Dylan O’Brien (Thomas) had a REALLY bad accident in set. Had to even get plastic surgery to fix his face! so after that he stepped out for a while to get calm and all that. Then did American Assasssin and then finished this movie
i think teresa lowkey chose to stay on the building, like i think she knew she could’ve gotten on with them but she also knew that everyone saw her as a traitor and she maybe felt like that’s what she deserved
Note: The Griever sting is Flare-like but NOT the Flare. The Griever sting was 100% curable by WCKD, the Flare is not. The point is to find a cure for Flare. Any experiment requires a treatment group (immunes) and a control group (non-immunes) for comparison's sake. So, some of the Gladers are not immune to the Flare. This needs to be remembered. Moreover, the Griever sting cannot be Flare because the immunes would be immune to it. It has to be something deadly that would affect both immunes and non-immunes because any Glader must be at risk of death from it for the sake of the experimental stresses. It also can't be communicable since if one Glader is stung, WCKD would not want all the Gladers to die. The whole idea behind the Trials (Phase I: The Maze, Phase 2: ?) is to create specific engrams in identified areas of the brains of immunes. These engrams, in turn, alter the brain chemistry of the immunes and results in the production of a specific enzyme which has been found to be useful as a temporary treatment for Flare in the non-immune. This enzyme can be extracted directly from the brain of an immune or isolated in his blood. WCKD has discovered that subjecting immunes to life-and-death situations stresses the immunes in ways that creates engrams that sometimes result in a more effective enzyme. In its quest for a more efficacious enzyme or an enzyme that actually cures, WCKD may vary the type of stress inflicted, its severity or lethality and/or its duration. The experiment is an iterative trial-and-error process. The dangers of the Trials are real, and test subjects can and frequently do die as a consequence. The ultimate purpose of the Trials is to find the right combination of stresses that produce an actual cure to Flare. Any experiment requires a treatment group (in this case, immunes) and a control group (non-immunes). WCKD treats all test subjects as if they were lab rats, property of WCKD. All test subjects have brain implants which are used to control memory, provide limited tracking capabilities and to provide biometric data for WCKD researchers. With the exception of Thomas and Teresa, the test subjects are all involuntary subjects. They did not consent to be part of the Trials.
I stumbled across your other Maze Runner videos and I wanted to sub to you guys so I knew when you'd drop the last movie, and here it is, the moment i clicked on your profile haha! Still subscribing, hope you enjoyed the trilogy!
@@jaydenisaidiot07 I mean tbf during my first watch I avoid spoilers and I noticed the mask guy look like gally. So some people like me do noticed things and personally I like to look at details and understand characters
@@jaydenisaidiot07I'm genuinely confused 🤔 how people be so mean a lot in the Internet and assume others like you know people from the Internet personality/in real life......
@@jaydenisaidiot07 would you be a kind gentleman and answer my 3rd comment why do people be so mean and assume others like they know us on the Internet? 🤔🤔🤔
the time gap between the 2nd and 3rd movie is 3 yrs because Dylan O’Brien got injured shooting the train scene if my memory serves me correctly…i also heard a rumor that in the tunnel scene when during the jeep crash the jump wasn’t supposed to flip over, but after they confirmed that all three actors were ok they decided to go with that version of the crash scene
I think the enzyme that is responsible for fighting. The virus is only released when adrenaline and the rest of the fight or flight chemicals are also released. This might be because the only time that the body knows that it's infected is when certain things like heart rate increase and anxiety levels and stress levels increase, and so the body immediately assumes that it's the virus and kicks everything into gear. I'm not sure. But this would make sense, because in the films, you clearly see that the only way they're able to extract the enzyme is by producing fear.
TMR trilogy asks some very deep questions and there's a lot to the films, which a lot of people miss. I've found that a lot of reactors and commenters, present company excluded, of course, ask questions which were actually answered in the films. TMR trilogy is adult filmmaking. Unlike, say, YA films, they don't draw you a picture, which might be rather boring to adults or insult their intelligence. They do give you all the facts you need, though, if you're paying attention, but you have to assemble them together for yourself. That's part of the fun, really. It's the same if you're watching an adult mystery. You can enjoy the trilogy as a simple action-adventure series, and that's fine, but if that's all you're seeing, you're missing a lot. They're really classic Greek tragedy a la Aristotle's "Poetics" in three acts. While I love all the mythologically inspired elements and other aspects of the films, the fundamental theme is quite modern. It's about medical ethics. Is it ethical to conduct human Trials/experiments on non-consenting youths just because the stakes are so high? Does the end justify the means? It's similar to the conundrum encountered after WW II regarding what to do with the data the Nazis acquired from their horribly cruel and sadistic medical "experiments" on concentration camp prisoners. The trilogy actually goes beyond that by essentially asking the Pilate question: "What is truth?" Pilate apparently believed that truth is relative, just like WCKD, without realising he was standing in front of the ultimate answer. Of course, in TMR, Thomas, a Christlike figure, is also the ultimate truth, he's the cure that can save the non-immunes.
