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Movie Review - Maze Runner: The Death Cure

Thank the Lord above (or whatever deity you pray to) that Maze Runner: The Death Cure (what a title) wasn鈥檛 split into two movies. At a bloated and overstuffed 142 minutes, Death Cure could have easily been chopped into a two-part finale.
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Thank the Lord above (or whatever deity you pray to) that Maze Runner: The Death Cure (what a title) wasn鈥檛 split into two movies.

At a bloated and overstuffed 142 minutes, Death Cure could have easily been chopped into a two-part finale. That鈥檚 usually the trend in Young-Adult novel-adaptations in Hollywood. After Harry Potter proved there was big money in making the last chapter in a series a two-fer, every Tom, Dick, and Katniss got on board, with Twilight and The Hunger Games getting unnecessary extensions to their closing movies. You can make a lot more money off two movies than one.

You can almost picture the alternate universe where Death Cure received the grand swan-song two-parter its YA-contemporaries got. In a world where 鈥淢aze Runners鈥 are a national fan base and everyone鈥檚 champing at the bit, waiting for a resolution to the adventures of Thomas and Co., a two-movie finale would make all the sense in the world.

But we don鈥檛 live in that world. We live in a world where the studio executives pushed the last movie of the series into the January dead zone with little fanfare or attention. Death Cure carries not the weight of grand expectations or epic closure, but a sense of dutiful obligation. The cast and crew seem resigned to the fact that their franchise was relegated to the pop culture dustbin before it even properly finished. Everyone鈥檚 here to get their work done as efficiently as possible so they can get back to their careers. They just want to get it over with.

But that doesn鈥檛 mean they don鈥檛 try. The opening scene (a train/car/helicopter heist in the desert) is a virtually dialogue-free scene of slick visual storytelling. It鈥檚 simple, but it鈥檚 executed with such a level of craft that it鈥檚 quite enjoyable. It actually manages to eclipse most of the chase scenes in the recent Fast and Furious movies. It鈥檚 nothing special, but it鈥檚 decent. That maxim holds true for several scenes in Death Cure. It never dazzles, but it鈥檚 often respectable.

Death Cure follows main character Thomas as he attempts to save his friends from the wicked company WCKD (seriously) while they experiment on teens to find a cure for a worldwide plague (if you haven鈥檛 seen the first two films in the series, Death Cure does a terrible job of catching you up on the story). He infiltrates their secure city-compound and must contend with new friends, old enemies, and angry revolutionaries led by a goofy-looking Walton Goggins in zombie makeup.

It鈥檚 a straightforward plot, but Death Cure draaaaaaaaaags it out. Countless characters regurgitate the same points over and over in endless dialogue scenes. Action moments always go on longer than they should. The last hour is one prolonged explosion-fest that wears the viewer down until they鈥檙e begging for the credits to roll.

It鈥檚 not all bad, though. Buried in this buffet of a movie are a few choice scenes. The action, while hectic and disorienting, manages to create some inventive moments, such as a bus dangling from a construction crane and the aforementioned train robbery. The lighting is a bit flat, but it occasionally adds a good colour or shadow to a scene. On a technical level, Death Cure is blandly competent.

Dylan O鈥橞rien will probably never be mistaken for a great actor, but he鈥檚 solid as Thomas, throwing himself into the action scenes with a nice amount of commitment. I wouldn鈥檛 be surprised to see him in the next XXX movie. Aidan Gillen is smarmy as ever as the bland villain, while Patricia Clarkson stands around and drinks whiskey in a nothing role. Walton Goggins and Giancarlo Esposito are great actors, but they鈥檙e clearly in 鈥渃ashing cheques鈥 mode here. Everyone else fades into the background.

Death Cure isn鈥檛 a great movie. It鈥檚 barely a good one. But its slick professionalism is commendable as it reaches its unheralded finale. It goes softly into that good night while most of the movie-going public forgets it even existed. For its loyal fans, it鈥檚 sure to be an appropriate goodbye. For everyone else, it鈥檚 an overly-long snoozefest with some unexpected and welcome high points.

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