Alison Sudol has shared her thoughts on Queenie joining Grindelwald. What she says makes sense to me.
MACUSA. Magical Congress of the United States of America. Except did you notice that they’re now calling it the American Ministry of Magic, which doesn’t sound American at all? That was the first thing in the movie that annoyed me.MEDUSA cut "his" tongue out.
Yeah, that confused me too. I rewatched the first movie the day before we saw this one, so the name change really stood out for me.MACUSA. Magical Congress of the United States of America. Except did you notice that they’re now calling it the American Ministry of Magic, which doesn’t sound American at all? That was the first thing in the movie that annoyed me.
This movie got pretty lazy with lore that's very easy to double check. Like having McGonagall be a professor at Hogwarts when Newt and Leta were students there, when McGonagall wasn't even born until 1935.Yeah, that confused me too. I rewatched the first movie the day before we saw this one, so the name change really stood out for me.
Completely disagree on both points here. You can easily fit WWII in a world with real magic, @David Mack did it in The Midnight Front and it was awesome.Gaith's larger point about larger, public issues like WWII don't fit into a world with real magic is correct. But this actually applies to all fantasy writers. I suppose the closest to squaring the circle was T.H. White's The Sword in the Stone, which is damning with faint praise. Fantasy is about getting away from the mundane, and back to the past where things were magical.
I, personally, didn't say that can't be done - but for a peaceful Wizarding Britain, a minor squabble with Grindelwald notwithstanding, to apparently totally ignore WWII probably isn't great look. Maybe there'll be some upcoming handwaving as to why a few aurors couldn't have dismantled the Nazi and Soviet states, but Wizarding politics hasn't been Rowling's strong suit so far...Completely disagree on both points here. You can easily fit WWII in a world with real magic
No need to check McGonagall’s birth certificate — Pottermore gave us her birth date years ago, and, no, she is not as old as Dumbledore, and she is not old enough to be in this movie. [Edited to add: I can't find the birth year now, so maybe it isn't canon?] We also know from Pottermore that her father was a muggle — a Presbyterian minister, no less! — so this Prof McGonagall can’t be Minerva’s older relative.The notion that McGonagall can't be a professor when Dumbledore was a professor seems unlikely barring an inspection of her birth certificate, which seems a dull thing to do. The two being about the same age does seem plausible, though.
Gaith's larger point about larger, public issues like WWII don't fit into a world with real magic is correct. But this actually applies to all fantasy writers. I suppose the closest to squaring the circle was T.H. White's The Sword in the Stone, which is damning with faint praise. Fantasy is about getting away from the mundane, and back to the past where things were magical. This never produces good sociopolitical analysis. Clark Ashton Smith and Jack Vance are the only ones to play with a magical future, and they are not beloved, for a reason.
Grindelwald is doing Trump in a faux-populist mode, not Hitler, though. I doubt Rowling understands how much of Hitler was simply standard political conservatism and nationalism, aka patriotism. But the more uniquely Hitlerian element, antiCommunism and antisemitism are missing. Rowling's magical universe has always been tacitly Christian, largely C of E as near as I can tell. Neither RCs nor evangelicals really fit in and never did. Seeing characters with supposedly Jewish names (Kowalski isn't a Polish Catholic?) means nothing. Everybody is liberal Protestant, there's the conventions of religion and there's the pragmatic use of "magic" (science conceived as wishful thinking,) and never the twain shall meet, lest they clash. Misreading Grindelwald as Hitler makes nonsense of the purported politics. And this would be true especially if Rowling herself at some point turns Grindelwald into "Hitler." It's not a real Hitler if he doesn't start a world war, is he?
I am still wrestling with Queenie. She heard what she wanted to hear, so she followed. I have seen a lot of that in real life over the past two decades, so I can understand that. But she was much smarter than that in the first film.
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