Hmmm. That's a very good question, but the Griever sting is not Flare, although similar. So, how did Gally recover from being stung? I guess we're forced to assume that immunes would show symptoms but would eventually recover from Griever sting, whereas non-immunes wouldn't. If that's true, might Ben have eventually recovered on his own? Yikes!
@@wilhelm-z4t yea i could see your point, but have we ever seen immunes who was stung who naturally recoverd from it, i don't think so, and since Gally was not picked up by WCKD, we can assume that he's also very-100% immune, since he than would have recovered from it on his own.
@@quic7434 I agree the conclusion must be Gally is immune to Flare AND that immunes would eventually recover from WCKD's Griever-injected Flare-like virus. I don't think we can conclude he's a "cure" like Thomas, though. Presumably, non-immunes would not recover. Some of the Gladers were immune, others (controls) were not. As far as WCKD's virus is concerned, we never got a chance to see how an immune might react to it long-term before Gally. Alby and Thomas got the antidote pretty quickly, and Ben was banished for trying to kill Thomas. It now seems likely Thomas would have recovered on his own, eventually. Alby and Ben are unknowns since they died due to Griever attacks. We can't really tell if they were immunes or not. Teresa would know, of course, and so would Thomas, if he ever got his memory undisabled. It'd be messed-up to discover sending Ben into the Maze to die might've been totally unnecessarily, if he could recover. And what about some of the other boys crossed out on the wall?
By the way, I just recalled that Lawrence, the severely Flare infected leader of Gally's group, uses an IV solution of the "enzyme." So, his group may have captured some WCKD supplies along the way or know how to extract the enzyme from immunes like Mary. I'm also thinking Gally's rescuers could have found a supply of WCKD's "rescue" pens in the Lab along with Gally. Gally is still clearly an immune, but I'm preferring Gally's rescuers finding WCKD supplies in the Lab as the reason Gally was cured of the Griever sting as opposed to it being a function of his Flare immunity.
annmariemills. It never says were Newt got infected. Personally i believe he was injected with the virus when they arrived to wicked facilities in Scorch Trials, Just in the beginning you can se that the doctor gave him an injection in his right arm and they said it was vitamins. Later when he shows Thomas the arm it shows a mark exactly were he got the injection.
Thx no matter how many times I rewatch I still haven't find how newt gets bit because they were in a car, crash, got out car and the zombies is running towards them still far only one get close but fry shoot that zombies. Can you give me a timestamp if when exactly he got bit?
@@TakakiM-sr1df. I don't think he ever got bit by a crank. I think he got it when they arrived to the Wicked facility in the beginning of Schorch trials. You can se that they gave him an injection in his right arm and they told him that it was vitamins. Watch his right arm when he is telling Thomas that he's infected. The mark on his arm is exactly were he got the injection.
Love all your reactions, and wondered if I can suggest some murder mysteries. The 1974 "Murder on the Orient Express" 1982 "Evil Under the Sun" and the 1978 "Death on The Nile" all by Agatha Christie and so well written that it makes it almost impossible to figure out whodunit😊 Thanks❤
For (SPIDERMAN:NO WAY HOME) MUST WATCH are:- .Tobey(SPIDERMAN 1,2&3) .Andrew Garfield (TASM1&2) .Venom 1&2 . Spiderman into the SPIDERVERSE .DAREDEVIL(S1 will be enough for Spiderman no way home and for HAWKEYE S1 too)
I want to see the reaction to the third movie because I believe it is the third one where Dylan O’Brien got seriously hurt the one who plays Thomas and he kind of stopped acting for quite a while there because of it I think it traumatized him a lot, but he’s back at it for a few years now, so I’m glad to hear that
These were very nice reactions to the TMR trilogy. I really enjoyed them. Here endeth the third lesson of this amazing heroic trilogy. Both the books and the films, I think, are primarily based on four things: The "Theseus and the Minotaur" myth, the myth that the newly dead drank from the river Lethe and forgot their past existence (the test subjects are sort of the walking-dead), "The Lord of the Flies" novel, and the WW II Nazi human experimentation programme. Although these films were adapted from a YA series of books, they are adult films, not YA, which probably explains the reaction of some viewers of that ilk. I'm sorry, but there is no female protagonist with associated love triangle etc. However, there is a love story, albeit one that's subtly understated. The films do homage to the books, but the universe of the films is not the same as the books. Thomas is very different in the films. As mentioned above, the films are deeply rooted in myth. The most obvious aspect being the ancient Greek myth of "Theseus and the Minotaur." Thomas is, naturally, both the hero Theseus and Daedalus, whereas Newt is Ariadne, and therein