The age of the young adult franchises are upon us now more than ever with yet another entry in the 'Divergent' series being released. Miles Teller's character attempts to inject some comic relief into the proceedings but even his jokes fall flat. The decision to split the final novel into two is for reasons which can really only be described as monetary, a gamble which appears not to have paid off judging by the box office takings. There are large swathes of the film's running time where nothing seems to happen, no surprise considering this is the first of two parts of what is one book. The set of David's office is so over-designed and green-screened to the point that it just became a distraction. What follows is multiple occasions of Tris being called up to David's office for meetings- like an episode of The Apprentice- but instead of getting fired she exchanges some of the dullest exposition dialogue heard in the cinema so far this year. We follow our protagonists- doe-eyed Tris and perpetually dull Four- through the wastelands and into the hands of sinisterly-titled Bureau of Genetic Welfare, led by Jeff Daniels' character David. The worst of the Divergent series to date, in Allegiant we finally see what lies beyond the walls which encircle Chicago.
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