The final Crimes of Grindelwald trailer was released this
week and the latest buzzword around the internet is Nagini.
Claudia Kim as Nagini as seen in Fantastic Beasts: The
Crimes of Grindelwald trailer. (Photo: Warner Bros.)
Potter fans all remember the infamous snake sidekick to He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named. She was also Lord
Voldemort’s last and closely protected Horcrux. So, when the whispered name
accompanied a beautiful woman transforming into a snake during what appears to
be a circus act, it should have been a moment of excitement for fans.
Unfortunately, not all were as excited about the reveal as might have been
expected.
According to the latest trailer, and confirmed by J.K.
Rowling herself, Nagini is a Maledictus: a human woman carrying a blood curse
that can transform into an animal (snake in this case) and will ultimately make
that transformation permanent when the curse matures.
They're different conditions. Maledictuses are always women, whereas werewolves can be either sex. The Maledictus carries a blood curse from birth, which is passed down from mother to daughter. https://t.co/wYfvPeQFRW— J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) September 25, 2018
Author and screenwriter J.K. Rowling tweeted that she’d been
sitting on this secret “for around 20 years.”
Only for around twenty years. https://t.co/gZadgWVREN— J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) September 25, 2018
I don’t know about you, but I can’t keep a secret that long.
Kudos J.K. you are a true master!
In the trailer, we witness Nagini as a shape-shifting circus
performer in the 1920s, played by South Korean actress Claudia Kim.
Ms. Kim, in an interview with Entertainment Weekly said:
“You’ve only seen her as a Horcrux. In this, she’s a wonderful and vulnerable woman who wants to live. She wants to stay a human being and I think that’s a wonderful contrast to the character… She does feel sometimes it’s not controllable ... She is bound to [permanently] transform at some point to a beast so she feels this pressure that the clock is ticking.”
As a fan of the series myself, both books and film, I enjoy
the connective tissue that J.K. Rowling is employing, making sure we see plenty
of familiar characters and their backstories. Given that Witches and Wizards in
this world live longer than their Muggle counterparts, it is believable that
Nagini could be around for all the events of Grindelwald, and exciting to see
how she plays into it all.
In the interview Claudia Kim gave to Entertainment weekly,
she reveals a few tantalizing details.
“Expect Nagini to befriend fellow a fellow outcast who has transformation issues of his own — the fugitive Credence Bare bone (EzraMiller), who has run off and joined the circus after wrecking havoc in Manhattan in the first film ... these two broken souls are able to form some kind of friendship within the circus. Credence is special to her because heen courages her to use her power.”
Learning that Nagini had a troubled past (as actress Claudia
Kim revealed in her interview) one can easily accept her character being sympathetic
toward those who help and encourage her during these dark times. Even if those
people might serve the dark side. So, when I saw the trailer I responded with appropriate
enthusiasm.
The response via social media, however, has been quite
polarizing. Rather than focusing on learning Nagini’s origin story, fans took
to the internet focusing on their shock of potential racist implications
relating to the choice of actress ethnicity.
“Let's retroactively turn a woman of color into a literal object owned by a white man inspired by nazis.” https://t.co/JYTQK6YFss— Bad Janet™️ (@CharlesPulliam) September 25, 2018
"nagini is actually an asian woman who is repeatedly milked by the dark lord and then killed" sounds like the sort of thing you'd see while testing a rowling retcon bot before deleting the entire thing in horror— shameboy advance (@failnaut) September 26, 2018
Nagini was a human-eating snake that Voldemort kept around but come Fantastic Beasts it's all "forget everything from harry potter, because well actually Nagini is an Asian woman"— skim🐻casual (@skimcasual) September 26, 2018
The root argument seems to be that a woman of color is being
used in such a subservient roll. I can understand that to a point. We live in
an age where women are trying to level the playing field and feel that showing
negative stereotypes resets the board. But, not everything has to be a social
or political statement.
I’m quite sure that when author and screenwriter, J.K.
Rowling chose to write Nagini this way, she was doing it with the hope of
giving her Wizarding World fans what they want, backstory, history, the key
elements to making a character feel more real to the readers/viewers.
As an author myself, I do the same, focusing on interesting
bits of the character and how they fit into a world. It is never done with the
intention of polarizing the fan base.
I’m reminded of the English teacher analyzing a story meme. The curtains
were blue. Nothing more.
I truly believe the same applies to Nagini. She is not meant
to be a racist stereotype. She’s just a character with a troubled past, living
with a curse, hoping to find her place. And unfortunately we know where that
place ends up being. Not all characters get a happy ending.