lies the trilogy's love story. Heroic stories often follow the same basic pattern. In his book "The Hero with a Thousand Faces," Joseph Campbell, distilled the world's myths into a common structure which he called the monomyth or hero's journey. It's very concisely summarized as follows: A hero ventures forth from the world of common day into a region of supernatural wonder: fabulous forces are there encountered and a decisive victory is won: the hero comes back from this mysterious adventure with the power to bestow boons on his fellow man. That's the "Maze Runner" film trilogy in a nutshell. What's the "boon" in the trilogy? Obviously, it's Thomas himself or, more specifically, his blood. He can potentially save mankind. By the end of the third film, Thomas has come to accept this as his destiny which he will meet even if it means his death. Tragic heroes almost always die, and Thomas is a tragic hero. This is without doubt what the epilogue of the final film means. Thomas is going back to the Krank-world, and he is going to offer himself up as a cure even if it means his life is forfeit. Unlike the books, Thomas is not going to remain in the Safe Haven with Brenda to live happily ever after. Even though WCKD's HQ was destroyed along with the city, there were more than one WCKD lab and installation referenced in the films. Ask yourself, where was WCKD evacuating to in the third film? The fact that the trilogy doesn't end with a conventional happy-ending like boy-gets-girl or vice-versa, if that's your preference, also sets it apart. Another reason these are adult films. Nevertheless, many people do crave happy-endings. Instead, the film ends on a hopeful note. Thomas is going back. He's not going to stay in the Safe Haven, which, if you think about it, is really a new Glade. He's going to venture out into the maze again, the krank-filled-world. He's going to try to save, in this case, not just Alby and Minho, but the world. It's an open question whether he'll succeed. We hope so, but we don't know. This time the maze might defeat him. The end of the trilogy brings us full-circle, and we're back at the beginning. Thomas and Theresa are basically mirror images of one another. They're both betrayers, and they both want a cure, but they're complete opposites otherwise. The key difference being Thomas is selfless, whereas Theresa is self-centered. Theresa often refers to her own personal history to explain her actions. Thomas never does. To be fair, Thomas can't because his personal history has been erased, but, even so, we can see his altruism is innate. Personal history would have no bearing on his actions. These attributes primarily motivate their respective actions. Hopefully, everyone realizes there's no way Thomas could ever kill Newt, even Flare Newt. The same is true for Newt, but not Flare-Newt, of course. In that gut-wrenching struggle, Thomas would defend himself, but always stop short of killing Newt. Inevitably, Flare-Newt would kill Thomas. To save Thomas, Newt kills himself, instead, and as the Bible says: "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." Whereas Thomas and Theresa were "oppositum ego," Thomas and Newt were "idem ego." What effect did Newt's death have on Thomas? It's profound. Thomas is palpably different afterwards. He presents a diminished lifeforce and sadness. Not only did Newt die, but a part of Thomas did, too. He will never again be the same person. Newt's death marks a turning point, peripeteia and anagnorisis. From that time forward, Thomas will focus on being "the cure." He's not staying in the Safe Haven, he's leaving to save mankind. Thomas is determined to complete WCKD's mission, and we have yet another instance of immense tragic irony when Thomas, for a second time, offers himself to Ava Paige in lieu of the immunes. This time she accepts, and mankind might have been saved then and there, but Jansen, out of pure selfishness, kills her, and destroys the opportunity. The interplay between selflessness and selfishness is another aspect of the trilogy. "Does the end justify the means" represents WCKD's agenda and is the central theme of the "Maze Runner" trilogy. It's a principle often associated with totalitarianism, and the phrase has its origin with Machiavelli, although the idea is much older. The principle is part and parcel of consequentialism, a teleological theory that says whether an action is morally good or bad depends on its outcomes. The more good outcomes outnumber the bad, the better/more moral the action. Under this rubric if WCKD finds a cure, then WCKD is very good, indeed. Therea/WCKD adhere to this end-means principle rigidly. This principle is, unfortunately, a too common belief today. It allows people to believe their actions are justified regardless of how they go about achieving their desired end result. It potentially allows for all sorts of aberrant behaviors. A rather trivial example of this is the following scenario: My end is to get a certain work promotion. To get it, I work to sabotage all the other candidates. Hopefully, we agree that's not a nice way to behave. This is essentially the viewpoint of WCKD and Theresa, although they are