ipl-logo

Compare And Contrast's Allegiant In The Divergent Series

1052 Words5 Pages

The Divergent series started off as a book series, focusing on a girl named Tris as she grows up in a dystopian society. The Divergent series books were very popular and so were the first two movies with the audience aimed towards teenagers and young adults. This caused the third movie in the Divergent series, Allegiant, to be highly anticipated while coming into 2015. Although it is a great movie, Allegiant in the Divergent series, is frustrating for many teenagers and young adults because the screenwriters for the movie did not follow a lot of the book’s original story. Some of the changed elements included missing characters, changed and missing scenes, relationships and points of view. Warning there will be spoilers. Allegiant is the third …show more content…

One of the relationships changed in the movie is the difference between Tris and Tobias’ group and the rest of the people who are from the Bureau. In the book, it demonstrates how the Chicago group was clearly different from everyone else by the way they dressed. However, in the movie the only person who is different from the people at the Bureau is Tris because she was a true divergent. Another relationship that was adjusted to fit the movie is Tris’ and Tobias’ relationship. In the book, Tris and Tobias went through a big breakup that broke the hearts of many fans (including myself), however Tris did this out of love for Tobias so they could both go their own separate ways. Tris wanted Tobias to go back to Chicago to help save it from the Bureau (who was trying to make them forget everything that happened) while Tris needed to stay back and see what actually was going on at the Bureau. However, in the movie, they did not break up because Tris instead went with Tobias to save their city of Chicago. Many readers, who also watched the movie, were bracing themselves for this big breakup and when it did not come, many people knew the screen writers screwed up the rest of the

Open Document