---fantastic: Beasts And Where To Find Them 2016 O...
Meanwhile, MACUSA’s fear of exposure leads to the near-execution of Newt and Tina and the mass memory-wiping of New York. The Swooping Evil’s venom being used to erase the city’s memory of the attack is deeply ambiguous: is obliviation mercy, or a violent erasure of truth? The film leans toward the latter. When Kowalski—a No-Maj who witnessed everything—is forced to have his memories removed, the audience feels the tragedy. His lost love Queenie is left weeping. The system protects itself by sacrificing human connection.
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them ultimately rejects the binary of monster versus human. The Niffler is greedy but loveable; the Occamy is protective; the Thunderbird is majestic and healing. The only real horror is Credence’s Obscurus—and it, too, is a child desperate for love. In the film’s most devastating line, Credence asks Graves, “Why don’t you like me?” He has internalized his abuser’s cruelty so deeply that he believes his own nature is the crime. ---Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them 2016 O...
Rowling uses the Obscurus to critique not only anti-witch persecution but any system that demands the violent repression of innate identity. Credence is the dark mirror of Harry Potter—a child with magical ability raised by cruel Muggles. But where Harry found Hogwarts, Credence finds only the Second Salemers, a Puritanical group that literalizes the historical Salem witch trials. Mary Lou’s slogan, “We’re coming for you all,” echoes modern conversion therapy rhetoric, anti-LGBTQ+ legislation, and racial purity ideologies. The Obscurus is what happens when a society refuses to accommodate difference: the monster is not the repressed but the repression itself. Meanwhile, MACUSA’s fear of exposure leads to the
By setting the story in a pre-World War II America, Rowling critiques how democracies turn fear into policy. MACUSA’s segregation echoes Jim Crow laws; the death sentence for exposing magic parallels the brutal enforcement of racial and sexual purity. The film suggests that the greatest threat to magical society is not exposure but the internalization of oppression. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them ultimately
Crucially, the wizarding establishment is no refuge. MACUSA operates under a strict policy of non-fraternization with No-Majs, enforced by death-penalty-level secrecy. President Seraphina Picquery and Director Percival Graves (actually the dark wizard Gellert Grindelwald in disguise) represent two faces of the same authoritarian coin: one institutional, one revolutionary.
His journey is not about defeating a dark lord but about learning to trust and be trusted. The film’s emotional climax is not a duel but Newt’s parting gift to Kowalski: a case of Occamy eggshells (pure silver) as capital for his bakery. It is an act of quiet solidarity between two outsiders. The final shot of Newt returning to England, alone but content, suggests that belonging does not require assimilation—only mutual respect.
The film’s Jazz Age New York is not mere period dressing. It evokes the Roaring Twenties’ cultural ferment—jazz, immigration, women’s suffrage—juxtaposed with the rise of nativism, eugenics, and the Second Ku Klux Klan. Mary Lou’s Second Salemers carry signs reading “No Witches” in the same fonts as temperance and anti-immigrant posters. The Obscurus’s destructive rampage echoes the Wall Street bombing of 1920, an unsolved act of domestic terrorism that fueled the Red Scare.