While a reliance on obvious feelings doesn’t make for great Oscar bait, it certainly drives a taut, wholly enjoyable action flick, such as “The Death Cure.” The characters’ motivations here are textbook simple: survival, love and friendship. The group’s journey to get back their guy is not one of great emotional or psychological complexity. Minho is being kept prisoner in the walled-off Last City, where he’s subjected to even more cruel laboratory tests by a jerk doctor played by Patricia Clarkson. But first they must rescue their man Minho (Ki Hong Lee) from WCKD’s clutches. Thomas (Dylan O’Brien) and his pals plan to sail away to an island safe-haven, hoping to escape the increasingly hostile world. “The Death Cure” starts where the last film, “The Scorch Trials,” left off. Now, those trigger-happy teens are hungry for a new life - but not before getting revenge. Desperately seeking a cure for a worldwide zombie plague, WCKD spent years inhumanely experimenting on a group of boys who have a rare immunity to the devastating virus. Here he’s Janson, leader of the evil WCKD organization (pronounced “Wicked,” these thugs could use some serious brand reinvention). But “Game of Thrones” actor Aidan Gillen has, indeed, slithered back to the third and final chapter of the “Maze Runner” film series, in which he plays a character just as vile, conniving and, well, squirmy as Petyr Baelish. Lock your doors and hide your Sansas - Littlefinger has returned!
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