Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials

Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials

2015 • Action, Adventure, Science Fiction, ThrillerPG-13
Thomas and his fellow Gladers face their greatest challenge yet: searching for clues about the mysterious and powerful organization known as WCKD. Their journey takes them to the Scorch, a desolate landscape filled with unimaginable obstacles. Teaming up with resistance fighters, the Gladers take on WCKD’s vastly superior forces and uncover its shocking plans for them all.
Runtime: 2h 11m

Why you shoud read the novel

If you truly want to experience the full scope of The Scorch Trials, you should pick up the original novel by James Dashner instead of relying on the film adaptation. The novel offers significantly deeper insight into the thoughts, fears, and motivations of Thomas and his friends, immersing you in their emotional struggles and moral dilemmas in a way the movie simply cannot. Dashner’s writing creates a richly imagined and terrifying world, crafting a relentless pace and intricate plot twists that will have you turning pages late into the night. Through the book, readers are exposed to a far more complex version of the trials and the environment itself. The perilous journey across the Scorch involves not just physical threats, but also psychological ones, giving you a much broader understanding of the challenges and stakes for each character. The relationships, alliances, and betrayals are enriched with greater context, allowing their actions and choices to resonate more powerfully than what the on-screen adaptation provides. Choosing the novel means you access layers of mystery and psychological suspense that are either glossed over or completely changed in the movie. The written version remains truer to the original vision of the series, preserving surprises and character development arcs untainted by adaptation shortcuts. For anyone looking to uncover all there is to know about this gripping second chapter, the book offers a far more rewarding and engrossing adventure.

Adaptation differences

One of the main differences between The Scorch Trials novel and its movie adaptation is the sequence and context of key events. In the book, the Gladers are quickly thrust into the harsh environment of the Scorch without the prolonged detour at a WCKD facility, which the movie heavily emphasizes. This change alters the pacing and the way the characters learn about their next test, making the film more about escape and survival from the organization's clutches, as opposed to the book's immediate mysterious challenge imposed by WICKED. The portrayal of the Cranks (virus-infected humans) also varies significantly. In the novel, Cranks retain elements of sanity and are capable of communication, thus adding layers to the threat they pose and sometimes evoking sympathy. The movie version turns them into almost zombie-like monsters, prioritizing horror-action sequences over the book’s nuanced depiction of infection and humanity lost. This difference impacts both the tone of the story and the kinds of interactions the group has during their journey. Character relationships and motivations are handled differently as well. For example, Teresa's betrayal is far more complex and ambiguous in the book, involving telepathic communication and her own moral conflict, whereas the film simplifies her motives and role in the group. New characters are introduced earlier or differently in the movie; certain book fan favorites are minimized or omitted, resulting in less pronounced character development and shifting the focus to a more action-centric plot. Finally, the overall structure and ending diverge notably. The book continues the theme of orchestrated trials and leaves readers questioning reality and WICKED’s true intent, with cryptic notes about what the next phase holds. The movie instead opts for a more conventional rebellion narrative, positioning Thomas and his friends as freedom fighters against WCKD, and ending with a clearer call to action. This shift affects the saga’s central mysteries and reduces the psychological complexity that makes the novel’s narrative uniquely compelling.

Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials inspired from

The Scorch Trials
by James Dashner