I went to see “Maze
Runner: The Scorch Trials” yesterday, and honestly, I still can’t decide
whether I liked it or not. Now, don’t get me wrong here. I’m not saying that it
was bad, because it’s not. There were a lot of good things about it, but, of course, there were also a handful
of bad stuff that happened in the film, which were pretty major – stuff that
fans of the books may or may not take nicely.
[SPOILERS AHEAD]
You've been warned.
Scorch opens
with a quick peek into the childhood of Thomas (Dylan O’Brien) with his mum
handing him over to WCKD (World In Catastrophe: Killzone Experiment Department –
in the books), but the story picks up exactly where the previous film left off – on
a helicopter after an apparent rescue of the Gladers. They are then brought to
a secured facility, where they are fed, given fresh clothes, and promised a new
life. Everything seems too good to be true, and soon enough, the Gladers find
themselves taking a run out of their rescuers’ den and out in the Scorch, where
they face a new test of survival.
It’s pretty much a
whole different story.
Our favourite Gladers are back! But if you have seen the trailers, you probably know by now that a lot of changes have been made in Scorch. Well, what they showed in the trailers were just bits of the big jumps director Wes Ball, writer T.S. Nowlin, and their team pursued. I have read James Dashner’s Maze Runner trilogy, and I can tell you that the movie runs in a totally different direction.
Our favourite Gladers are back! But if you have seen the trailers, you probably know by now that a lot of changes have been made in Scorch. Well, what they showed in the trailers were just bits of the big jumps director Wes Ball, writer T.S. Nowlin, and their team pursued. I have read James Dashner’s Maze Runner trilogy, and I can tell you that the movie runs in a totally different direction.
In fact, the word “trials” in
the title almost seems irrelevant, since the Gladers are not sent to the Scorch for
any kind of trial, or at least, not in the context of them being lab rats of
WCKD. The Gladers voluntarily got
themselves out of the facility against the wishes of WCKD, who were, by the
way, the people behind the staged rescue (duh). That is the biggest plot difference
that I can pinpoint, since all the new stuff branched out from it.
Some elements in the third
book have also been incorporated into the second movie, just like what Ball has
said in interviews. The reason: to ease the franchise into a big ending, which
he said will be “cool” and more “futuristic”. Was it a smart move? Perhaps. But
we’ll have to wait for more than a year until we find out if the changes he
made will pay off or not. In the mean time, let’s just put our trust in Ball’s vision, and hope for the best.
The visual effects are sick!
Trust me when I say that you
are in for a CGI extravaganza when you see this film. While the setting is a
lot darker, the visual effects team didn’t see that as a reason to downplay
things. Instead, they used that as an advantage to give the film the creepier,
hair-raising, and heart-thumping feel it deserves.
Less dialogues, more action.
Scorch is an adrenaline-pumped film and fans of action will not be
disappointed. It’s fast-paced and intense, leaving little room for the
characters (and the audience) to catch their breath and even speak to each
other! I also guarantee you that this movie has a lot more running than the previous
one. Watch out for Thomas’s slide through the closing door and Minho’s knee to
chest attack – I have to admit, those were pretty awesome.
Forget romance. You won’t be getting it.
One of the things I really
liked in the Scorch movie is how unromantic
it is.
I do understand that romance
plays a great role in young adult stories, and that ruling it out is a big risk
(we’re talking about millions of fangirls losing their minds here), but for me,
the filmmakers behind Scorch
bypassing the romantic aspect of the story is a risk well taken.
Through a subtle way, the movie gives you the idea that Thomas has strong feelings for Teresa and Brenda, and that’s better than doing something drastic that would push fans to gang up and form “Team Teresa” or “Team Brenda”, pitting both girls against each other. That is so yesterday, and that's not what The Maze Runner is about.
Through a subtle way, the movie gives you the idea that Thomas has strong feelings for Teresa and Brenda, and that’s better than doing something drastic that would push fans to gang up and form “Team Teresa” or “Team Brenda”, pitting both girls against each other. That is so yesterday, and that's not what The Maze Runner is about.
Having said that, while Scorch is not a movie that has a lot of
romance to offer, it is certainly a movie about different kinds of
relationships, and that’s what’s so great about it because instead of watching two people getting cosy together, you see everyone genuinely caring and looking
out for each other.
There’s the brotherhood of the
Gladers, the foster father-daughter relationship between Jorge and Brenda, and
even the complicated link of Teresa with WCKD and her twisted affection for the
Gladers. If you don’t think that’s love, you better get yourself a new heart.
The cranks are terrifying.
They are not zombies. They are
not an army of the undead. They are just terribly ill people who look terrifying and run way too fast. And just in case
you’re wondering, the “rose took my nose” crank wasn’t in the film. The cranks
past the gone do not speak but they let out haunting screams every now and
then.
You will get to hear Newt call Thomas “Tommy”.
Happy now? And, yes, Thomas
Brodie-Sangster as Newt is as cute and young-looking as ever, proving that life
is, indeed, unfair.
More Minho? More like foreshadowing.
