Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials was written by T.S. Nowlin and directed by Wes Ball.
Nowlin
co-wrote the original film with Noah Oppenheim and Grant Pierce Myers.
Wes Ball directed the original as well. Amazingly, this is the second film he's ever directed.
I
liked the first film for the most part. I thought the Maze and its mysterious
origin made the movie feel like a big budget Twilight Zone episode. Then
they revealed the reason behind the Maze, and suddenly I didn't like it
so much anymore. Better to have left the ending vague, with Thomas and
Minho discovering the exit and going through as the screen faded to
black. That certainly would have been preferable to the vague,
nonsensical explanation we got. Any time you have a story with a big
central mystery, answering it is nearly always a letdown. The audience
can always imagine something much better than the actual answer.
The
Scorch Trials opens up the Maze Runner world quite a bit, adding
destroyed cities, vast deserts, Mad Max-style societies and hordes of
pseudo-zombies to the mix. Unfortunately it doesn't add much in the way
of plot, as the characters simply dash from one expensive set piece to
another.
Character
development takes a big hit in this installment as well. Anyone who isn't Thomas is little more than set dressing this time
around. When one of the characters is bitten by a zombie and begins turning into one, we're obviously supposed to be saddened and concerned by
his fate. Unfortunately all I could think was, "Who the hell is this
kid? Was he even in the first movie?"
Despite
the title, there are no mazes in this followup, but there is a lot of
running. Lots and lots of running. There's no time to breathe or think
about what it all means, as the minute they arrive at a point, it's
time to head to the next one.They rarely if ever stand still, like they're afraid if they stop for even a second, the audience
will lose interest and start diddling with their phones.
Most
of these YA film series are action packed, but also contain a message
for those willing to look below the surface. The Hunger Games is about
the evils of the media. The Insurgent series is an allegory
against conformity (I think). The Maze Runner films though... I have no
idea what they're about. Socialized medicine? Thinking outside the box (or the maze)? The needs of the
many outweigh the needs of the few? I'm honestly not sure.
One
last thing— I haven't read any of the books, but I assumed that this
was a trilogy, like the majority of Young Adult series. Well, not quite. Turns out
there are a whopping FIVE books in the series! There's the main Maze Runner Trilogy, plus two prequel books. So does that mean
there are gonna be five movies? As long as they make money, I'd say yes.
Steel yourself, gang, we may still have three more movies to get through.
SPOILERS!
The Plot:
The
film picks up right where the last one left off, which will be mighty
confusing to anyone walking into this one cold. The survivors of the
Maze— Thomas (our hero), Minho, Teresa, Newt, Frypan and Winston— are
all whisked away by helicopter to an unknown facility. It's run by Mr.
Janson (played by Game Of Thrones' Aiden Gillen), who assures them that
he and the facility have absolutely nothing to do with WCKD (the evil
organization that built the Maze).
Janson
explains that Not-WCKD is a safe haven and provides food and shelter
for the many Immunes from the various Mazes (yep, there were more than
one!). Once a day Janson selects several Immunes who will
be taken to yet another even more special sanctuary. Thomas is suspicious of
Janson and Not-WCKD, especially when he notices Teresa is missing.
Aris,
a survivor from another Maze, contacts Thomas and tells him all is not
what it seems in Not-WCKD. The two sneak out of their rooms and explore
the facility. They find a secret lab housing all the previously taken
Immunes in giant tubes. They're apparently being harvested for their
precious bodily fluids, which can cure the Flare (the world-wide plague
that decimated the world). Thomas also overhears
Janson talking to Ava Paige, the evil scientist who runs WCKD, and who apparently got better after seemingly killing herself in the previous film. Gosh, it's a WCKD facility after all! Who would have guessed? Janson
tells Paige that he's close to locating and wiping out the Right Arm, a
resistance group located in the mountains.
Thomas
finds Teresa and rescues her, and he and his group escape the Not-WCKD
facility. They're unprepared for life outside though, in the
lifeless Scorch. They hole up in an abandoned mall, but are attacked by
Cranks (humans turned into zombies by the Flare virus). Winston is
bitten by a Crank, and the group barely escapes for their lives.
They
trudge through the endless Scorch, trying to make it to the mountains
and the Right Hand. Winston begins turning into a Crank and kills
himself. The rest make it to a hidden base at the foot of the mountains.
There they meet Jorgé and his adopted daughter Brenda. Jorgé is an
opportunist and plans to hand the group over to WCKD for a hefty fee. Just
then WCKD attacks Jorgé's base and kills nearly everyone in it. Jorgé,
Brenda and Thomas' group flee and eventually find the Right Arm camp
high in the mountains.
Brenda
was bitten by a Crank during their escape, and Vince (played by Barry
Pepper), the leader of the Right Arm, wants to kill her before she
turns. Mary (played by Lily Taylor), the group's doctor, synthesizes a
serum from Thomas' blood that stops the Flare virus. Unfortunately it
doesn't cure it, and she'll need regular injections of Thomas' blood for
the rest of her life.
WCKD
manages to track down the camp and blows it to smithereens. Teresa
reveals she contacted WCKD and told them their location. Apparently WCKD
restored her wiped memory, and she's now working for them, believing
they only want to cure the Flare. Paige and Janson take Minho, Teresa
and a bunch of other Immunes back to WCKD, leaving Thomas and a handful
of survivors behind. Thomas convinces the others they have to fight back and
overthrow WCKD once and for all, as the screen fades to black.
Thoughts:
• Just a reminder that WCKD stands for World in Catastrophe Killzone
experiment Department, which tells me someone reeeeeeally wanted it to
spell "wicked."
• After
reaching the sanctuary, Thomas and his group take much needed showers.
In true movie fashion, Thomas places one hand against the wall and
stares at the floor as the water pours over him. HAW! I couldn't help but laugh.