dealing with an end of much greater significance. WCKD and Theresa are totally ruthless in their pursuit of a cure. Thomas, on the other hand, believes that the means are just as important, or, maybe, even more important, than the end. His viewpoint is if the means are morally objectionable in themselves, then this outweighs any potential benefit from the end. In other words, the "how" is just as important as the "why." Thomas, just like WCKD, wants to find a cure to the Flare, he's only opposed to how WCKD tries to do it. Thomas is willing to sacrifice himself to obtain a cure and save humanity. He's not willing, however, to sacrifice the unwilling. Theresa's/WCKD's morality is relativistic and man-centric, whereas Thomas' morality is based on absolute principles and God-centric. Even so, the trilogy challenges both WCKD's and Thomas' perspective, and makes us wonder which one is "right." I'm reminded of Pilate when he said: "What is truth?" We have man's truth, and we have God's Truth. Some miscellaneous observations: The Earth is actually beginning to recover from the effects of the Scorch, that's why you're seeing green etc. Teresa and Dr. Paige were sort of clones of one another. Thomas could never actually kill Dr. Paige, she was like a foster mother to him. The purpose of the VR torture/stress isn't to increase heartrate but to alter brain engrams/chemistry. The increased heartrate is only a side-effect. Thomas was shot in what looks to be the exact same spot as Ben was stung. By the way, under the circumstances, Thomas would have died from that gunshot wound. The only gripe I have about the films, and it's not really that big a gripe, is that Thomas should have died at the end of the third film. Tragic heroes almost always die, and since there weren't any more films, his arc was incomplete or left to the imagination. Why was Theresa put into the maze? She was always meant to coax Thomas back to WCKD, should he survive, as befits her role as "temptress." Why does the mob destroy the city? It's part and parcel of the madness of mobs!! They're fundamentally chaotic and destructive. Finally, what a fantastic trilogy "Maze Runner" is, especially when you consider all three films only cost $157 million. The average cost for a major Hollywood movie is $100 million. You'd never know it watching these three movies that they were done on the cheap. They come across as much more expensive productions. Hats off to the actors for their incredible performances and the director, crew and SFX folks, too. Job very well done.
@@AlexAzure Same, their friends and family lie to them when they say it looks good to not hurt their feelings, that's the problem today, people are too afraid to offend someone, not me, I'll tell you like it is haha have a good one ♡
You cant have one movie without the other and I find it funny because if you didn't have the other two you will probably complain about the first one ending and not having the 2nd or 3rd movie.
Honestly you gotta talk less. talk bout what you're seeing, don't ruin the rest of the film for the minority that haven't seen it. Annoying asf I wanna see your reaction not how excited you are that you already guessed what was gonna happen.
they are not annoying and they do not have to talk less. you sound like you don't want a reaction you want a review. the minority who haven't seen the film are not going to be watching a reaction before they've even seen the film for themselves.
Great! It is very interesting to see your joint detailed reaction to the film Robocop 1987. This is a cool classic movie 🦾🤖🔥 Do you have any plans to do it?
Great! It is very interesting to see your joint detailed reaction to the film Robocop 1987. This is a cool classic movie 🦾🤖🔥 Do you have any plans to do it?
When Tristan said “If Newt dies!” I was like ohhh shit 🤣🤣
It's the kiss of death whenever he says: "X better not die."
Dylan O’Brien (Thomas) had a REALLY bad accident in set. Had to even get plastic surgery to fix his face! so after that he stepped out for a while to get calm and all that. Then did American Assasssin and then finished this movie
i think teresa lowkey chose to stay on the building, like i think she knew she could’ve gotten on with them but she also knew that everyone saw her as a traitor and she maybe felt like that’s what she deserved
One thing most forget, is that Thomas and Teresa worked for The company in the Lab, so he may be trained to replicate the cure as Teresa was.
Note: The Griever sting is Flare-like but NOT the Flare. The Griever sting was 100% curable by WCKD, the Flare is not. The point is to find a cure for Flare. Any experiment requires a treatment group (immunes) and a control group (non-immunes) for comparison's sake. So, some of the Gladers are not immune to the Flare. This needs to be remembered. Moreover, the Griever sting cannot be Flare because the immunes would be immune to it. It has to be something deadly that would affect both immunes and non-immunes because any Glader must be at risk of death from it for the sake of the experimental stresses. It also can't be communicable since if one Glader is stung, WCKD would not want all the Gladers to die.
