---fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them 2016: O...
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.
Grindelwald’s infiltration is the film’s most chilling subversion. Disguised as the trusted Graves, he seeks to weaponize the Obscurus against Muggles, revealing that the film’s true antagonist is not a beast but a charismatic supremacist. His line, “Do you know what it’s like to be despised simply for what you are?” manipulates Credence’s pain for political ends. This mirrors real-world extremists who recruit the disenfranchised by validating their trauma while redirecting it outward. ---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. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them ultimately