Review: 'Allegiant' Fails to Capture the Spark of the Books
Erin Graham ’19 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
Allegiant opens what seems like a few weeks after the last movie, Insurgent, ended (lazily implied through the main character’s hair growth). Tris Prior (Shailene Woodley) and Tobias Eaton (Theo James) clamber up a dilapidated building to share an intimate, virtually speechless moment. It’s the first of many moments that seems to rely on special effects to draw in the audience and involves little dialogue between two characters that are supposed to be warm and friendly. Within the next half hour, through heavily contrived dialogue, there’s a hasty decision to go beyond the wall. The characters engage in their usual stunts and soon find themselves beyond the wall facing a whole new adventure of genetics, omnipresent governments, and, of course, mistrusting authority.
The dialogue hinders the actors because it’s pedestrian at best, featuring clichés like “gadzooks!” and a fatalistic “uh-oh” right before an explosion. At times it felt like the writers threw random one-liners into a hat and picked them out to assign to random characters; the lines didn’t always fit the characters and just seemed like they were from a list labelled “classic dystopian dialogue” with boxes waiting to be checked.
In the end, the film finally reminds the audience of its essence with entertaining conflict, redemption, plot twists, and exciting action sequences. Overall, however, the movie shows far more allegiance to a contrived, cookie cutter style rather than to that which makes it unique: its characters and ideological conflict. If only there had been some kind of guideline for the movie while it was being written, for example: a book.
Overall Grade: C+
Watch The Trailer: [embedyt] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0G0C-vMHcQY[/embedyt]