The whole idea behind the Trials (Phase I: The Maze, Phase 2: ?) is to create specific engrams in identified areas of the brains of immunes. These engrams, in turn, alter the brain chemistry of the immunes and results in the production of a specific enzyme which has been found to be useful as a temporary treatment for Flare in the non-immune. This enzyme can be extracted directly from the brain of an immune or isolated in his blood. WCKD has discovered that subjecting immunes to life-and-death situations stresses the immunes in ways that creates engrams that sometimes result in a more effective enzyme. In its quest for a more efficacious enzyme or an enzyme that actually cures, WCKD may vary the type of stress inflicted, its severity or lethality and/or its duration. The experiment is an iterative trial-and-error process. The dangers of the Trials are real, and test subjects can and frequently do die as a consequence. The ultimate purpose of the Trials is to find the right combination of stresses that produce an actual cure to Flare. Any experiment requires a treatment group (in this case, immunes) and a control group (non-immunes). WCKD treats all test subjects as if they were lab rats, property of WCKD. All test subjects have brain implants which are used to control memory, provide limited tracking capabilities and to provide biometric data for WCKD researchers. With the exception of Thomas and Teresa, the test subjects are all involuntary subjects. They did not consent to be part of the Trials.
Maze runner- Thomas
Scorch trial- Minho
Death Cure- newts
You guys are hilarious “the crank closet”😂😂😂
I stumbled across your other Maze Runner videos and I wanted to sub to you guys so I knew when you'd drop the last movie, and here it is, the moment i clicked on your profile haha! Still subscribing, hope you enjoyed the trilogy!
Wow this movie is good 😊❤ Just like I remember
19:54 "why does that kinda look like Gally" 🤣
they 100% watched the movie before
@@jaydenisaidiot07 I mean tbf during my first watch I avoid spoilers and I noticed the mask guy look like gally.
So some people like me do noticed things and personally I like to look at details and understand characters
@@jaydenisaidiot07 so I hate you type of people who assume others like you know them/us but you don't know us.
@@jaydenisaidiot07I'm genuinely confused 🤔 how people be so mean a lot in the Internet and assume others like you know people from the Internet personality/in real life......
@@jaydenisaidiot07 would you be a kind gentleman and answer my 3rd comment why do people be so mean and assume others like they know us on the Internet? 🤔🤔🤔
minho never knew about newt’s death, they are the OG friend in the maze
Minho came after Brenda and saw Newts body. He knew basically right after he died
the time gap between the 2nd and 3rd movie is 3 yrs because Dylan O’Brien got injured shooting the train scene if my memory serves me correctly…i also heard a rumor that in the tunnel scene when during the jeep crash the jump wasn’t supposed to flip over, but after they confirmed that all three actors were ok they decided to go with that version of the crash scene
Yes, my understanding is that the jeep crash in the tunnel was unscripted, too. Dylan O'Brien was probably thinking "Not again."
I think the enzyme that is responsible for fighting. The virus is only released when adrenaline and the rest of the fight or flight chemicals are also released. This might be because the only time that the body knows that it's infected is when certain things like heart rate increase and anxiety levels and stress levels increase, and so the body immediately assumes that it's the virus and kicks everything into gear. I'm not sure. But this would make sense, because in the films, you clearly see that the only way they're able to extract the enzyme is by producing fear.
TMR trilogy asks some very deep questions and there's a lot to the films, which a lot of people miss. I've found that a lot of reactors and commenters, present company excluded, of course, ask questions which were actually answered in the films. TMR trilogy is adult filmmaking. Unlike, say, YA films, they don't draw you a picture, which might be rather boring to adults or insult their intelligence. They do give you all the facts you need, though, if you're paying attention, but you have to assemble them together for yourself. That's part of the fun, really. It's the same if you're watching an adult mystery. You can enjoy the trilogy as a simple action-adventure series, and that's fine, but if that's all you're seeing, you're missing a lot. They're really classic Greek tragedy a la Aristotle's "Poetics" in three acts. While I love all the mythologically inspired elements and other aspects of the films, the fundamental theme is quite modern. It's about medical ethics. Is it ethical to conduct human Trials/experiments on non-consenting youths just because the stakes are so high? Does the end justify the means? It's similar to the conundrum encountered after WW II regarding what to do with the data the Nazis acquired from their horribly cruel and sadistic medical "experiments" on concentration camp prisoners. The trilogy actually goes beyond that by essentially asking the Pilate question: "What is truth?" Pilate apparently believed that truth is relative, just like WCKD, without realising he was standing in front of the ultimate answer. Of course, in TMR, Thomas, a Christlike figure, is also the ultimate truth, he's the cure that can save the non-immunes.
just realized something while watching this movie again. Since Gally is still alive does this mean that he is also full immune just like thomas
Hmmm. That's a very good question, but the Griever sting is not Flare, although similar. So, how did Gally recover from being stung? I guess we're forced to assume that immunes would show symptoms but would eventually recover from Griever sting, whereas non-immunes wouldn't. If that's true, might Ben have eventually recovered on his own? Yikes!
