Note: Â my love of the book predates any knowledge of OSC’s deplorable politics and views on gays. Â Not discussing that here.
I have a long history with the book Ender’s Game. Â My brother gave it to me to read after he read it and loved it, I couldn’t have been more than 10 years old. Â It blew my mind, and it, along with my family’s love of Star Trek, kicked off my life-long love of science fiction. Â So yeah, my brother and I have been waiting for a decent big-screen adaptation for 25 years. Â Is this it? Â Let’s take a look.
The first thing you have to remember is, no book or TV show or whatever survives it’s trip to the Hollywood blockbuster zone unscathed. Â There are several aspects of the book that would make a movie unfilmable – especially the fact that the main character would have to age from 6 to 12. Â The timeline is changed, so kid actors that can actually act can be used. Â Sub-plots are minimized or left out. Â It’s Ender’s story, so the Locke/Demosthenes stuff is left out. Â It wouldn’t be very exciting, to be honest, though it leaves Peter as a common bully and not a flawed genius, like his brother and sister.
Visually, the thing that has to work is Battle School. Â I love what they did with it here, having the Battle room glassed in looks fantastic, and the suits are sweet. Â It’s telling that the main complaint many people have with the movie is that it moved too quickly. Â But it’s already 2 hours, and more time would’ve been a lot to ask of a YA movie.
I was impressed when the casting announcements were made, and for the most part, it’s great. Â Harrison Ford as Graff is great, especially the scenes where he’s bouncing off Viola Davis’s Major Anderson. Â Asa Butterfield does Ender right, somehow making you believe in this kid and root for him, despite his obvious capability for violence and war. Â Abigail Breslin’s Valentine doesn’t get much to do, again, her main plot wasn’t in the movie. Â Hailee Steinfeld as Petra did a solid job, I loved the scene where she’s teaching him to shoot. Â Gavin Hood et al resisted the love interest angle with just a few lingering looks that were suitably understated. Â The rest of the kids were fine, with a mix of ex-Disney channel alums and other young stars. Â Moises Arias had it tough as Bonzo, though. Â He’s pretty short, and I remember the book having that as a fairly even matchup between he and Ender. Â There wasn’t enough development for Bonzo to give him any hints of a Napoleon complex, or to establish him as some hand to hand master, so the fight in the shower just seemed like a mis-match.
Other problems? Â Other than rushing a lot of things, we don’t get much of Command school. Â I know montages get made fun of, but one or two would’ve served this movie. Â They mis-use “The enemy’s gate is down” at the end, but the aftermath of that battle works pretty well, so I’ve forgiven them. Â It’s also odd to think that the cocoon was sitting walking distance from them this whole time, exacerbated by the fact of a LIVE FORMIC QUEEN just hanging out in there. Â The queen is able to speak into Ender’s mind in the books, even when in the cocoon, so while the live queen makes sense for non-fans, it’s tough to believe here.
On the whole, I really enjoyed the movie. Â I kind of wish they could’ve made two movies, or a mini-series with this budget though, so everything could be juuuust right, but after 25 years, it wasn’t happening. Â It’s better than I hoped. Â Fans of the book probably already saw it, non-fans, it’s worth a matinee showing for you.
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