynski
Stebbins
Danielle Hugues
Irma Dugard
Alfie Simmons
McClaggan
Isaac Cortinovis Johnson
McClaggan's Friend
Olivia Popica
Receptionist
Alfie Mailley
Child in Bubble
Simon Wan
Chang
Andrew Turner
MacDuff
Linda Santiago
Credence's Aunt
Alfrun Rose
Red-Haired Witch
Maja Bloom
Carrow
Olwen Fouéré
Melusine
Simon Meacock
Krafft
David Wilmot
Portkey Tout
Ed Gaughan
French Policeman
Jamie Campbell Bower
Young Grindelwald
Toby Regbo
Young Dumbledore
Hugh Quarshie
Mustafa Kama
Isaura Barbé-Brown
Laurena Kama
Keith Chanter
Corvus Lestrange Senior
Jemima Woolnough
Gryffindor Girl
Hollie Burgess
Gryffindor Girl
Thea Lamb
Young Leta Lestrange (13-16 Years Old)
Joshua Shea
Young Newt (13-16 Years Old)
Isaac Domingos
Yusuf Kama (12 Years Old)
Ruby Woolfenden
Young Leta Lestrange (3-6 Years Old)
Christopher Birks
Young Auror-Auditorium
Sabine Crossen
Mrs. Lestrange (uncredited)
Morrison Thomas
Old Carnie (uncredited)
Johanna Thea
Ministry of Magic Witch (uncredited)
Liv Hansen
Ministry of Magic Witch (uncredited)
Israel Ruiz
Ministry of Magic Wizard (uncredited)
Jag Patel
Senior Wizard (uncredited)
Deepak Anand
Wizard (uncredited)
Andrew Blackall
The Rowdy Frenchman (uncredited)
Phil Hodges
Prisoner 001 (uncredited)
Michael Haydon
Shopkeeper (uncredited)
Tim Ingall
Spectrum (uncredited)
Stephen McDade
Cirque Arcanus Worker (uncredited)
Jeremy Oliver
Circus passerby (uncredited)
Dave Simon
Muggle at Circus (uncredited)
Jason Redshaw
Chef (uncredited)
Callum Forman
Doorman (uncredited)
Ryan Hannaford
Sailor (uncredited)
Donna Preston
Circus Compare (uncredited)
Nasir Jama
Macusa Prison (uncredited)
Aykut Hilmi
Shafiq (uncredited)
Natalie Lauren
Parisian Woman (uncredited)
Deano Bugatti
Muggle (uncredited)
Adrian Wheeler
Party Guest (uncredited)
Annarie Boor
Wand Seller (uncredited)
Ana Cilas
French Muggle (uncredited)
Grant Crookes
Cafe Owner (uncredited)
Sarah-Jane De Crespigny
Amphitheatre Witch (uncredited)
Mike Wood
Circus Beastmaster (uncredited)












Released
en
$200,000,000.00
$654,900,000.00
- #witch
- #new york city
- #paris, france
- #magic
- #school of witchcraft
- #black magic
- #sequel
- #prison escape
- #old flame
- #wizard
- #magical creature
- #1920s
- #based on young adult novel
- #good versus evil
- #follower
- #جانوران شگفت انگیز: جنایات گریندل والد
Reviews

In order to thwart the evil "Grindelwald" (Johnny Depp) from creating his own Arian version of enforcers for the wizardly world, "Dumbledore" (Jude Law) drafts in his talented understudy "Newt" (Eddie Redmayne) to help him out. Unfortunately, their nemesis has recently escaped from high-security custody and so the Ministry needs help for their men "Abernethy" (Kevin Guthrie) and "Theseus" (Callum

Well, there was one too many twists here and I only say that because it was unnecessary. The plot would have been cleaner if they just let that one go...and don't worry, you'll know what is being mentioned when you watch it. It would have worked in a novel, but in a screen play it just made it a bit messy and loose. And, unfortunately, that is what the critics are going to focus on. But then, J
Confused, lost, Johnny Depp always awesome. I think the days of me playing in the Harry Potter world are over.

Better than its predecessor, even if I still didn't really dig it. <em>'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald'</em> has more of a vibe about it, especially early on, and is marginally better paced. Overall, though, I'm kinda split on how I feel about this second instalment. It is a definite improvement, and yet I don't have any noteworthy positives to share about it. The cast, despite nam

I re-watched the original _Fantastic Beasts_ today to prep for _Crimes of Grindelwald_ and it made me realise that the only reason I gave that first film a positive review was because of Queenie Goldstein. She's just **such** a sweetheart. Her character wasn't the **only** thing I liked about that movie, but without her, it still gets pushed down into Rotten. So when they took her in this one and

First of all, just like in the last movie the acting in this film is excellent but with a few exceptions. Eddie Redmayne was still excellent as Newt but I think he did a better job in the first film. Same thing with Dan Fogler who didn’t seem as funny but useless and could have just been written out of this film. But I did really like Jude Law as a young Dumbledore and Joshua Shea who plays young
The first Fantastic Beasts movie was excellent. It was a bright and magical adventure. This one is going down another path and I cannot say that I was overly thrilled by that. This movie is putting emphasis on political machinations, division between the wizards and the non-wizards, betrayals etc. etc. Take away the magic component and you really have a fairly regular racial-differences, humans
The first Fantastic Beasts movie was excellent. It was a bright and magical adventure. This one is going down another path and I cannot say that I was overly thrilled by that. This movie is putting emphasis on political machinations, division between the wizards and the non-wizards, betrayals etc. etc. Take away the magic component and you really have a fairly regular racial-differences, humans

_By JD Phillips, geekr.org_ The Harry Potter movies are great but one of the main flaws of the original franchise was the struggle the films had condensing the lengthy novels into movies under three hours. Despite the Fantastic Beasts sequel not being based on a book, it still somehow feels like its stressing to condense a five hundred page book into a smaller narrative. The movie runs fro











