Enders Game: A review and comparison of the new hit movie and the bestselling novel.
I
finally got time to see the movie version of my favorite book of all time,
Enders Game. Because of how important
this film was to me, I am going to do this review in two parts. First I will review the movie by itself and
secondly I will do a comparison of the film to the book, its short comings and
what I would have personally preferred to have seen. The second portion will be almost 100% spoilers both of the film and the
movie so if you have read the book but not seen the movie, vice versa or not
seen or read either you might want to avoid that section.
The
film Enders Game takes place in the future on an Earth that has survived an
attack by an alien species know as the Formics.
Our victory was secured against all odds when a pilot named Mazor
Rackham got off a lucky shot that destroyed their entire fleet. With our victory being so narrow and the
threat of a second invasion of the Formics looming, the governments of the
world decided to start training the most elite commanders Earth has ever
seen. Recruiting children while they are
young and controlling every aspect of their training in a battle school that
orbits Earth in space, but time is running out.
Andrew Ender Wiggin is one such child who seems to be Earths best and
maybe last hope in the battle to come but
in order to reach his full potential he must be pushed to his limits
both physically and mentally. Every challenge he faces is a test designed to
train him to be the leader our world needs him to be.
The
character Ender is played by Asa Butterfield, best known for his amazing
performances in Hugo and the Boy With
the Striped Pajamas. However his
performance here is a little underwhelming. The pace at which the movie moves
gives very little time for him to develop properly but he does a decent job at
keeping up. Making up for this however
is the supporting cast which includes Harrison Ford, Ben Kingsley, Viola Davis,
and Nonso Anozie. They provide a much
needed sense of drama around the child actors balancing things out rather well.
Enders
direct commander is Col. Graff played by Ford.
He provides much of the depth in the movie as he is seen as the holder
of secrets or maybe more of the puppet master of battle school. He is the one that designs all of the challenges for the students and
secretly guides them to reach their potential.
The yin to his yang is Maj. Anderson played by Davis who plays a very
stern yet caring teacher who is torn between the mission to create the future
savior of the human race and the reality of what they are doing to children.
The
main fault to the film is that it seems to break down underneath the weight of itself. There seems to be a massive amount of story
that they tried to fit into a mere hour and forty five minutes. This causes
several really choppy transitions between scenes and character development as
well as a lot of very underdeveloped characters and concepts. The stunning eye candy provided by the
special effects and the tone set by the cinematography is truly amazing at
times and does a decent job of balancing out the rushed tone of the movie.
Overall
I think it’s a pretty decent movie. Not
the best I have seen lately but not horrible either. I don’t think the depth of the book gets
translated as well as other recent movies based on novels. For example the solid cores of the Hunger
Games were all well translated onto screen whereas most are missing in Enders
Game.
*****SPOILERS
AHEAD******
Ok, you
were warned so here it goes. Compared to
the book this movie is horrible. All of
the most amazing and compelling points from the book were removed or glossed
over. There was no time taken to develop any one character correctly, nor was there any time to really delve into
the duality of Ender growing into a cold
calculating leader who is so isolated and afraid inside.
The
opening scene has a quote that is attributed to A.E. Wiggin. Andrew Ender Wiggin. Face meet palm. Enders middle name is never mentioned in the
book. Ender is the name given to him by his sister Valentine almost mistakenly
because she couldn’t pronounce Andrew correctly as a child and the nick name
stuck. So 10 seconds into the movie the readers of the book already know that
story hatchet is probably going to be swinging heavily and often. The rest of the opening shows the Formic
invasion and the lone pilot Mazer Rackham saving the world, the only real
differences is they are combining the two invasions that occur in the books
into one which isn’t that bad. This leads to the first scene of Ender in school
on Earth which is pretty close to the book. In fact the first 15 minutes or so
are all really close to the book except for one thing. Ender is 12 years old instead of 6.
Now
this is something I was aware of while the film was still in production and as
someone who likes to write in both novel and screenplay form it was a decision
that makes a lot of sense to me. The
logistics involved in getting an actor young enough to play an extremely mature
6 year old and carry almost half of a movie until transitioning to an actor who
has to be able to look like the 12 year old version of the younger actor and
carry the rest of the movie is way too much work for too little pay off. So I agree with the decision to cut the age
down and the length of actual time at battle school. However they didn’t really
know where to stop. Instead of listing
everything that was different I’ll say that the director picked out specific
things that he seemed to like and ignored other necessary story lines until
they were absolutely necessary and then threw them on as an afterthought. Which
kinda sounds familiar so I looked up the director Gavin Hood who just happens
to be responsible for X-men Origins:
Wolverine. This is making a lot more sense now.
The
core of the novel was that Ender was just a child and you felt so much empathy
for him. In the first chapter you fall
in love with him because he is just a scared young child with a fire deep
inside of him. He knows it’s there but
he resents it because it makes him feel like he is turning into his tormenter
Peter, his older brother. The only thing
he wants is to be normal and when he is hiding in his bed and crying you feel
just like you did when you were a child who felt alone and bullied. This theme caries for maybe half of the book as
Graff uses this isolation to guide and fuel his training. Even at the end of
the war he still feels alone and because of who he is must remain in isolation.
In the movie as soon as Ender is on the shuttle he meets Bean and Alai and even
though Graff tries to single him out, Ender is able to make friends with
everyone in about 5 minutes. So you
never really get that sense of isolation with Ender.
You
also don’t get what makes him what he is. The movie never really shows that he
is a better commander or how he wins. It just keeps setting up single
challenges that once he completes them they graduate him to his next level.
This gets really ridiculous when they rush the story so fast that suddenly he
is in command of his own army and facing what looks like his first real battle.
It’s a battle against two armies. One of his soldiers hurts his leg
because…..well the script told him to that’s why. When Ender gets to the battle room both of
the other armies are already inside and ready for him and he is short handed
but wait, Graff sent a substitute to be on his team, Petra. This is where the
continuity director should have been shot because Petra was on one of the
armies that is already in the battle room.
But this is part of a story line not in the book that the director
really wanted to push which was a special relationship between Petra and Ender.
The thing is at the time this battle takes place in the book Petra is a
commander of her own army and no longer on team Salamander, in fact she even
tires to help some of the bullies at the school attack Ender around this time
in the book. But in the movie they never
progressed that story line so you have to assume she is still on Salamander. As
soon as the battle is over they seem to have decided he is the best thing since
Rackham and promote him out of school….after he turns his nemesis into a
vegetable. This was the second battle shown but in the book Ender had maybe a
hundred battles over the years and many of them were described. Each battle was a lesson for him, he learned,
grew and became a master commander. All
of that was thrown away.
In the
book you see the world through Enders eyes.
You see the way he looks at things and how his thought pattern
works. You get to see him make plans to
get what he wants and then follow through on them. Most importantly you see
what truly makes him great and that is his ability to think like his enemy and
do the exact thing that they would not be able to defend against. His strategies change the entire way that
every battle is played. But the stress that they put on him by making him
battle every day rather than month crushes him and again you realize that he is
still just a child who feels alone. His fight with Bonzo comes before he
battles the two armies and is very significant because he tries to avoid it but
gets caught off guard. Seeing he has no other choice his instincts kick in and
he does what he does best which is finish the fight so there will not be
another one. He doesn’t know that Bonzo
is dead, at least not consciously yet, but it breaks the last of his will and
after the final battle he believes he has truly become his brother and loses
the desire to go on. Since the movie cuts so much out you don’t get the same
sense that these aren’t really kids, more like immature adults. They are so
intelligent and being put through so much they mature faster. So when Bonzo
goes to fight ender it really is a mortal feud.
In the movie it feels like more of a afterschool scuffle until Bonzo
trips and hits his head. This is a first of a few cop outs the movie makes for
Ender, not making him specifically responsible for the injury when in the book
he very intentionally kills him.
This is
also where the huge difference between book Graff and movie Graff starts to
show. Movie Graff seems hell bent on getting Ender to win at all costs, not
caring about what will be left of him.
But in the book you know that Graff really cares for Ender and is
conflicted about what he is doing but continuing regardless because it is his
duty. He goes with Ender to command school in an unofficial capacity, knowing
that once he goes there he might not leave do to secrecy concerns regarding the
location of the school. He does this
willingly because he cannot force Ender to do it alone; he wants to be there to
bear what he can for him. His role does
get a little deeper if you read Enders Shadow but that shouldn’t be considered
here.
The
command school section of the movie is identical to the battle school portion
only with even less time spent on it. He shows up and gets a new teacher, the
legendary Rackham, and meets all his old friends and they start battling in
simulations. They vaguely make reference
to there being a lot of battles but it’s not shown, Ender says the stress is
hard and you have to go with him I guess. Then there is a simulation for
graduation. Ender seems almost more
concerned that soon he will start real battles then with the upcoming battle
but he soon has to put in everything he has to win one last battle. And it
turns out that it really is the last battle as he has been in control of the
real fleet the entire time and just destroyed an entire race. He seems a bit offended for a minute or two
but then the director remembered that he forgot there was a whole rest of an
ending to tack on and has Ender run outside and grab a Formic queen egg and
then literally just get in a ship and say he’s going to travel the universe.
