Film Review: Divergent - Faction Before Blood

2014-DivergentDivergent
Directed by Neil Burger
Summit Entertainment | Lionsgate
NZ Release: 10 April 2014

I was eager to see how the book would translate onto the big screen and I must say, despite a few gripes, I rather enjoyed it. The action/fight sequences were on point and the visuals were pretty good- despite its less than stellar budget. However I can’t deny that there were a few things, the more I think about it, that didn’t sit quite well with me. While it doesn’t hurt that Four (Theo James), Beatrice Prior aka Tris (Shailene Woodley) and the entire cast really give some great performances, and are mighty-easy on the eye, there were moments where you wondered if anyone who hadn’t read the books would understand what exactly was going on.

Worry not, whether you’ve read the book series or are going in blind, this half of the review is safe and spoiler free.

Shailene Woodley and Theo James in Divergent trailer GIF

If you’ve read the book, you’ll find there were some scenes noticeably absent from the movie- methinks for the mere fact that it errs on the ‘too graphic’ side of things for a comfortable PG-13 rating. (Although I swear they snuck in the f-bomb. Could be my ears?) Also, there are some characterisation changes that may or may not have been due to casting, but first thing’s first:

Yer Divergent, Tris!

So we know the basic storyline from the trailer, a place set in a future, Dystopian, Chicago- with a suitably Dystopian-type fortification/fence/wall- where society is split into five distinct factions (Abnegation, Dauntless, Erudite, Amity and Candor) based on five distinct virtues/traits (selflessness, bravery, intelligence, peacefulness and honesty). At the ripe old age of 16, with a little help of an aptitude test that should tell you what faction you’re geared towards, you’re to choose which faction you want to be part of for the rest of your life. That’s right, no take backs! Once you’ve chosen- that’s it, from there on out it’s “Faction Before Blood”.

With rather stunning aerial shots of a post-apocalyptic Chi-town showing in the background Tris’ voice-over makes it clear from the get-go that while “the system is designed to foster peace” it’s more about control than anything else. And the movie really hammers it into you that this mass categorization of society is merely a means of control.

If you exhibit more than one distinct trait you’re ‘what they call’ Divergent, and that -my friend- is a no no. It is this very predicament the Abnegation-born Tris, who doesn’t fit into any particular category, finds herself. At the Choosing Ceremony she chooses Dauntless, those crazy sons of britches (yes, I do mean pants) and the fun begins. By fun I mean getting the crap kicked out of you and basically getting around by parkour/free-running all the time.

I’m going to go ahead and say that any comparisons to The Hunger Games are unwarranted for the mere fact that if anything Divergent in the grand scheme of things has more in common, plot-wise, with an entirely different series- The Maze Runner. Justification below in the Spoiler Corner- enter at your own risk. Also, if you’re understandably sick of angsty love-triangles Divergent will be a breath of fresh air.

While the movie felt a bit too long, it never felt like it was dragging- except for an extended scene at the end which really milked the high intensity climax for all it was worth. And yet, once things started moving there didn’t seem to be any room to catch one’s breath let alone understand what was going on. I did find myself wondering how the movie would come across to people who hadn’t read the series. There’s a chance the uninitiated could get lost once the pace picks up.

One thing’s for sure, you’ll like the characters- mostly because you’re not given much insight into them. Although we’ll see how that likeability is sustained in the next two movies as we, hopefully, get more. Thank goodness the cast meshed well, making what was some awkward dialogue in places, work. Kate Winslet suffered from Jeanine’s obvious ‘villainry’- I get that it makes for easy storytelling and with the way the novel itself is set up we don’t fully appreciate/understand these characters’ rationales until Allegiant. But you’d think the screenwriters would have found a way around it.

Which is why the movie’s a bit of a fanservice, because anyone who hasn’t read the books might come out thinking the characters were bland and the premise of the story mirrored other YA narratives like no one’s business. It doesn’t help that they utilised shaky cam at points, in a way that was very Hunger Games. For a movie heavy on exposition at the start there is almost no explanation towards the end when the pace picks up. Nevertheless when it comes out on the 10th of April, I’ll no doubt be glad to take my sister to see it again.

As a fan of the series I’m very glad Divergent is practically critic-proof right now, and that we should see Insurgent come 2015. However because of those little hiccups we must give it THREE out of FIVE Silent LOLs. Which is unfortunate because I really wanted to give it…

 

out of FIVE Silent LOLs.

Giggity.

 

Honourable Mentions :

- I really do like the casting and watching the movie confirmed it for me. I heard/read dissent about Shailene Woodley somewhere but *shrug* haters gon’ hate. Theo James’ voice tho’.

- Anyone else Silently LOL about Miles Teller, who played Shailene’s character’s love-interest in The Spectacular Now being her antagonist/rival here and at Ansel Elgort, playing her brother here when he’ll be her love-interest in The Fault in Our Stars? Just me? Okay.

