Calgary Herald

IS IT TIME TO GROW UP?

Movie series such as Divergent may be fading into the sunset, writes Michael Cavna

-

Have we reached the saturation level with dystopian young adult movies?

The mammoth Hunger Games franchise (which grossed $3 billion globally) seemed to give birth to a new wave of copycat projects in which young, demographi­cally ideal stars are contractua­lly locked in for an entire trilogy or tetralogy at a time. Kid characters might die violently in these dire adventures, but pluckily, the big-picture franchise would soldier its way to the boxoffice vaults.

Now, though, the money train has a markedly lighter load.

Allegiant, the third of four planned films in the Divergent series, debuted to only $29 million domestical­ly last weekend — a disturbing plunge for the studio considerin­g that the first two films in the franchise, Divergent and Insurgent, each opened to a March weekend of more than $52 million.

Dystopia lost to Zootopia, the big animated spectacle laced with a sly little political message, which remained the box-office champ by taking in $38 million domestical­ly, according to studio estimates. The Disney film has now grossed nearly $600 million globally.

Lionsgate has to be especially concerned when you consider that there’s one more film in the Divergent franchise: Ascendant is scheduled to open in June 2017. (“To mitigate its risk on the $110 million project,” Variety reports, “Lionsgate pre-sold the internatio­nal rights to Allegiant, which is handled by an array of distributo­rs.”)

Given Allegiant’s significan­t dip, we have two immediate conclusion­s.

First, many American viewers might be hungry for the promise of happier change. Part of Deadpool’s massive appeal this year, for instance, was due to the fact that this R-rated superhero comedy was not a destroyer of worlds. We welcome the occasional breather from entire cityscapes being levelled, or planets being barely saved by the last-reel sealing of some portal.

Must we always be at world’s end? Sometimes it’s enough, as in Netflix’s Daredevil, just to save the neighbourh­ood.

Besides Allegiant, the boxoffice numbers dipped significan­tly in the domestic market last year for the second Maze Runner film, The Scorch Trials. And a year earlier, The Giver mustered just $45 million in North America.

Maybe it’s just time to let the YA dystopian fields lie fallow for a season.

And then there’s a second, smaller lesson from the Divergent series: Whither the career of the wonderful Shailene Woodley?

After she flashed a precocious­ly steely presence in The Descendant­s, with a signature rasp that can allow her to play a bit older, the actress seemed plotted for a Jennifer Lawrence career arc. Woodley shined in The Fault in Our Stars, playing ill but never cheap-weepy, and signed on to her own youth-in-peril franchise with the Divergent series. But what happens when you’re saddled to a fading franchise for several years?

Woodley is an appealing tal- ent who can deliver authentic humour in dramas pitched at the emotional level of real life. She is deserving of a long and interestin­g career.

But she doesn’t have many projects officially on the docket right now, beyond a role in Oliver Stone’s Snowden later this year. (The politicall­y outspoken actress, who has been stumping for Bernie Sanders, has called Edward Snowden “a hero.”)

Perhaps this is the time for her to diverge from the multiple franchise track that Lawrence followed.

The acting allegiance, after all, should be to her distinctiv­e gifts.

 ?? LIONSGATE ?? Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen in the film, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay — Part 2. Must we always be at world’s end? Sometimes it’s enough, as in Netflix’s Daredevil, just to save the neighbourh­ood.
LIONSGATE Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen in the film, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay — Part 2. Must we always be at world’s end? Sometimes it’s enough, as in Netflix’s Daredevil, just to save the neighbourh­ood.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada