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    Movie Review

    Alien apocalypse: The 5th Wave doesn't deserve a sequel as YA sci-fi craze peters out

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 27, 2016 | 9:11 am
    Alien apocalypse: The 5th Wave doesn't deserve a sequel as YA sci-fi craze peters out
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    If you thought that the genre of young adult apocalyptic movies was petering out with the final Hunger Games movie in 2015, think again. Despite significantly lower returns for their respective sequels, both the Divergent and Maze Runner series are coming back to finish their trilogies. And now we can add a new one to the mix with The 5th Wave.

    At least this one — which, as they all are, is based on a book series — brings a little something new to the table. Instead of humans separating into groups and turning on one another, The 5th Wave revives an oldie-but-goodie: the alien invasion. Cassie (Chloë Grace Moretz), along with her family and the rest of humanity, is caught off guard when spaceships invade the atmosphere.

    The unseen aliens then bombard Earth with four waves of destruction. The first is an electromagnetic pulse that knocks out all electricity. The second wave triggers earthquakes around the world, effectively drowning anybody on islands or along the coasts via the resulting tsunamis. The third is a virus spread through birds, and the fourth is the inhabitation of some humans to kill off others without them knowing their attackers are aliens.

    The first half of the movie details these four waves, and thanks to a screenplay by the powerhouse trio of Susannah Grant, Akiva Goldsman, and Jeff Pinkner, it’s actually pretty compelling. Where the story goes wrong, ironically, is when it has to deal with the titular fifth wave and children are turned into soldiers to take out the remaining surviving humans.

    I guess that could be considered a spoiler, but there’s never a doubt where the movie is headed. Taking a cue from The Hunger Games but somehow making it worse, kids as young as 5 are outfitted in uniforms and given guns. This is supposed to be deadly serious, but seeing them suited up and trying to act like badasses elicits a mixture of laughter and pity.

    Meanwhile Cassie, who escaped being turned into a soldier and is trying to survive on her own, runs into a hunky, mysterious guy named Evan (Alex Roe), injecting romantic tension into a movie that doesn’t need it. Nor does it need the triangle that develops when she reconnects with her high school crush, Ben (Nick Robinson).

    Pompously-named director J Blakeson can’t keep the momentum of the first half going, taking weird narrative leaps that remove any suspense the film had. His jumpy style does no favors to Moretz, turning her more into a damsel in distress than the hero she’s shown to be in other films.

    The other recognizable actors in the film are hit and miss. Ron Livingston and Maggie Siff make the most of their short screen time as Cassie’s parents, but Maria Bello is near insufferable as a Southern-fried army sergeant. Liev Schreiber falls in both the good and bad camps as the main bad guy, Colonel Vosch, with hammy scenes overshadowing the subtler ones.

    The 5th Wave is not completely awful, but it should earn very little praise. Just like its genre forebears, it doesn’t really deserve any sequels, but with two more books to adapt and more money to be made, you can expect to see them in the coming years anyway.

    Liev Schreiber in The 5th Wave.

    Liev Schreiber in The 5th Wave
    Photo by Chuck Zlotnick
    Liev Schreiber in The 5th Wave.
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    Movie Review

    Scarlett Johansson makes her directorial debut with Eleanor the Great

    Alex Bentley
    Sep 26, 2025 | 3:00 pm
    June Squibb in Eleanor the Great
    Photo courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics
    June Squibb in Eleanor the Great.

    One of the more remarkable stories in recent movie history is the very late rise of actor June Squibb. Although not an unknown, having appeared in supporting roles in the 1990s and 2000s, Squibb became a sensation after earning an Oscar nomination for her role in Nebraska in 2013 at the age of 84. She has remained in demand ever since, even playing the lead role in Thelma in 2024 and now Eleanor the Great.

    Eleanor (Squibb) is a long-retired woman living in Florida with her best friend, Bessie (Rita Zohar). When Bessie dies, Eleanor’s daughter Lisa (Jessica Hecht) insists she move back to New York to be closer to her family. With no other connections, Eleanor takes Lisa’s suggestion to go to her local Jewish community center to see if she can make some friends there.

    Eleanor inadvertently gets pulled into a Holocaust survivor group, where everyone there assumes she shares their history. Out of embarrassment and a love for Bessie, who was a Holocaust survivor, Eleanor starts sharing Bessie’s stories as if they were her own. Nina (Erin Kellyman), an NYU student, happens to be at the meeting and takes a shine to Eleanor. Soon, the two of them are spending lots of time together, with Nina hoping to use Eleanor’s stories for a piece she’s writing for her journalism class.

    Scarlett Johansson, making her directing debut, and writer Tory Kamen give Squibb a light-yet-dramatic showcase that plays directly to her strengths. Many films that focus on elderly characters use their age as a joke, pointing out how they don’t mesh well with modern times. The filmmakers mostly eschew that kind of storytelling, instead allowing Eleanor to be a full human being who gets caught up in a lie that she can’t seem to shake.

    They also make the wise decision to give Eleanor a compelling foil in Nina, who’s dealing with her own trauma following the recent death of her mother. The grief that Nina and her father, Roger (Chiwetel Ejiofor), are experiencing adds a dimension to the story that that expands its emotional depth. Eleanor and Nina’s growing friendship is portrayed so believably that the inevitable reveal of Eleanor’s deception grows more heartbreaking by the minute.

    Johansson has a few minor missteps in her first attempt as a feature filmmaker, but overall she demonstrates an ability to juggle a variety of characters and situations without losing the thread of the plot. The story is a familiar one that’s been done in different ways before, but Johansson and her team keep it engaging throughout despite its predictable beats.

    Squibb, who is 95 years old (!!), is yet again a wonder in the role. While her and her character’s age are a big part of the story, that fact never overshadows her acting ability. She’s able to find nuances that make Eleanor into a large presence, proving she is a star through and through. The rest of the cast is also great, especially Kellyman and Ejiofor, who inhabit their storyline well without taking away from the main plot.

    There are not many actors who still have the ability to carry an entire movie on their back in their nineties, but Squibb is a delightful exception. The fact that Eleanor the Great is not some disposable trifle makes her continued late-career renaissance all the more impressive, and even more reason to respect her and everyone involved in the film.

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    Eleanor the Great is now playing in theaters.

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