- Amity is totally for the stoners. There, I said it lol.

- Kate Winslet gives good side-eye. That sounds rude, but I assure you we’re keepin’ it PG-13.

- Go take the official aptitude test and find out what faction you’d fit in. (My results show I score Erudite and Dauntless..lol and Candor?)

Divergent Aptitude Results

SpoilerAlertSpoiler Corner! (Not really a corner, is it?) Only go past this point if you’ve read the books, or just don’t care about spoilers. You’ve been warned.

More Maze Runner than Hunger Games:

Jess and I were talking about the series as a whole and how people keep comparing Divergent to The Hunger Games however if you take a step back- and view the series as a whole you’ll find that Divergent has much more in common with The Maze Runner than it does with The Hunger Games outside a female protagonist, a corrupt governing body and a Dystopian future setting. The Maze Runner has also been made into a film, which will be released this September. Spoilers for Both Allegiant and The Death Cure below.

As a whole Tris’ and Thomas’ (Maze Runner) worlds have much more in common than Tris’ and Katniss’. More social behaviour experiments and science than the divide between the haves and the have nots.

Both protagonists in Divergent and The Maze Runner were ‘free’ from whatever it was that the others suffered from. Tris’ genes were ‘healed’ and Thomas didn’t suffer from the flare. Both their original governing officials were responsible for the apocalypse? With manmade weapons/experiments?

So it’s really annoying how people keep comparing it to The Hunger Games when all Divergent really has in common with THG is a strong female lead and a post-apocalyptic/dystopian world.

Peter

Don’t get me wrong, Miles Teller made for great comic relief at points- however that’s the problem. In the book Peter is legitimately seen as a threat to Tris’, and Jess fears that the way the movie’s characterised him is problematic. They’ve made Peter a somewhat lovable douche as opposed to the outright antagonist he is in the novel.

They also nixed the extremely brutal eye-stabbing scene, when Peter proves just how cowardly he is by stabbing Edward (who would have been the number one initiate) in the eye causing him to become factionless as he would not have been able to complete the initiation.

Where’s Uriah?

I do believe the black guy who invited Tris along to zip-lining after capture the flag might be him, but we’re not explicitly given his name. I NEED MY URIAH! Also, Marlene and Zeke and any Dauntless born member. Uriah especially, considering how important he becomes- you’d think they would want to at least introduce him- as it’s HIM that invites Tris to do zip-lining. Insurgent it is then.

Rapey?

I did that thing where you skim tweets and posts on tumblr to gage the general impression from fans and something that I wondered about while watching the movie seemed to be mentioned quite a bit. In the book one of Tris’ fears that shows up in her landscape is a fear of intimacy- in the movie it comes off as though Tris is afraid of Four raping her? The novel makes it very clear that Tris isn’t afraid of Four/Tobias as a person, however the idea of intimacy is such a foreign concept to her- having grown up in Abnegation- that it manifests itself as a fear of being intimate. Perhaps they needed to amp up the urgency of the her fear and the unfortunate by-product is the unpleasantness that moviegoers will subconsciously link to Four.

I do commend how Tris handles herself in that situation. Boom, pow! Onomatopoeia!

Visiting Day?

Visiting day was left out, which is interesting because I can see what they were doing with making Tris’ mum even more badass by stealing away to sneak a meeting with Dauntless guards about. However it therefore leaves out her mum telling Tris that Abnegation parents don’t get to visit their children in Erudite. Which Tris then tells Caleb when she sneaks into Erudite’s headquarters- sowing the seeds of doubt in him about his faction. And further establishing Erudite’s dodginess lol.

But most importantly, where was the Dauntless Cake?

 

10 [Spoiler-Free] Reasons To Read The Divergent Trilogy Before The NZ Premiere!

Divergent-series-by-Veronica-Roth

The film adaptation of the first book, Divergent, in Veronica Roth’s Divergent series will premiere in New Zealand on the 10th of April, just over three weeks after its American release on the 18th of March. While this may suck for everyone here who’s already read the series, and are ready to go, it gives some slackers the chance- and more time- to get their asses into gear and read the trilogy.

But why? I hear you ask, ‘It’s just another dystopian novel’ and ‘gee whiz, sounds like a rip-off of The Hunger Games’. Stop right there, pull your head out of your wazoo and get thee to a bookery! The Young Adult trilogy is dystopian, yes, and there’s a strong female protagonist, yes, but that’s where the comparisons end. Not true- there are more, but the storylines are completely different, each story complex in their own way but more importantly there’s no bloody love triangle in Divergent.

However below are 10 reasons, off the top of our domes, as to why you should read the Divergent trilogy before the movie comes out.

