![]() ![]() On top of that, there are certain scenes that are just a bit “ugh” like Cassie spotting Evan Walker (Alex Roe) bathing in a river and apparently having her sexual awakening right there and then. For the most part, it’s mostly exposition, and the characters basically just explaining everything to you, and if it’s not exposition, it’s just downright cringe worthy. I’m one of the only positive voices in a sea of negativity when it comes to this film, and to be fair, it is flawed the dialogue is awful. When the army intervenes, Cassie finds herself alone, and sets out to find Sam before The 5th Wave strikes. ![]() Needless to say, The 5th Wave Blu-Ray disc was not the most exciting thing I’ve received in the post…But it certainly wasn’t the worst, either.Ĭassie Sullivan (Chloe Grace Moretz) is an ordinary teenage girl living in Ohio with her parents (Ron Livingston and Maggie Siff) and little brother Sam (Zackary Arthur) when a strange UFO, controlled by a race referred to as the Others, towers above the city, and before long, four waves of alien forces are sent to wipe out the human race. That gets far more grating than comic book characters going toe to toe with each other. You can complain about superhero movies and their similarities all you want, but we’ve had so many movies in the last six years about a young protagonist in a dystopian/post-apocalyptic future, thrust into a situation they’re not prepared for and having to survive and fight against powerful/unknown forces, with the help of friends they make along the way and a love triangle thrown in too. Some are getting tired of them, and it’s very easy to see why they’re almost always exactly the same. Young adult novels-turned-movies are the thing of today, and they aren’t going anywhere. ![]()
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