Movie Background

Allegiant

Beatrice Prior and Tobias Eaton venture beyond the fence and are taken into protective custody by a mysterious agency known as the Bureau of Genetic Welfare.

Director(s)

James McGrady

Christina Fong

John Wildermuth

Katye Kalivoda

Chad Wheeler

Kate Pulley

Samantha Smith McGrady

Robert Schwentke

Jessica Kivnik

Alicia Accardo

James Madigan

Where to watch

Amazon Video

Amazon Video

Rent

Apple TV Store

Apple TV Store

Rent

Google Play Movies

Google Play Movies

Rent

YouTube

YouTube

Rent

Fandango At Home

Fandango At Home

Rent

Plex

Plex

Rent

Amazon Video

Amazon Video

Buy

Apple TV Store

Apple TV Store

Buy

Google Play Movies

Google Play Movies

Buy

YouTube

YouTube

Buy

Fandango At Home

Fandango At Home

Buy

The Roku Channel

The Roku Channel

Ads

Cast & Crew

Ashley Judd

Ashley Judd

Natalie Prior

Naomi Watts

Naomi Watts

Evelyn Johnson-Eaton

Bill Skarsgård

Bill Skarsgård

Matthew

James McGrady

James McGrady

-

Daniel Dae Kim

Daniel Dae Kim

Jack Kang

Octavia Spencer

Octavia Spencer

Johanna Reyes

Xander Berkeley

Xander Berkeley

Phillip

Jamie Renell

Jamie Renell

Perfexia Medical Technician

Shane Callahan

Shane Callahan

Trial Factionless Member

Miles Teller

Miles Teller

Peter Hayes

Jonny Weston

Jonny Weston

Edgar

Al Vicente

Al Vicente

Trial Factionless Member

John Wildermuth

John Wildermuth

-

Alicia Accardo

Alicia Accardo

-

Mark Hicks

Mark Hicks

One Last Factionless

Gary Weeks

Gary Weeks

Perfexia Father

Zoë Kravitz

Zoë Kravitz

Christina

Samantha Smith McGrady

Samantha Smith McGrady

-

Shailene Woodley

Shailene Woodley

Beatrice 'Tris' Prior

Kyle Clements

Kyle Clements

Factionless Guard

Mekhi Phifer

Mekhi Phifer

Max

Jeff Daniels

Jeff Daniels

David

Derek Roberts

Derek Roberts

Most Scared Factionless

Katye Kalivoda

Katye Kalivoda

-

Christina Fong

Christina Fong

-

James Madigan

James Madigan

-

Amy Parrish

Amy Parrish

Zoe

Michael Beasley

Michael Beasley

Perfexia Uncle

Keiynan Lonsdale

Keiynan Lonsdale

Uriah Pedrad

Andy Bean

Andy Bean

Romit

Janet McTeer

Janet McTeer

Edith Prior

Allie McCulloch

Allie McCulloch

Bureau Staff

Leonardo Santaiti

Leonardo Santaiti

Leo

Hannah Riley

Hannah Riley

Crush Girl

Maggie Q

Maggie Q

Tori Wu

Jose Miguel Vasquez

Jose Miguel Vasquez

Perfexia Patient

Tara Ochs

Tara Ochs

Perfexia Nurse

Scott Poythress

Scott Poythress

Trial Amity Allegiant Member

Ray Stevenson

Ray Stevenson

Marcus Eaton

Theo James

Theo James

Tobias 'Four' Eaton

Rebecca Pidgeon

Rebecca Pidgeon

Sarah

Ansel Elgort

Ansel Elgort

Caleb Prior

Joe Knezevich

Joe Knezevich

Trial Factionless Dissenter

David Kronawitter

David Kronawitter

Perfexia Doctor

Anthony K. Hyatt

Anthony K. Hyatt

Perfexia Son In Law

Zeeko Zaki

Zeeko Zaki

Factionless Squad Leader

Candace B. Harris

Candace B. Harris

Bureau Staff

Suehyla El-Attar Young

Suehyla El-Attar Young

Fringe Parent

Kaleka

Kaleka

Perfexia Grandma

Déjá Dee

Déjá Dee

Trial Candor Member

Eric Mendenhall

Eric Mendenhall

Fringer

Billy 4 Johnston

Billy 4 Johnston

Fringe Child

Danielle Lyn

Danielle Lyn

Natalie's Friend

Joseph David-Jones

Joseph David-Jones

Hollis

David An

David An

-

Nick Madrick

Nick Madrick

Caleb's Guard

Thomas Blake, Jr.

Thomas Blake, Jr.

