As an adult, I was insulted by how the romance - which is clearly there to cause angsty problems for Cassie later - was so central to the storyline of an alien invasion action film. To make matters worse, it’s marred by a forced love triangle setup for our heroine, Cassie, the boy on whom she had a crush in high school, Ben Parish (Nick Robinson, “ Jurassic World”), and her mysterious new friend Evan (Alex Roe, “Sniper: Legacy”). Instead, what USA Today called “an engaging look at humanity” has become a rushed story of a girl looking to reunite with her little brother, at the hands of screenwriters Susannah Grant, Akiva Goldsman (from whom we expect SO much more), and Jeff Pinkner (who, with Akiva, is part of the team adapting Stephen King’s The Dark Tower to screen - please do well by us, gentlemen!). At the forefront of such a story, you want characters finding their humanity as they come together in a battle against certain destruction. The 5th Wave is trying to break out as the new trilogy fans will clamor for at the cinema, but the “twists” in the story are predictable and the writing is incredibly trite. It takes any real fear we have of them and boils them down to palatable servings, for the youngest demographic of YA fans.
#THE 5TH WAVE (2016 MOVIE#
should do for aliens what Twilight did for vampires as it brings outer-space entities to Earth for the sole purpose of complete annihilation of mankind.” While I haven’t had the pleasure of reading the source material for director J Blakeson’s entry into the world of YA adaptation films, I can say that the movie definitely does for aliens what “ Twilight” did to vampires. In his 2013 review of Rick Yancey’s original young adult (better known as YA) novel, Brian Truitt of USA Today called The 5th Wave “a modern sci-fi masterpiece.
But, as we soon find out, not only are the children being kept secure, they’re also being trained to protect humanity from The Others. They are undetectable, and anyone could be an Other, so the military has come to transport everyone to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base where they will be kept secure. The 4th Wave has begun The Others have begun taking human beings as hosts. Families are divided and relatives separated in the name of safety, as Colonel Vosch (Liev Schreiber, “ Spotlight”) explains the protocols to the adults at the camp. They have small gardens, a mess hall, and clean water, and things start looking up until the military arrives with school buses and begins ushering all children onto them. In his attempt to keep his children safe, Cassie’s father (Ron Livingston, “ The End of the Tour”) ushers the family to a campground nearby where many refugees have found solace in numbers. In the 3rd Wave, a incurable strain of the Avian Flu is released some are immune, some get sick and recover, but most people, like Cassie’s mother, don’t. In the 2nd Wave, incredibly powerful earthquakes unleash tsunamis across the planet, wiping out any cities or towns located near water. The 1st Wave is an electromagnetic pulse that wipes out all electricity, engine power, cell service, and running water - everything we take for granted. The Others, as the visitors are called, do nothing for ten days, but then the Waves of attack begin. ” but then, one day, the end of the world arrives in the form of giant spaceships crossing the planet, and Cassie and her family get the opportunity to spot one cruising above their Ohio home. She tells us, “When you’re in high school, everything feels like the end of the world. The upheaval in Cassie’s life comes not from within, but from without - from beyond, if you will.
#THE 5TH WAVE (2016 TV#
Cassie has a good homelife, honors her curfew, and nurtures a close relationship with her little brother, Sam (Zackary Arthur, “Transparent” TV series).
The first act of the film introduces Cassie Sullivan (Chloë Grace Moretz, “ The Equalizer”) as an average teenage girl - she plays soccer, she goes to parties with her friends, and she’s awkward with the boy she likes. The introductory voiceover for The 5th Wave is certainly not typical of your run-of-the-mill PG-13 fare, but unfortunately, that’s where the non-similarities end. I wonder what that Cassie would think of me now - the Cassie who kills.”