Does ANYONE ever take a shower like that in real life?
• The Not-WCKD facility features massive
air vents that are wide enough and sturdy enough for a person to crawl
through. Just like in 95% of movies and TV shows.
• At
the end of the film there's a big ol' full screen credit that reads, "Costume Design By
Sanja Milkovic Hays." Seriously? Someone designed these outfits?
It looks more like Hays drove to North Face, bought all the jackets, shirts, pants and boots they had, dragged them behind her car for a few miles and then passed them out to the cast.
It looks more like Hays drove to North Face, bought all the jackets, shirts, pants and boots they had, dragged them behind her car for a few miles and then passed them out to the cast.
The only costumes I saw that might have actually been designed were the WCKD troopers and Ava Paige's white "Cruella de Vil" coat.
• Patricia Clarkson plays evil WCKD leader Eva Paige. Every time she was onscreen, I couldn't help but think of Tammy I from Parks & Recreation. She even acted like Tammy I!
• Aiden Gillen plays Mr. Janson, Eva Paige's evil minion. Gillen would make a really good live action Reed Richards if Fox ever decides to make a good Fantastic Four movie. One that doesn't feature an all-teen cast, like their recent abomination, that is. He's even got the requisite graying temples!
• Patricia Clarkson plays evil WCKD leader Eva Paige. Every time she was onscreen, I couldn't help but think of Tammy I from Parks & Recreation. She even acted like Tammy I!
• Aiden Gillen plays Mr. Janson, Eva Paige's evil minion. Gillen would make a really good live action Reed Richards if Fox ever decides to make a good Fantastic Four movie. One that doesn't feature an all-teen cast, like their recent abomination, that is. He's even got the requisite graying temples!
• As is the law in most scifi movies, this one features 3D holograms, but with visible scan lines and less resolution than an old school
picture tube TV. Why do they always do that? Why would futuristic video technology look worse than what we have now?
I guess they do this to help sell the idea we're watching a screen and not a live person, but surely there's a better way.
I guess they do this to help sell the idea we're watching a screen and not a live person, but surely there's a better way.
• As Thomas and Aris snoop around Not-WCKD, they find a lab full of giant tubes, each containing a large flea-like monstrosity.
I guess they were supposed to be the Grievers, the monsters that populated the Maze in the previous film. Oddly enough, no one ever comments on them. Not even a perfunctory, "I say, what the heck are those giant weevil things?"
I guess they were supposed to be the Grievers, the monsters that populated the Maze in the previous film. Oddly enough, no one ever comments on them. Not even a perfunctory, "I say, what the heck are those giant weevil things?"
• Once again I have to mention the awesome spectacle of Minho's massive shelf of hair. It juts out a good six to eight inches over his forehead, like the bill of a baseball cap. It's really quite impressive.
* As
they're crossing the vast desert of the Scorch, Minho drains the last
few drops of water from his canteen. He looks at it for a few seconds, then throws it away in disgust.
Hey, might as well, Minho! I'm sure you won't ever be needing something to hold
water in ever again!
• The Crank zombies were pretty impressive and gruesome looking. That said, some of the more advanced specimens appeared to have tendrils or roots growing out of them, looking a lot like the Infected in The Last Of Us video game.
• Ava Paige's giant WCKD transport ship looks a lot like the Hunter Killers from the Terminator films. A LOT. It looks for all the world like they took a Hunter Killer model and stuck two more engines on it and called it a day.
• Ava Paige's giant WCKD transport ship looks a lot like the Hunter Killers from the Terminator films. A LOT. It looks for all the world like they took a Hunter Killer model and stuck two more engines on it and called it a day.
• Lily Taylor plays Mary, the Right Arm's resident doctor. It's always good to see her in anything. Unfortunately she's killed off way too soon.
• When Thomas and his group arrive at the Right Arm's camp, Mary, their resident doctor, tends to Brenda's wound. She synthesizes a serum from Thomas' blood, which treats, but doesn't cure, the Flare virus in her system. She tells Thomas that Brenda will need these injections for the rest of her life, or she'll turn into a Crank.
Jorgé thanks Thomas of the blood, and says he doesn't know what he'd do if anything ever happened to Brenda. Um... Jorgé did just hear Mary say Brenda will need Thomas' blood serum from now on, right? It's a treatment, not a cure.
And what happens after Mary's killed? Does anyone else in the Right Arm know how to make the serum? Seems to me like Brenda's screwed.
• Since this is the second part of a trilogy (unless they split part
three into two lucrative halves), I knew it would end on a cliffhanger.
Trouble was there were about ten spots where it could have ended, but it
kept going and going and going and...
I came close to shouting, "Just end it already!"
I came close to shouting, "Just end it already!"
• At the end of the film, things look pretty grim for our heroes. WCKD has captured Minho and dozens of other
Immunes and is taking them back to their lab to grind them into medicine or whatever they're doing. Thomas and his handful of survivors decide enough's enough, and vow to overthrow WCKD once
and for all.
Since
they're hopelessly outnumbered and outgunned, the outlook's not so
good. They're going to need reinforcements. I predict they'll discover
yet another hidden rebel group somewhere in the mountains. One that has a
large, highly trained army and is equipped with guns, ammo and
vehicles.
That's
exactly what happened in The Hunger Games and the Divergent series. In each case, the
ragtag heroes didn't have a chance against their technologically
superior enemy until they discovered a heretofore unknown army, pulled directly out of the writer's ass. I expect the same thing to happen here.
• When everyone agrees to side with Thomas and attack WCKD, they ask him what
his amazing plan is. The camera cuts to a closeup of him, and fades to
black before he can open his mouth. Eh, don't worry about it, he'll tell you
his plan same time next year!
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