Edmonton Journal

Been there, done that

Not another teenage melodrama, please — we’re not sure we can take it anymore

- TINA HASSANNIA

Hollywood: Please stop adapting dystopian YA novels. Just stop. I can’t even tell them apart anymore. The earliest YA franchises (Harry Potter, The Hunger Games) had distinct world-building and trendsetti­ng qualities that unfortunat­ely led to a proliferat­ion of copycats: Divergent, Maze Runner, and now, the insipid The Darkest Minds trilogy, in which children develop strange superpower­s and thereby must escape the scary world of adults who want to control them.

A metaphor about adolescent rebellion and the fear of growing up, you say? How quaint.

The Darkest Minds has got everything you’ve been looking for in a YA trilogy — or, more accurately, everything you’ve already seen. Post-apocalypti­c setting ? Check. Children and teens treated poorly by adults for some systemic reason or another? Check. Hero’s journey narrative? Check. Superpower­s? Check. Houses, colours, camps, blocks, or some other arbitrary means to distinguis­h kids from each other? Check. Total lack of imaginatio­n? Check.

The Darkest Minds isn’t even trying: The arbitrary system categorizi­ng kids is based on the most primitive system we learn when we are all but children — colour. Oranges can control minds, which is what 16-yearold protagonis­t, Ruby Daly

(Amandla Stenberg), can do, and Reds breathe fire. Only Greens, Blues and Yellows, who have less harmful abilities like telekinesi­s and control over electricit­y, are allowed to remain alive. Ruby manages to escape a child prison anyway and serendipit­ously finds a family of other teen deserters. Liam (Harris Dickinson), Chubs (Skylan Brooks) and Zu (Miya Cech) survive in a touring hippie van and take care of each other because no one else will.

Their discovery of Edo, a safe space for other kids with superpower­s, doesn’t go as well as planned when the foursome discover the secret motives of the camp run by another Orange, Clancy Gray (Patrick Gibson), putting the group on the run once again, trying to escape bounty hunters and some adult rebellion group led by Mandy Moore, who plays a camp nurse.

The film does so little to build any purpose behind the kids’ mysterious powers that their implementa­tion is poorly designed plot points begging to be torn apart.

For example, if Oranges can control others’ minds, how could they possibly be contained or even stopped and killed in the first place? That kind of power has such an explicit degree of invincibil­ity that it requires a fair bit of world-building to ensure the narrative’s internal logic (see: X-Men).

Here, everything is rushed through, including Ruby’s close friendship with Clancy, who understand­s her on a level Liam simply cannot.

When that friendship quickly sours — for serious reasons the film spends far too little time exploring — the story verges on a kind of teenage melodrama made all the more absurd by the presence of their superpower­s. Speaking of which: Why are the other colours deemed harmless? The telekineti­c kids are just as capable of wreaking fatal havoc (Liam flattens a bunch of Reds in one go by dropping a dumpster on top of them). And, if the number of kids at Edo is any indication, many of them are capable of escaping the prisons. The Darkest Minds is not interested in fleshing out the details of its constructe­d world and, as a result, it becomes increasing­ly difficult to digest the story or characters.

Ruby’s romantic entangleme­nts are also unintentio­nally silly and, to some degree, problemati­c: Whenever she stands up to Liam, all he has to do is physically force her back through telekinesi­s! The closest the film gets to resembling the turbulence of teenage tribulatio­ns is including that real-life physical power imbalance between men and women, but it’s also for no real purpose.

It’s this lack of thoughtful­ness that should have kept The Darkest Minds on the never-ending stack of other unimaginat­ive, copycat YA screenplay­s, never to be greenlit.

 ?? DANIEL MCFADDEN ?? Mandy Moore, left, and Amandla Stenberg star in The Darkest Minds, a derivative YA film that lamely checks all the boxes.
DANIEL MCFADDEN Mandy Moore, left, and Amandla Stenberg star in The Darkest Minds, a derivative YA film that lamely checks all the boxes.

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