@@wilhelm-z4t yea i could see your point, but have we ever seen immunes who was stung who naturally recoverd from it, i don't think so, and since Gally was not picked up by WCKD, we can assume that he's also very-100% immune, since he than would have recovered from it on his own.
@@quic7434 I agree the conclusion must be Gally is immune to Flare AND that immunes would eventually recover from WCKD's Griever-injected Flare-like virus. I don't think we can conclude he's a "cure" like Thomas, though. Presumably, non-immunes would not recover. Some of the Gladers were immune, others (controls) were not. As far as WCKD's virus is concerned, we never got a chance to see how an immune might react to it long-term before Gally. Alby and Thomas got the antidote pretty quickly, and Ben was banished for trying to kill Thomas. It now seems likely Thomas would have recovered on his own, eventually. Alby and Ben are unknowns since they died due to Griever attacks. We can't really tell if they were immunes or not. Teresa would know, of course, and so would Thomas, if he ever got his memory undisabled. It'd be messed-up to discover sending Ben into the Maze to die might've been totally unnecessarily, if he could recover. And what about some of the other boys crossed out on the wall?
By the way, I just recalled that Lawrence, the severely Flare infected leader of Gally's group, uses an IV solution of the "enzyme." So, his group may have captured some WCKD supplies along the way or know how to extract the enzyme from immunes like Mary. I'm also thinking Gally's rescuers could have found a supply of WCKD's "rescue" pens in the Lab along with Gally. Gally is still clearly an immune, but I'm preferring Gally's rescuers finding WCKD supplies in the Lab as the reason Gally was cured of the Griever sting as opposed to it being a function of his Flare immunity.
yes, gally is fully immune. he says it when he says “i was picked up by a group headed to the city. they realized i was immune and patched me up”
18:27 yeah that tower is definitely white gold tower 😂
Newt got scratches when they were in the tunnel.😮
annmariemills. It never says were Newt got infected. Personally i believe he was injected with the virus when they arrived to wicked facilities in Scorch Trials, Just in the beginning you can se that the doctor gave him an injection in his right arm and they said it was vitamins.
Later when he shows Thomas the arm it shows a mark exactly were he got the injection.
Thx no matter how many times I rewatch I still haven't find how newt gets bit because they were in a car, crash, got out car and the zombies is running towards them still far only one get close but fry shoot that zombies.
Can you give me a timestamp if when exactly he got bit?
@@TakakiM-sr1df. I don't think he ever got bit by a crank. I think he got it when they arrived to the Wicked facility in the beginning of Schorch trials. You can se that they gave him an injection in his right arm and they told him that it was vitamins. Watch his right arm when he is telling Thomas that he's infected. The mark on his arm is exactly were he got the injection.
Love all your reactions, and wondered if I can suggest some murder mysteries. The 1974 "Murder on the Orient Express" 1982 "Evil Under the Sun" and the 1978 "Death on The Nile" all by Agatha Christie and so well written that it makes it almost impossible to figure out whodunit😊 Thanks❤
Finally I was waiting for this video for a while lmaooo
fast and furious intro vibes
For (SPIDERMAN:NO WAY HOME) MUST WATCH are:-
.Tobey(SPIDERMAN 1,2&3)
.Andrew Garfield (TASM1&2)
.Venom 1&2
. Spiderman into the SPIDERVERSE
.DAREDEVIL(S1 will be enough for Spiderman no way home and for HAWKEYE S1 too)
He can pull down that chopper so they can get both of them
I want to see the reaction to the third movie because I believe it is the third one where Dylan O’Brien got seriously hurt the one who plays Thomas and he kind of stopped acting for quite a while there because of it I think it traumatized him a lot, but he’s back at it for a few years now, so I’m glad to hear that
These were very nice reactions to the TMR trilogy. I really enjoyed them.
Here endeth the third lesson of this amazing heroic trilogy. Both the books and the films, I think, are primarily based on four things: The "Theseus and the Minotaur" myth, the myth that the newly dead drank from the river Lethe and forgot their past existence (the test subjects are sort of the walking-dead), "The Lord of the Flies" novel, and the WW II Nazi human experimentation programme.
