Total Film

Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials

No rest for the WCKD…

- Stephen Kelly

the Maze is one thing,” slurs Aidan Gillen’s Janson, the actor’s Irish accent crackling through the American, “but you kids wouldn’t last a day out in the Scoooorch.” He’s not totally wrong: the huge, monstrous labyrinth of last year’s The Maze Runner – where a group of boys (and girl) found themselves trapped with no memory – is indeed gone. And in its place is... well, everything. Unlike fellow young adult franchise The Hunger Games, sequel The Scorch Trials abandons its USP altogether – boldly opening up, for better and for worse, into something entirely different.

Out of the maze and into the fire, it picks up right where we left off, with Thomas (Dylan O’Brien), Teresa (Kaya Scodelario) and the other ‘Gladers’ on the run from shady organisati­on WCKD (World Catastroph­e Killzone Department). Having escaped their lab, and sinister, Littlefing­er-esque enforcer Janson, they venture out into a post-apocalypti­c world ravaged by solar flares. Here, cities are now ruins in the desert, and a disease has rendered most of the population berserk, screaming zombies. This is the sprawling Scorch, and it looks beautiful.

Free of the Maze’s claustroph­obic selfcontai­nment, returning director Wes Ball runs wild; there’s barely a sequence here lacking style or imaginatio­n. One stand-out shot, for instance, has the group walking in silhouette over a sand dune, only to halt at the sound of a distant gunshot (an infected friend preventing the inevitable). The action scenes are urgent and masterfull­y paced, too; especially one involving a zombie attack in a mall, which builds ever-so-slowly to a grisly reveal likely inspired by cinematic videogame The Last Of Us (the zombies even sound like its Clickers). In fact, compared to other young adult efforts, this is, overall, far more grim and gory.

Even so, such momentum works hard to mask a flimsy and unfocused script (adapted from book two in James Dashner’s YA trilogy). Action is one thing, but the film also needs a better-developed sense of mystery – as well as a deeper exploratio­n of character relationsh­ips and a wit that goes beyond tired lines like, “Well, that doesn’t sound good.” Not necessaril­y deal breakers, and the Empire Strikes Back- esque ending does up the dramatic ante. Yet when the dust settles, The Scorch Trials is, as we’re repeatedly told of WCKD, “good” – just not as good as you want it to be.

‘This is far more grim and gory than other young adult efforts’

THE VERDICT Rather than ‘Maze Runner 2: We’re Gonna Need A Bigger Maze’, The Scorch Trials ambitiousl­y opens up its world with mixed results: gripping action, so-so script.

› Certificat­e 12A Director Wes Ball Starring Dylan O’Brien, Kaya Scodelario, Thomas Brodie-Sangster, Nathalie Emmanuel, Aidan Gillen Screenplay T. S. Nowlin Distributo­r 20th Century Fox Running time 131 mins

 ??  ?? The new workout craze was a bit of ahead-scratcher.
The new workout craze was a bit of ahead-scratcher.

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