Who does Leta say she loves?











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During the battle between the Aurors and Grindelwald there is a moment when Grindelwald's attention is drawn to Leta. They have a brief conversation with Grindelwald asking Leta to join him. Leta then turns to the Scamander brothers and says:




I love you.




It is left unclear as to which one she spoke to but was there any evidence in the film that can give us an idea of which she was talking to? Perhaps there has been an interview dealing with this.










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  • 4




    I think this is the whole point of the moment - to be unclear.
    – Shana Tar
    Nov 28 at 13:10










  • Related question, but not a duplicate. scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/199230/…
    – RichS
    Nov 29 at 8:27















up vote
4
down vote

favorite












During the battle between the Aurors and Grindelwald there is a moment when Grindelwald's attention is drawn to Leta. They have a brief conversation with Grindelwald asking Leta to join him. Leta then turns to the Scamander brothers and says:




I love you.




It is left unclear as to which one she spoke to but was there any evidence in the film that can give us an idea of which she was talking to? Perhaps there has been an interview dealing with this.










share|improve this question




















  • 4




    I think this is the whole point of the moment - to be unclear.
    – Shana Tar
    Nov 28 at 13:10










  • Related question, but not a duplicate. scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/199230/…
    – RichS
    Nov 29 at 8:27













up vote
4
down vote

favorite









up vote
4
down vote

favorite











During the battle between the Aurors and Grindelwald there is a moment when Grindelwald's attention is drawn to Leta. They have a brief conversation with Grindelwald asking Leta to join him. Leta then turns to the Scamander brothers and says:




I love you.




It is left unclear as to which one she spoke to but was there any evidence in the film that can give us an idea of which she was talking to? Perhaps there has been an interview dealing with this.










share|improve this question















During the battle between the Aurors and Grindelwald there is a moment when Grindelwald's attention is drawn to Leta. They have a brief conversation with Grindelwald asking Leta to join him. Leta then turns to the Scamander brothers and says:




I love you.




It is left unclear as to which one she spoke to but was there any evidence in the film that can give us an idea of which she was talking to? Perhaps there has been an interview dealing with this.







harry-potter fantastic-beasts the-crimes-of-grindelwald






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share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 28 at 17:37









Bellatrix

68.4k12307345




68.4k12307345










asked Nov 28 at 11:46







user107643















  • 4




    I think this is the whole point of the moment - to be unclear.
    – Shana Tar
    Nov 28 at 13:10










  • Related question, but not a duplicate. scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/199230/…
    – RichS
    Nov 29 at 8:27














  • 4




    I think this is the whole point of the moment - to be unclear.
    – Shana Tar
    Nov 28 at 13:10










  • Related question, but not a duplicate. scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/199230/…
    – RichS
    Nov 29 at 8:27








4




4




I think this is the whole point of the moment - to be unclear.
– Shana Tar
Nov 28 at 13:10




I think this is the whole point of the moment - to be unclear.
– Shana Tar
Nov 28 at 13:10












Related question, but not a duplicate. scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/199230/…
– RichS
Nov 29 at 8:27




Related question, but not a duplicate. scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/199230/…
– RichS
Nov 29 at 8:27










1 Answer
1






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up vote
7
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accepted










In the screenplay, it says she “looks toward both of them”.



In the screenplay of Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, it’s said that Leta looks toward both Theseus and Newt when she says “I love you” and no further explanation is given.




She looks toward both THESEUS and NEWT, who are watching her, stunned.



LETA

I love you.
- Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (The Original Screenplay)




This could mean she loved them both, possibly in different ways - it can but doesn’t necessarily mean she was still in love with Newt while still planning to marry Theseus. It could mean she loved one of the brothers as a friend, and the other one romantically.






share|improve this answer





















  • Or, heck, it could mean that they just don't want us to know what she meant.
    – Adam Miller
    Nov 28 at 14:44










  • I have accepted this answer for not but I am hoping for some more information in the later films!
    – user107643
    Dec 3 at 10:02











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
7
down vote



accepted










In the screenplay, it says she “looks toward both of them”.



In the screenplay of Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, it’s said that Leta looks toward both Theseus and Newt when she says “I love you” and no further explanation is given.




She looks toward both THESEUS and NEWT, who are watching her, stunned.



LETA

I love you.
- Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (The Original Screenplay)




This could mean she loved them both, possibly in different ways - it can but doesn’t necessarily mean she was still in love with Newt while still planning to marry Theseus. It could mean she loved one of the brothers as a friend, and the other one romantically.






share|improve this answer





















  • Or, heck, it could mean that they just don't want us to know what she meant.
    – Adam Miller
    Nov 28 at 14:44










  • I have accepted this answer for not but I am hoping for some more information in the later films!
    – user107643
    Dec 3 at 10:02















up vote
7
down vote



accepted










In the screenplay, it says she “looks toward both of them”.



In the screenplay of Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, it’s said that Leta looks toward both Theseus and Newt when she says “I love you” and no further explanation is given.




She looks toward both THESEUS and NEWT, who are watching her, stunned.



LETA

I love you.
- Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (The Original Screenplay)




This could mean she loved them both, possibly in different ways - it can but doesn’t necessarily mean she was still in love with Newt while still planning to marry Theseus. It could mean she loved one of the brothers as a friend, and the other one romantically.






share|improve this answer





















  • Or, heck, it could mean that they just don't want us to know what she meant.
    – Adam Miller
    Nov 28 at 14:44










  • I have accepted this answer for not but I am hoping for some more information in the later films!
    – user107643
    Dec 3 at 10:02













up vote
7
down vote



accepted







up vote
7
down vote



accepted






In the screenplay, it says she “looks toward both of them”.



In the screenplay of Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, it’s said that Leta looks toward both Theseus and Newt when she says “I love you” and no further explanation is given.




She looks toward both THESEUS and NEWT, who are watching her, stunned.



LETA

I love you.
- Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (The Original Screenplay)




This could mean she loved them both, possibly in different ways - it can but doesn’t necessarily mean she was still in love with Newt while still planning to marry Theseus. It could mean she loved one of the brothers as a friend, and the other one romantically.






share|improve this answer












In the screenplay, it says she “looks toward both of them”.



In the screenplay of Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, it’s said that Leta looks toward both Theseus and Newt when she says “I love you” and no further explanation is given.




She looks toward both THESEUS and NEWT, who are watching her, stunned.



LETA

I love you.
- Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (The Original Screenplay)




This could mean she loved them both, possibly in different ways - it can but doesn’t necessarily mean she was still in love with Newt while still planning to marry Theseus. It could mean she loved one of the brothers as a friend, and the other one romantically.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 28 at 12:02









Bellatrix

68.4k12307345




68.4k12307345












  • Or, heck, it could mean that they just don't want us to know what she meant.
    – Adam Miller
    Nov 28 at 14:44










  • I have accepted this answer for not but I am hoping for some more information in the later films!
    – user107643
    Dec 3 at 10:02


















  • Or, heck, it could mean that they just don't want us to know what she meant.
    – Adam Miller
    Nov 28 at 14:44










  • I have accepted this answer for not but I am hoping for some more information in the later films!
    – user107643
    Dec 3 at 10:02
















Or, heck, it could mean that they just don't want us to know what she meant.
– Adam Miller
Nov 28 at 14:44




Or, heck, it could mean that they just don't want us to know what she meant.
– Adam Miller
Nov 28 at 14:44












I have accepted this answer for not but I am hoping for some more information in the later films!
– user107643
Dec 3 at 10:02




I have accepted this answer for not but I am hoping for some more information in the later films!
– user107643
Dec 3 at 10:02


















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