My favourite character in The
Maze Runner series is Minho (Ki Hong Lee), so it was a great treat for me to see him in
almost every scene in the movie. Little did I know there was a bigger reason
behind his almost-constant presence around Thomas, for towards the end of the
film, Minho unexpectedly becomes a driving force of the story…
After finding some relief in a
camp of immune and uninfected humans, the Gladers are once again found by WCKD (How? You'll find out later.) and they try to make another escape. In the middle of all the chaos, Minho stays behind
his friends to ensure their safety, while exchanging bullets with WCKD
soldiers, who eventually incapacitate him. Too stunned to move from their
hiding places to help Minho, the Gladers don’t get to save the former keeper of the
runners, who is then taken away by WCKD on a Berg.
With Minho gone, Thomas loses
it, and decides to go back to WCKD and find his maze-running buddy, sticking to a promise he
previously made that no more Glader will be left behind. His friends along with
Jorge, Brenda, and Group B, who were all hesitant at first, resolve to join
Thomas, and that’s where Scorch ends.
Now does this really have
anything to do with Minho being in almost every scene? Well, I like to think of
it as a foreshadowing technique used by the filmmakers. Thing is, if they fail
to establish the idea that Minho is someone who means a lot to Thomas
(especially in Scorch), then him
going back to WCKD to find his friend, when freedom is almost at reach, would be rather impractical if not pointless.
As for Minho's sass, we'll get that, but just. His hair is still on fleek, though! :D
As for Minho's sass, we'll get that, but just. His hair is still on fleek, though! :D
Teresa’s actions are more reasonable.
The book has some motivation
issues when it comes to the characters’ actions, so I’m glad that Ball and
Nowlin made Teresa’s (Kaya Scodelario) dedication to WCKD (which makes Thomas eventually lose his
trust in her) more believable and reasonable.
In Scorch, Teresa’s memories
are restored, and her desire to help WCKD in finding a cure for the Flare is
reignited. She goes along with the Gladers, but towards the end of the film, she
gets in touch with WCKD authorities who arrive at the colony of immunes. Chaos
ensues. Trust is lost. Minho is taken. Shuck
this life.
But it’s not all bad, because
we also get to see the sensitive side of Teresa as she recounts a memory of her
as a helpless little girl seeing her once-beautiful mother turn into a crank.
That part gave me (and probably other fans out there) a reason to
sympathise with Teresa. I mean, if I were her, I would have the same
determination to look for a cure and eradicate whatever killed my mum and billions
of other people.
I can’t believe I’m saying this, but I’m starting to like
Teresa.
Winston gets his moment.
Thank God, Ball and Nowlin did
not include the scene with the head-swallowing molten metal in the film! It's
one of the parts of the novel that I didn't like. So yeah, good riddance! But
then such omission means only one thing: Winston dies differently in the movie.
Winston (Alex Flores), the
former keeper of the slicers, makes it out of WCKD's facility alive and well
with his fellow Gladers. But after an encounter with the cranks who claw him,
he gets infected by the Flare and his health rapidly deteriorates. The effects
of the disease on Winston were undeniably grotesque. After dropping unconscious
midway through the journey, he wakes up coughing out blood and when he lifts
his shirt, he reveals his exposed sick-coloured innards. He then begs the
Gladers to leave him behind - a scene that was surprisingly emotional.
In my opinion, had Winston's
character been developed better in the first film, his farewell scene would
have conjured more feels, since it's a great display of the friendship among
the Gladers.
Brenda is made to be more likeable in the film.
I found it difficult to like
Brenda (Rosa Salazar) in the books. I actually hated her and her unreasonable and
almos creepy touchy-feeliness towards Thomas. The movie, however, made her a
lot more likeable and a bit more kick-ass.
Salazar did a great job
portraying Brenda. She brought a fresh female presence to the film that Kaya
Scodelario as Teresa wouldn’t have done, and she just blended so well with the
rest of the cast. Whether she will be romantically linked to Thomas or not in
the last film, it doesn’t matter because Brenda is someone you’d totally cheer
on even without the romantic arc Dashner originally wrote.
Giancarlo Esposito makes a great Jorge.
I pictured Jorge to look more
Latino so I was a bit taken aback when I found out that Giancarlo Esposito (you’ve
probably seen him on Breaking Bad) was playing the role. He’s just not Jorge…
or so I thought. Damn, he was perfect! He may not look the part, but he carried
Jorge’s cleverness, tenacity, and soft side in a good, balanced way.
Patsy Cline’s “Walkin’ After Midnight” is surprisingly a great
background music for an intense and explosive
action scene.
Who knew, right? I enjoyed
this part immensely, and I might have sung through the entire song. Haha!
Apart from Aris, members of Group B don’t appear until the last part of
the film.
Aris joins the Gladers shortly
after they arrive at WCKD and has stuck with them throughout the journey.
However, Harriet and Sonya do not appear until the last quarter of the film,
when the Gladers, Jorge, and Brenda get ambushed by immunes who live in a colony which the two
girls are part of.
Janson is just… boring.
As the assistant director of
WCKD, Janson (Aidan Gillen) goes about looking for the Gladers in the entirety
of the film, trying his best to be on the good side of Chancellor Ava Paige (Patricia
Clarkson) like an overly-obedient lackey – that’s all there is to him. He’s not
even called the Rat Man! I personally think Gillen could have given more to the
character if he were just given the chance.
Nobody is safe.
With all the plot changes, the
characters in the movie are at their most vulnerable. All I can say is that
everything is too uncertain for everyone at this point that it makes you fear
of what Ball can do to the characters you've been rooting for from the
beginning.
♥Andz
FAST FORWARD TO FEBRUARY 2017, PLEASE!!!
♥Andz
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