Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore (2022) Review: Even though the Fantastic Beasts series finds itself included in the wizarding world with shared mythologies, character arcs, political design, and imaginative wonders, it…

Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore (2022) Review: Even though the Fantastic Beasts series finds itself included in the wizarding world with shared mythologies, character arcs, political design, and imaginative wonders, it…
I say this with great disdain that the men in Mona Fastvold’s ‘The World to Come‘ should have been left as side commodities. This is because the queer love story at its…
It took 17 years, 7 books, one Broadway show, and now 10 movies for me to feel a sense of disappointment with something that comes from J.K Rowling’s wizarding world. I put…
When it finally ends, it leaves you with a very likable, warm and fuzzy feeling inside, and you go home with a heart full of happiness. Fantastic Beasts, in the end, stands as a really nice, endearing entertainer and one of the best movies I have seen in this year so far.
The actors bring Sorkin’s highly stylized and biting words to vivid life, and it resonates on a human level. Though Fassbender might look miscast in terms of physicality of Steve Jobs, but he combines incandescent aggression with cold calculation, egotistical bully, and control freak Orchestra maestro who knows exactly how to tune his instrument players – be it threatening or manipulating. Michael Fassbender becomes Steve Jobs. By the time credit rolls, it will be difficult to shrug off the dented image of anyone else playing Jobs character with such panache.