Parents' Guide to The Maze Runner

Movie PG-13 2014 113 minutes
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Common Sense Media Review

Sandie Angulo Chen By Sandie Angulo Chen , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 13+

Dystopian tale offers high-stakes action, mystery for teens.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 13+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 12+

Based on 43 parent reviews

Parents say this film can be quite intense, with varying reactions based on children's maturity; some find it suitable for kids as young as 8, while others deem it too violent or disturbing, particularly towards the end. Despite mixed feelings regarding its faithfulness to the source material and some graphic scenes, many appreciate its gripping story and action-packed sequences, recommending parental guidance for younger viewers due to the presence of swearing and intense themes.

  • intense scenes
  • suitable for teens
  • mixed book adaptation
  • swearing present
  • parental guidance advised
  • gripping story
Summarized with AI

age 12+

Based on 278 kid reviews

Kids say this movie is an engaging and thrilling adventure suitable for mature audiences, often recommended for ages 11 and up, although opinions vary on its appropriateness for younger viewers. While it features some violence, mild swearing, and intense scenes, many found the excitement and plot twists commendable despite deviations from the source material.

  • suitable for mature viewers
  • engaging and thrilling
  • some violence present
  • varies by maturity
  • differing from source material
Summarized with AI

What's the Story?

THE MAZE RUNNER is a dystopian thriller based on James Dashner's best-selling YA book trilogy. The action starts immediately, with an elevator taking a scared teenage guy, Thomas (Dylan O'Brien), up into the unknown. When the doors open, he's introduced to the Glade, a mysterious all-boy commune surrounded by an even more mysterious Maze that changes every day and is home to killer mechanized bugs called "Grievers." Every month, the elevator delivers supplies and a new amnesiac resident. None of the imprisoned boys can remember anything but their names, with the newest guy being Thomas. He learns that the Glade residents are divided into groups with specific jobs -- builders, farmers, healers, and the bravest of the group, the runners who go out into the Maze hoping to map it. Thomas' arrival coincides with a series of strange occurrences, the strangest of which is the too-soon arrival of another "greenie," a girl (Kaya Scodelario) who has a note attached to her. ("She's the last one ever.") Realizing that their prospects of surviving without any more supplies are slim, Thomas convinces a small group to face the dangers of the Maze and look for a way out of their bizarre captivity.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say ( 43 ):
Kids say ( 278 ):

As adaptations go, this one is quite faithful to the book, which should please its loyal readers. But those who haven't read the book may be dissatisfied with the lack of fully developed characters and overly compressed pacing. The story's types and tropes will seem familiar to anyone who's seen other YA-based dystopian movies: the super-precocious protagonist who can do exceptional things (in this case, accomplish in three or four days what the rest of the guys couldn't in two or three years); the sense that the adolescents are pawns of cruel, unfeeling adults; the violence that leaves teens dead; and the idea that no one really knows what's going on. Unlike Divergent and Hunger Games, which explain what happened to the post-apocalyptic society from the start, The Maze Runner is more of a pin-hole mystery -- you find out little by little what's actually happening until the very end, and even then, it's just a primer for a second installment.

O'Brien has always been a standout actor (he routinely steals the show on Teen Wolf). Here he's good at the connections with the other guys, all of whom are played well by the cast of young actors -- particularly head runner Minho (Ki Hong Lee), leader Alby (Aml Ameen), second-in-command Newt (Thomas Brodie-Sangster), and the youngest of the Gladers, chubby and charming Chuck (Blake Cooper). The problem is that there's not much depth to the many supporting characters because the movie focuses solely on Thomas, whom the audience doesn't know (he doesn't know himself) but still has to root for, since he's the only one willing to break rules to get out of the Glade. Then there's Scodelario, a nuanced young actress (Wuthering Heights) who's wasted on the tiny role of Teresa, the only girl ever to be sent to the Glade (this isn't Peeta and Katniss or Tris and Four). The action sequences are genuinely heart-pumping (and violent), but the overall story falls a bit flat once it's clear that the Lord of the Flies aspect is secondary to the mystery of who or why these boys are in this horrible prison. Those hoping for a satisfying solution will have to keep their fingers crossed that a second movie will be made ... or just resign themselves to the fact that some of these first books work as standalone stories, and some have to be experienced in their entirety to make sense.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the popularity of movies based on dystopian YA novels. Why do you think adaptations like The Maze Runner are so appealing?

  • For those who've read the Maze Runner book, how does the movie compare? Was it faithful, or did the movie go in a different, unexpected direction? What was left out that you missed, and what was added that you enjoyed?

  • There's more language in the movie than in the book. Do you think language is as important concern compared to violence and sex? Why or why not?

  • How did the movie's violence impact you? How does it compare to what you've seen in other, similar movies?

  • Which characters are role models? What character strengths do they demonstrate?

Movie Details

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