Because storylines, fuck them right, let’s just give this child sociopath we’ve
created a ship and let him go wherever he wants.
In the
book command school is a whole different animal. Ender is reenergized and more mature. He is
out of his element but is taking on a new role where he only really answers to
his teacher Rackham. He doesn’t seem to acknowledge anyone else as having
authority over him. He studies strategy with Rackham for months and learns to
use simulator to command what he thinks is a make believe fleet. Eventually he
is given commanders to control the smaller armies in his fleet and it turns out
they are his old friends. The main difference is he never sees them; he can
only talk to them in the simulators, leaving him still isolated. The battles start and they are covered with
decent detail. At the same time Ender
starts having nightmares about the Formics leading him to become more exhausted
and stressed. But he keeps going and
unlike in the movie it is Petra who breaks down not him. Eventually the lack of
sleep and the stress of multiple gruelingly long battles each day catch up to
him and he finds himself back where he was at battle school, not wanting to
continue anymore. Barely able to walk he is put in his simulator and is told
this battle will be his final test. The screen comes on and the entire Formic
fleet is there in front of him and he has the smallest fleet he has ever used.
He sees that also for the first time there is a planet in the field. Deciding that he doesn’t care he makes a
kamikaze run at the planet and destroys it, the entire Formic fleet as well as
his own. Graff and Rackham then tell him what he has done.
The
realization almost kills ender. The
knowledge that he destroyed an entire species simply crushes him. That night
there is a revolution on the base and Earth as the governments vie for control
in a post war world. But Ender sleeps through it all in a quazi coma. When he
comes through he finds all his friends are there with him. With them and Graff and Rackham, who are now
not his teachers so they can show feelings for Ender, he makes a recovery but
he cannot go back to Earth because the governments want to use him because he
is a hero and a threat now. Valentine
travels to him and convinces him to join her and go to the formerly colonized
Formic planets to start human colonies. It is on this journey years later that
Ender finally finds the last Formic egg and starts his new journey of finding a
home for it to grow and reform the species he once destroyed.
So what
could have been done to improve the movie?
Obviously the chances of ever getting a movie to be as good as a book
are slim but it has been proven time and time again that getting close enough
can be good enough. In my opinion the
best way to have done it would have been a darkly lit anime. It would have been infinitely easier to
transition Ender from a 6 year old to a 15 year old like the book if you just
had to augment the voice actor a little. Envisioning the Battles would have
been smoother and it would have added
the drama needed to make it more tangible.
However that probably wouldn’t get a green light as a blockbuster which
is what they wanted so the next logical and probably the best overall choice
would be to split the movie into two parts. Make the first film 2 hours long
and end it as Ender is finishing battle school.
This frees up so much time to really develop the secondary characters
and add all of the nuances of Enders training that really defined his
character. Enders character would be
beaten mentally and on a ship back to earth with Graff and you could end it
either with the reveal to the audience that Bonzo is dead or with Graff
commenting something along the lines of no matter what Ender decides to do it
won’t change the fact that the war is coming and maybe cut away to the enormity
of the Formic army. Release this one at
the end May or beginning of June and then in October you release the second
film. This one starts on the lake with
Ender still in purgatory. Now the same
thing can be applied to the command school. Add a ton of detail to Enders
training, include the ansible machine,
and move the story line regarding the governments getting ready for a
war forward. This would give plenty of time for the real resolution to unfold
in which Ender is able to find peace with what he has done which is way better
than leaving him as a borderline sociopath with a mental breakdown, an alien
egg and a space ship. But as long as you
don’t go all Peter Jackson and turn the 300 page book into a three part 12 hour
movie it would be fine.
So
that’s my way over winded review of Enders Game. I know it was drawn out but like I said it is
one of my favorite books and I did have high hopes for it. All in all I do still like it, it is just not
what it could have been. Those who are
new to the story (shouldn’t be reading down here!!) will still like it as well
as fans of the books. My next piece I
should be doing is going to be an “everything you need to know” for the
upcoming comic book movies set for release in the next two years. Pretty much it will be a fill in guide for
those who have not read the comics or just want to know a little more back
story about the upcoming films. Also I
plan to break ground on my novel any day now and will be posting it chapter by
chapter as it is written and I would love any and all feedback readers have on
it. Thanks for reading to the end!
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