The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Film reviews:

The Darkest Minds

- TJ MCKAY

Adapted from the first instalment of a trilogy of young adult novels penned by Alexandra Bracken, The Darkest Minds conjures dystopian nightmares that will be achingly familiar to fans of The Hunger Games and Divergent series.

The live action debut of Kung Fu Panda director Jennifer Yuh Nelson is set in a bleak, futuristic America where the adult population has turned against child survivors of a deadly epidemic.

One brave girl emerges from the melee to follow her destiny as figurehead of a rebellion, inspiring others to rise up against brutal regimes, which exterminat­e what they do not understand.

Nelson’s film is blessed with a moving central performanc­e from Amandla Stenberg, who captures the vulnerabil­ity of an adolescent heroine who experience­s growing pangs under duress including the first stirrings of hormone-addled desire for a boy. The closing image of the girl, raising her hand in defiance, is strikingly similar to Jennifer Lawrence’s courageous Katniss Everdeen, and Chad Hodge’s script for The Darkest Minds neatly plots three points of a love triangle to mirror the tug of war between Katniss, Peeta and Gale.

Nelson confidentl­y executes all of the elements including some slicklycho­reographed action sequences, but every glossy frame is doused liberally with eau de deja vu.

A pathogen with the unwieldy name Idiopathic Adolescent Acute Neurodegen­eration (IAAN) delivers a fatal blow to 98% of the child population.

Survivors are blessed with potentiall­y deadly powers.

US President Gray (Bradley Whitford), whose son Clancy (Patrick Gibson) is among the afflicted, orders children to be forcibly removed from their homes and relocated to rehabilita­tion camps where they are colour-coded based on their newfound abilities. Green, Blue and Yellow are permitted to live under armed guard, while Orange and Red are eliminated via lethal injection.

Sixteen-year-old Ruby Daly (Amandla Stenberg) is an Orange but has lived under the radar as Green in Thurmond rehabilita­tion camp, where Dr Cate Connor (Mandy Moore) takes a keen interest in the youngster.

The medic risks her life to smuggle Ruby out of the facility to join the fight against the government as part of the Children’s League.

A shocking vision wrenches Ruby away from Cate and the teenager aligns herself with three young fugitives – a Blue called Liam (Harris Dickinson), a Green called Chubs (Skylan Brooks) and a Yellow called Zu (Miya Cech) – who are searching for the fabled safe haven of East River.

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 ??  ?? The Darkest Minds stars, from left, Skylan Brooks as Chubs, Miya Cech as Zu, Amandla Stenberg as Ruby Daly and Harris Dickinson as Liam Stewart.
The Darkest Minds stars, from left, Skylan Brooks as Chubs, Miya Cech as Zu, Amandla Stenberg as Ruby Daly and Harris Dickinson as Liam Stewart.

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