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Nonton film Maze Runner: The Death Cure (2018) full movie subtitle Indonesia


Maze Runner: The Death Cure (2018) full movie subtitle Indonesia

Maze Runner: The Death Cure (2018)
Review Maze Runner: The Death Cure (2018) The “Maze Runner” series, a.k.a. the teenage dystopian franchise that’s not “The Hunger Games” and the sci-fi opera that’s not “Star Wars,” returns with an almost gleefully overstuffed third installment. Oblivious to occupying the pop-culture equivalent of the bottom half of a double bill, “Maze Runner: The Death Cure” aspires to be a grand male weepie: the “Shawshank Redemption” of “Maze Runner” movies.

The first film — like all the entries, adapted from a novel by James Dashner — had a pleasing unity of place and action. (Amnesiac boys attempted to escape from a giant maze.) The draggier sequel, “Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials” (2015), added scale by sending the characters on the run. While “Maze Runner: The Death Cure” continues the trend toward supersizing, at least it moves.

“The Death Cure” opens with a spectacularly staged train rescue indebted to “Mad Max: Fury Road.” It continues with a few too many zombies; the return of a character presumed dead; a lot of sneering from an Ahab-like security officer (Aidan Gillen); a class revolt that’s essentially window dressing; and some of the most homoerotic bromance in a mass release since the “Lord of the Rings” films.

But as silly as they sound, these movies are pretty well made, capable of outsize action and teary intimacy. The director, Wes Ball, knows how to move his camera around a futuristic medical compound, and the filmmaking brio — especially the sights of Earth’s last city, shot in Cape Town — mitigates the eye rolls prompted by the plot.

“The Death Cure” picks up soon after “The Scorch Trials.” The aforementioned train rescue saves a large group of children held captive by WCKD, which harvests the young seeking a cure for the zombie virus, but it fails to retrieve Minho (Ki Hong Lee), Thomas’s buddy since the maze. And Thomas (Dylan O’Brien), as ever, won’t leave anyone behind.

Poor Brenda (Rosa Salazar) persists in appearing to pine for Thomas, but he still carries the torch for the traitorous Teresa (Kaya Scodelario), now an assistant to the WCKD’S chief Machiavellian (Patricia Clarkson). Thomas reserves most of his emotion for Newt (Thomas Brodie-Sangster), whose immunity to the virus comes into question, prompting an outpouring.

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Gally (Will Poulter), resurrected with an almost comical lack of fanfare, is the only character with a sense of humor. Still, it’s hard to accuse a movie with a rescue by airborne bus of excessive self-seriousness.

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