Beatrice Prior
(Shailene Woodley) has always known that Abnegation was never her home. Her
heart is always longing to be outside the grey walls of her birthplace, but she
has never known where her longing would take her. On the day of her aptitude
test her mind is set on going with whatever her results suggest, yet a small
piece inside her fears that her results would only affirm that Abnegation is
her true identity.
With a cruel twist of
fate, her results are inconclusive, no, worse. She is Divergent.
Not knowing what it
means to be “Divergent,” Beatrice now has to hide to save her life – the only
thing she knows for sure about being Divergent is that everyone wants you dead.
With Dauntless as her heart’s desire, she abandons her faction and finds
herself in the forefront of a civil war to maintain the fragile peace between
the five factions.
The Story
If you haven’t read
the book, it’s basically about a social system that works on the basis of
groupings called, “factions”. I’m going to go all Mean Girls on you now to describe these groupings.
“Post-apocalypse Chicago is your central nervous system; you’ve got your: Dauntless (the brave); Amnesty (the peaceful), Candor (the honest); the greatest people you will ever meet – Abnegation (the selfless), and the worst, beware of the Erudite (the intelligent).”
Once the city’s
children turn the age of sixteen they have a choice to either stay in their
factions or leave to join another faction. The city’s motto is, “Faction Before
Blood”. Leaving your faction means automatic shunning from your old faction.
Generally, the story
was pretty much the same as the book. I have no qualms with the overall plot
and progression of the film. I thought some parts that were vague in the book
were brilliantly explained through the cinematography in the film. I
particularly liked the simulations of Tris’ fear landscape – specifically
speaking, I enjoyed watching how she overcomes each of her fears is portrayed through
one seamless scene-by-scene progression.
One thing I was a
little disappointed about was the ending. Although it was very close to the
book, I was a little peeved that they didn’t stay true to who is supposed to be controlling the simulations and how it was
undermined. Although I understood why
in terms of the series’ progression, but I thought, since they’d been pretty
much accurate up until that point, why change it?
The Cast
Shailene Woodley is
great in her first big film. She was great lead in the sense that she had that
awkward quirk that Tris needs as she progress through her initiation from
Abnegation to Dauntless, but I’m not confident in her development as to how she
will react to other simulations in the future. There is a fragility in her that
Tris loses by the end of the book and I just didn’t see that in Woodley in this
film. I hope she proves me wrong in the second film.
Theo James was a convincing
Four. Although I pictured Four to be an African American – and that image
played on my mind while I was watching the film – I thought James was stronger
than Woodley in terms of his character presence. It’s not a brooding allure,
it’s a real demand for attention through his facial expressions. There’s a real
jadedness to his portrayal that made his character believable. Which is helpful
considering I didn’t really like Four in the books – no offence Veronica Roth.
Jai Courtney
was a brilliant Eric. Again I pictured Eric a little different – i.e. lankier
and less domineering in looks – but Courtney did Australia proud as he plays
one of the most evil characters I’ve ever encountered in fiction – both on
screen and on paper. He was borderline Heathcliff in this film, yet retained
the Erudite wit within his Dauntless figure. I loved that he found the balance
between Eric’s old faction within his new faction.
Kate Winslet
was a simply flawless in this film. The heartlessness of Jeanine in the books
was definitely conveyed in the film. She did overshadow Woodley, but in such a
way portrays the icy relationship between the characters in the book. Casting
both Winslet and Woodley was perfect with the description that Roth writes in Divergent, where Tris says, “I kind of
look like her.” The cinematography that allows their constant mirroring is a
brilliant kudos to the casting of this film.
Overall,
Divergent was accurate to the book.
So whatever you thought of the book, you’ll think of the film. Everything you
fell in-love with in the book, you’ll fall in-love with in the film. Everything
you hated about the book, you’ll hate about the film. Everything you – well you
get the idea: book = film. If you haven’t read the book, like the Hunger Games, it’ll just be a source of
“more information” for you. I usually recommend reading the books, but when the
film is as accurate as it gets, like the Twilight
Saga, I think the Divergent Series
will be one you can simply watch without reading the book.
sL Star Rating: ★★★
***
Guest Reviewer | Irene's Corner
The best part of the
film would have to be the cast! I’m pretty impressed
with the cast selection for this movie. I think they did really well with
choosing actors who could portray the characters in the novel realistically. I
was particularly impressed with Zoƫ Cravitz who plays, Christina. I think her
portrayal of a “badass” bestfriend was commendable.
The worst part of the
film would probably have to be the over theatrics. Let’s just take a moment to
think about the confrontation scene between Jeanine and Tris towards the end of
the film – can you say cheesy or? For most parts of the movie the music is
pretty bomb – particularly in the zip line scene – but all the overly
orchestrated stuff was a tooootal bummer.
If I could change
anything about this film, I would change the ending.
Irene's Star Rating: ★★★
Next: Captain America: The Winter Soldier
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