The Divergent Series: Allegiant: Mini-review


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Shailene Woodley

Shailene Woodley is back for a third go-around in Allegiant

D+ Watching The Divergent Series: Allegiant brings to mind George Santayana’s endlessly paraphrased epigram, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” That advice applies perfectly to both the characters in Allegiant, who have not learned any lessons from the first two movies in the series, and the filmmakers, who seemingly haven’t learned any lessons from similar YA series such as The Hunger Games

As Allegiant begins, rebels have overthrown the old order in what used to be Chicago and installed a new ruler, Evelyn (Naomi Watts), who’s pretty much as ruthless as her predecessors and prohibits people from leaving the city. Tris (Shailene Woodley), who led the insurgency, Evelyn’s son Four (Theo James), and a few friends scale the giant wall surrounding Chicago and escape into a desolate wasteland. They eventually find their way to the headquarters of the Bureau of Genetic Research, an agency that’s been monitoring events in Chicago. The Bureau’s leader David (Jeff Daniels) tells Tris that the problems in Chicago were caused by damaged genes, and that Tris, the only person in the world with perfect genes, is the key to rebuilding society.

The first two movies in this series, Divergent and Insurgentweren’t great but at least had some decent action scenes and a somewhat intriguing vision of a particular dystopian future resulting from a master plan gone wrong. Allegiant, on the other hand, seems to have crafted its vision of the future straight from Josef Mengele’s lab notes, complete with blather about pure and damaged genes. Yes, the outside world blundered in setting up the faction system that ruled Chicago, but now they do it all over again. At least, Shailene Woodley gets to display some genuine emotion occasionally, and Miles Teller has fun as the duplicitous Peter, whose loyalties change from scene to scene. Otherwise, a talented cast is pretty much given little to do other than wait for things to come. And things definitely will come, since Allegiant covers merely the first half of the concluding novel in author Veronica Roth’s original YA trilogy. Once again, filmmakers try to milk a franchise by dividing one book into two movies with predictably bad results: a boring, talky, padded, unoriginal film. The Divergent series ran out of ideas in the last movie and is reduced to recycling them in Allegiant, and, except for one exciting sequence in which Tris and her group scale the wall to escape her former home, there’s very little action either. The series might redeem itself in the upcoming final movie, but Allegiant was doomed from the start.
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The 5th Wave: Mini-review


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Chloe Grace Moretz

Chloe Grace Moretz hopes to follow Jennifer Lawrence’s career path

CAudiences watching The 5th Wave can be forgiven if they have a strong feeling of déjà vu. Truth be told, the first half hour of 5th Wave resembles every CGI disaster movie of the last 20 years rolled into one, while the remaining 90 minutes resembles every YA dystopian sci-fi franchise of the last decade, as well as some popular TV series like The Walking Dead and Falling Skies.

The similarities to earlier franchises extend to the lead actress, Chloe Grace Moretz, who immediately calls to mind Jennifer Lawrence and Shailene Woodley. Moretz plays Cassie Sullivan, one of the few survivors left after a series of alien attacks nearly devastates the earth, The invaders are preparing their final assault, a “5th wave” consisting of aliens who appear human. The army recruits Cassie’s younger brother, along with other surviving children and teenagers, then hastily arms and trains them to detect and fight the infiltrators. In the meantime, Cassie and her mysterious, yet hunky new acquaintance, Evan Walker (Alex Roe), try to find where the Army has taken Cassie’s brother.

The 5th Wave is not a bad movie, merely a by-now overly familiar, unoriginal one. The film is based on a YA novel series by Rick Yancey, and perhaps those characters have greater depth, but here, Cassie is just a resourceful teen who transforms readily into warrior mode. She’s even the center of a similar triangle to that of The Hunger Gamescaught between Evan and Ben Parrish (Nick Robinson), the high school jock she had a crush on back home. Of course, adults, in this case the army’s Colonel Vosch (Liev Schreiber) and Sergeant Reznik (Maria Bello), are not to be trusted. Even though there’s a major surprise reveal about one character at the end of the second act, none of the main characters are well developed or seem all that interesting. Director J Blakeson handles the CGI disaster effects and battle scenes well, but 5th Wave overloads the effects into the film’s first half hour. The open-ended conclusion implies sequels to come, but, by now, most audiences would rather see the earlier and fresher movies that inspired The 5th Wave than this 5th generation copy. 
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Insurgent: Mini-Review


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Shailene Woodley

Shailene Woodley channels her inner Jennifer Lawrence

C-The best praise I can give  Insurgentthe sequel to last year’s modest YA science fiction success, Divergentis to note that it doesn’t merely recycle the same plot points as its predecessor. Unfortunately, the producers seem to have exhausted their store of fresh ideas in the first movie and are reduced to ripping off other movies like The Matrix, Raiders of the Lost Arkand Hellraiser instead. 

The storyline of Insurgent picks up a few months after Divergent ended. In a dystopian future, residents of what’s left of Chicago live behind massive walls and are divided into five factions based on their predispositions. However, a few, like Tris (Shailene Woodley), are “divergents,” possessing aptitudes for multiple factions. The de facto ruler of the society, Jeanine (Kate Winslet), is trying to hunt down Tris and the other divergents. In the meantime, Tris and her boyfriend Four (Theo James) form an uneasy alliance with Four’s mother Evelyn (Naomi Watts), leader of the homeless Factionless, who wants to bring down Jeanine.

YA science fiction concepts generally aren’t all that complex to begin with, and Insurgent abandons most of the intricacies found in Divergent. Instead, what emerges is yet another story of a fascistic ruling élite and their storm trooper lackies putting their ideas of racial superiority and purification in place. And, for all of Kate Winslet’s acting skills, she’s not nearly as good at playing the big bad as Donald Sutherland is in the similar role in the Hunger Games movies. The first half hour of Insurgent contains plenty of action, much of it well staged, but, after that, the movie goes downhill quickly. Woodley does her best, but she struggles in a role that requires her to spend most of the movie blaming herself for everything that’s gone wrong in her world. The only character who seems to be having fun is the duplicitous Peter (Miles Teller), whose loyalties go back and forth as the plot demands. The movie culminates in the last of many dream sequences Tris endures, all of which seem like outtakes from The Matrix. However, it’s the audience that really has to endure these sequences to get through Insurgent.
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