Although these films were adapted from a YA series of books, they are adult films, not YA, which probably explains the reaction of some viewers of that ilk. I'm sorry, but there is no female protagonist with associated love triangle etc. However, there is a love story, albeit one that's subtly understated. The films do homage to the books, but the universe of the films is not the same as the books. Thomas is very different in the films.
As mentioned above, the films are deeply rooted in myth. The most obvious aspect being the ancient Greek myth of "Theseus and the Minotaur." Thomas is, naturally, both the hero Theseus and Daedalus, whereas Newt is Ariadne, and therein lies the trilogy's love story.
Heroic stories often follow the same basic pattern. In his book "The Hero with a Thousand Faces," Joseph Campbell, distilled the world's myths into a common structure which he called the monomyth or hero's journey. It's very concisely summarized as follows: A hero ventures forth from the world of common day into a region of supernatural wonder: fabulous forces are there encountered and a decisive victory is won: the hero comes back from this mysterious adventure with the power to bestow boons on his fellow man. That's the "Maze Runner" film trilogy in a nutshell.
What's the "boon" in the trilogy? Obviously, it's Thomas himself or, more specifically, his blood. He can potentially save mankind. By the end of the third film, Thomas has come to accept this as his destiny which he will meet even if it means his death. Tragic heroes almost always die, and Thomas is a tragic hero. This is without doubt what the epilogue of the final film means. Thomas is going back to the Krank-world, and he is going to offer himself up as a cure even if it means his life is forfeit. Unlike the books, Thomas is not going to remain in the Safe Haven with Brenda to live happily ever after. Even though WCKD's HQ was destroyed along with the city, there were more than one WCKD lab and installation referenced in the films. Ask yourself, where was WCKD evacuating to in the third film?
The fact that the trilogy doesn't end with a conventional happy-ending like boy-gets-girl or vice-versa, if that's your preference, also sets it apart. Another reason these are adult films. Nevertheless, many people do crave happy-endings. Instead, the film ends on a hopeful note. Thomas is going back. He's not going to stay in the Safe Haven, which, if you think about it, is really a new Glade. He's going to venture out into the maze again, the krank-filled-world. He's going to try to save, in this case, not just Alby and Minho, but the world. It's an open question whether he'll succeed. We hope so, but we don't know. This time the maze might defeat him. The end of the trilogy brings us full-circle, and we're back at the beginning.
Thomas and Theresa are basically mirror images of one another. They're both betrayers, and they both want a cure, but they're complete opposites otherwise. The key difference being Thomas is selfless, whereas Theresa is self-centered. Theresa often refers to her own personal history to explain her actions. Thomas never does. To be fair, Thomas can't because his personal history has been erased, but, even so, we can see his altruism is innate. Personal history would have no bearing on his actions. These attributes primarily motivate their respective actions.
Hopefully, everyone realizes there's no way Thomas could ever kill Newt, even Flare Newt. The same is true for Newt, but not Flare-Newt, of course. In that gut-wrenching struggle, Thomas would defend himself, but always stop short of killing Newt. Inevitably, Flare-Newt would kill Thomas. To save Thomas, Newt kills himself, instead, and as the Bible says: "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." Whereas Thomas and Theresa were "oppositum ego," Thomas and Newt were "idem ego."
What effect did Newt's death have on Thomas? It's profound. Thomas is palpably different afterwards. He presents a diminished lifeforce and sadness. Not only did Newt die, but a part of Thomas did, too. He will never again be the same person. Newt's death marks a turning point, peripeteia and anagnorisis. From that time forward, Thomas will focus on being "the cure." He's not staying in the Safe Haven, he's leaving to save mankind. Thomas is determined to complete WCKD's mission, and we have yet another instance of immense tragic irony when Thomas, for a second time, offers himself to Ava Paige in lieu of the immunes. This time she accepts, and mankind might have been saved then and there, but Jansen, out of pure selfishness, kills her, and destroys the opportunity. The interplay between selflessness and selfishness is another aspect of the trilogy.
"Does the end justify the means" represents WCKD's agenda and is the central theme of the "Maze Runner" trilogy. It's a principle often associated with totalitarianism, and the phrase has its origin with Machiavelli, although the idea is much older. The principle is part and parcel of consequentialism, a teleological theory that says whether an action is morally good or bad depends on its outcomes. The more good outcomes outnumber the bad, the better/more moral the action. Under this rubric if WCKD finds a cure, then WCKD is very good, indeed.