10. Because Reading Is Fun.

This goes without saying, really. Reading is a great way to spend your time. And with Divergent the story is interesting and engrossing, never seeming like a chore to get through.

9. Why Wait For The Movie?

readthebookSeriously, who even has the patience?

8. Spoilers Will Eventually Get You.

Why risk it? In this day and (internet) age you’ll never be safe from spoilers. Preempt that douche bag person who’s going to finish reading the book and make their facebook status: OMG I CAN’T BELIEVE [SPOILER] HAPPENS AND [SPOILER] [SPOILER]!!!!!!

7. So You Can NerdRage With Other Readers.

NerdRageInstead of getting spoiled by one of those douchebags, be one of those douchebags! Kidding, be the kind of reader who nerdrages with other nerdragers away from the innocent eyes of the uninitiated. Believe me, you’ll need to speak to someone else who’s read the series stat.

6. Get To Know The World.

Sure it’s set in a Dystopian Chi-town (Chicago) however there’s more to the setting and context than visual exposition can provide. A lot of the tone of the place and what makes it tick is described in the pages of the series in a way that might not translate well.

5. Get To Know Your Characters.

Surely you want to know more about Four than what you’re presented with in the movie? And sometimes a movie with a lot of characters can be a bit overwhelming. Through reading the book series you’ll be better equipped for the barrage of characters sure to bombard you.

Also, there’s a chance some characters or character’s characteristics have been left out in the transition from page to screen- you need to be acquainted. Uriah springs to mind, he better be in the movies. Or I swear…*nerdrage*. Also the final book gives you much more insight into Four’s character than the movie probably will.

4. For Comparison’s Sake.

Did the book do it better? Or was the movie able to match your expectations- more often than not it doesn’t. However when you’re able to watch with just a hint of objectivity you’ll find comparing the two doesn’t have to be a disgruntling task. You’ll be able to hark back to favourite scenes from the book and compare them to how it’s been rendered onscreen, hopefully liking both respectively.

3. Mental Stimulation!

The underlying themes are rather thought-provoking. There’s the idea of choice and how much of it you have, and what happens when that choice defines who you’re supposed to be for the rest of your life. The books give you ample time to mull over these ideas of choice and identity while also confronting you with the idea of the individual versus the collective.

2. Strong Female Protagonist- GIRL POWER, FEMALE EMPOWERMENT!

The movie’s going to showcase Tris’ strength, however she’s also plagued by quite a bit of internal conflict which you may or may not be privy to unless you read the books. There’s something about Tris’ gradual growth and development in between the pages that you can absorb and revel in, granted there are moments you want to throw the book at the wall- but her strength as described in the books is something to behold.

1. Mental Preparation.

I can’t stress enough how much you need to be prepared for what happens in the third movie (that is if the first movie does as well as I think it will and they make the rest and they don’t split it into two parts for no particular reason) for the sheer fact that in my opinion it saves the entire series. Sure movies take creative liberties with the source material all the time, however it pays to know what’s coming all the same so you can be ready for it. Prepare yourself mentally for how this series ends. (It involves a clown, always be mentally prepared for clowns.)

Watch the final Divergent Trailer

What did you think about the final Divergent trailer? As someone who’s recently read the book I’m rather impressed with how it’s looking. I’m not here to complain about the cast, I think they cast the film adaptation pretty well. Always the first hurddle, in my head. I like Shailene Woodley as Beatrice -Tris- Prior, sure she’s supposed to be a lot blonder but she’s got Beatrice’s fear-to-BAMF face down pat. We’ve got Theo James as Four (he has another name but I’m not sure if it’s spoilery to say it…skip to the next paragraph now if you think it is. His real name, because who would name their kid a number, Tobias.

Hilarious that Miles Teller plays douchebag Peter, because he was her love interest in Spectacular Now, the lovely Zoë Kravitz as the blunt, because she’s from Candor, Christina and another hilarious cast Ansel Elgort as Tris’ brother, Caleb. Yeah, Augustus from The Fault in Our Stars- okay? Yeah a little bit not, just remember to differentiate between movies or it’ll be weird for you. I haven’t seen anything about Will or Al or even Uriah a few other friends she makes in Dauntless.

But Kate Winslet! She has the wonderful job of playing the big bad, scary because she’s so smart that intelligence overrides basic human compassion, Jeanine Matthews. And also, NIKITA!!! I mean, Maggie Q as Tori was a brilliant cast. Brilliant.

The world that the director, Neil Burger, and screenwriters Vanessa Taylor and Evan Daugherty have taken from the books and recreated visually looks like it’s on track. I’m looking forward to the action and the banter and watching Tris move from the stifling Abnegation to the dangerous world of the Dauntless. Mostly I’m keen to see how what I’ve read will translate to audiences on the screen, especially the simulations…and train hopping. I hope people don’t try that at home.