Therea/WCKD adhere to this end-means principle rigidly. This principle is, unfortunately, a too common belief today. It allows people to believe their actions are justified regardless of how they go about achieving their desired end result. It potentially allows for all sorts of aberrant behaviors. A rather trivial example of this is the following scenario: My end is to get a certain work promotion. To get it, I work to sabotage all the other candidates. Hopefully, we agree that's not a nice way to behave. This is essentially the viewpoint of WCKD and Theresa, although they are dealing with an end of much greater significance. WCKD and Theresa are totally ruthless in their pursuit of a cure.
Thomas, on the other hand, believes that the means are just as important, or, maybe, even more important, than the end. His viewpoint is if the means are morally objectionable in themselves, then this outweighs any potential benefit from the end. In other words, the "how" is just as important as the "why." Thomas, just like WCKD, wants to find a cure to the Flare, he's only opposed to how WCKD tries to do it. Thomas is willing to sacrifice himself to obtain a cure and save humanity. He's not willing, however, to sacrifice the unwilling.
Theresa's/WCKD's morality is relativistic and man-centric, whereas Thomas' morality is based on absolute principles and God-centric. Even so, the trilogy challenges both WCKD's and Thomas' perspective, and makes us wonder which one is "right." I'm reminded of Pilate when he said: "What is truth?" We have man's truth, and we have God's Truth.
Some miscellaneous observations:
The Earth is actually beginning to recover from the effects of the Scorch, that's why you're seeing green etc.
Teresa and Dr. Paige were sort of clones of one another. Thomas could never actually kill Dr. Paige, she was like a foster mother to him.
The purpose of the VR torture/stress isn't to increase heartrate but to alter brain engrams/chemistry. The increased heartrate is only a side-effect.
Thomas was shot in what looks to be the exact same spot as Ben was stung. By the way, under the circumstances, Thomas would have died from that gunshot wound. The only gripe I have about the films, and it's not really that big a gripe, is that Thomas should have died at the end of the third film. Tragic heroes almost always die, and since there weren't any more films, his arc was incomplete or left to the imagination.
Why was Theresa put into the maze? She was always meant to coax Thomas back to WCKD, should he survive, as befits her role as "temptress."
Why does the mob destroy the city? It's part and parcel of the madness of mobs!! They're fundamentally chaotic and destructive.
Finally, what a fantastic trilogy "Maze Runner" is, especially when you consider all three films only cost $157 million. The average cost for a major Hollywood movie is $100 million. You'd never know it watching these three movies that they were done on the cheap. They come across as much more expensive productions. Hats off to the actors for their incredible performances and the director, crew and SFX folks, too. Job very well done.
I wish they made more
You guys need to watch (american assassin) dylan main character
Personaly I like the Newtmas ship Newt and Thomas forever!
Yes, it's clear Thomas and Newt are the real couple in the trilogy. They don't hit you over the head with it, but it's obvious, nevertheless.
Brenda is bae❤
She looks a million times better with longer hair, I know that much. The last movie? Eh, she looked bad with short hair haha just my opinion
@@LexyThomas134 I agree, I just don't like short hair on girls at all tbh
@@AlexAzure Same, their friends and family lie to them when they say it looks good to not hurt their feelings, that's the problem today, people are too afraid to offend someone, not me, I'll tell you like it is haha have a good one ♡
Agree Brenda is bae personally I take Teresa 😏😏😏
@@TakakiM-sr1df I respect it
But wait there’s more 44:59
🖤
Think you guys would enjoy the movie “I am legend”
Not me for one reason
Spoiler
They killed the dog. I can't stand movies that do that haha
You cant have one movie without the other and I find it funny because if you didn't have the other two you will probably complain about the first one ending and not having the 2nd or 3rd movie.
when will you watch black panther 2. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Spider-Man no way home reaction plz
Day 263 of requesting Game of Thrones reaction!
WATCH SUPER 8 PLSSSS
Can u pls keep watch Marvel series + Agent of shild show pls ♥ +1
Honestly you gotta talk less. talk bout what you're seeing, don't ruin the rest of the film for the minority that haven't seen it. Annoying asf I wanna see your reaction not how excited you are that you already guessed what was gonna happen.
they are not annoying and they do not have to talk less. you sound like you don't want a reaction you want a review.
the minority who haven't seen the film are not going to be watching a reaction before they've even seen the film for themselves.
Great! It is very interesting to see your joint detailed reaction to the film Robocop 1987. This is a cool classic movie 🦾🤖🔥
Do you have any plans to do it?
Great! It is very interesting to see your joint detailed reaction to the film Robocop 1987. This is a cool classic movie 🦾🤖🔥
Do you have any plans to do it?