Fringe Father

Chad Wheeler

Chad Wheeler

-

Rachel Hendrix

Rachel Hendrix

Trial Dauntless Allegiant Member

Kate Pulley

Kate Pulley

-

Dwayne Boyd

Dwayne Boyd

Trial Factionless Supporter

Alan D'Antoni

Alan D'Antoni

-

Nadia Hilker

Nadia Hilker

Nita

Josh Duvendeck

Josh Duvendeck

Young David

Parisa Johnston

Parisa Johnston

Regina

Michael Christopher Rodney

Michael Christopher Rodney

Bureau Soldier

Konrad Howard

Konrad Howard

Jasper

Theo Howard

Theo Howard

Eulis

Lucella Costa

Lucella Costa

Laura

Ben Levin

Ben Levin

Checkpoint Guard

Maria Howell

Maria Howell

Council Member

Ken DuBois

Ken DuBois

Tom

Courtney Hope

Courtney Hope

Anna - Trial Factionless Dissenter

Andrew Farmer

Andrew Farmer

Trial Factionless Dissenter

Kara Cantrell

Kara Cantrell

Trial Factionless Supporter

Garrett Graham

Garrett Graham

Trial Amity Allegiant Member

Blake Webb

Blake Webb

Trial Candor Allegiant Member

Annie Humphrey

Annie Humphrey

Trial Erudite Allegiant Member

Emily Grace Dunn

Emily Grace Dunn

Natalie's Friend

Alana Cavanaugh

Alana Cavanaugh

Natalie's Friend

John Gabriel Rodriquez

John Gabriel Rodriquez

Bureau Soldier / Team Leader

Ryan Ashton

Ryan Ashton

Trial Erudite Member

Julianna Stasio

Julianna Stasio

Trial Dauntless Member

Louis Alexander

Louis Alexander

Fringer

Julie Ivey

Julie Ivey

Fringe Parent

Erin Elizabeth Burns

Erin Elizabeth Burns

Fringe Parent

Adin Steckler

Adin Steckler

Crush Girl

Rebecca Ray

Rebecca Ray

Hot Teacher

Ian Belgard

Ian Belgard

Young Four

Greer Howard

Greer Howard

Perfexia Mother

Pam Smith

Pam Smith

Perfexia Daughter

Anniston Price

Anniston Price

Perfexia Toddler

Robert Schwentke

Robert Schwentke

-

Jessica Kivnik

Jessica Kivnik

-

Details

GenresAdventure, Science Fiction, Action, Mystery
Runtime2h 0 mins
Released on09 Mar 2016
Languageen
Age RatingPG-13
Produced InUnited States of America

Reviews

Frank Ochieng

/10

The first compulsion is to reach for an unflattering label when dubbing the third installment of the **Divergent** series as "the poor man's **Hunger Games**". Sure, the comparison was inevitable but all the Divergent editions had to do was prove that the unfair comparing and contrasting were wrong. Well, the knockoff status was indeed warranted and unfortunately this copycat YA Sci-Fi serving of a harried heroine and her excitable dystopian dealings never mustered up the kind of distinctive expectations that failed to fuel this flaccid futuristic fable. Hence, **The Divergent Series: Allegiant** is an over-stuffed mechanical continuation of a familiar film franchise trying desperately to fulfill its colorful action-packed whimsy left over by its pumped-up predecessors. As mentioned, **Allegiant** is the third episode of the **Divergent** movie series. Of course Veronica Roth is the literary voice responsible for the books on which these films are based. Jokingly, one would probably imagine that both Roth and **Hunger Games** author Suzanne Collins are twin sisters seeing as though their imaginative wells of creativity are similar in style and content. The only difference is that Collins's notable blueprint registered with forceful reception while Roth's wannabe material was like an identical shadow trying to break out in its own shade. Basically, **Allegiant** (much like the rest of the YA genre) is a glorified teen soap opera bombarded with awesome ray guns and youthful cynicism aimed at the controlling over-30 Establishment. Distrust and disillusionment is the recurring theme and the penalty for being young, attractive, repressed and rebellious is a cautionary tale for those that want to challenge the sinister Authority. As with **The Hunger Games'** Katniss Everdeen (played by Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence) we are subjected to Divergent diva Tris Pryor (Shailine Woodley) as the feminine firecracker ready to spring into action defeating the aging forces threatening their post- apocalyptic presence. Unfortunately for Woodley's Tris she does not possess the explosive brooding or riveting material and eye-opening challenges that Lawrence's Katniss was blessed with from the get-go. At least one common denominator is clear: both bad-ass babes have totally catchy, cool-sounding names, right? The sluggish plotting in **Allegiant** revisits the enclosed post-apocalyptic Chicago where various "factions" of young folks are furiously fighting with one another. The tension is percolating big time as the trapped youthful residents are growing increasingly restless. The disenchanted Tris, along with her studly boyfriend Four (Theo James) and group of rebels, decide to break out of their Chicago-bound doldrums and climb the wall to escape their entrapment. Of course this means crossing over some treacherous terrain to reach a more, idyllic surrounding. The destination, as it turns out, is the comfortable haven for the monitoring overlords spying their every step. Thankfully, Tris and her bunch stumble upon a picturesque civilization headed by leader David (Emmy-winner Jeff Daniels). The surroundings look idyllic but David is very shady because his agenda is to recruit the pure and precious Tris for his genetic experimentation. With Tris as his main guinea pig the devious David can plan on using his experimental agenda on the underprivileged pretty kids back in the walled-off Chicago. The educated guess is that David most likely would extend the same kind of testing treatment for "the Fringes" as well (they are the masses that exist outside the wall of Chicago in less flattering pockets of the region). In any event, Tris represents the ideal vision for his replication of purity and perfection to be transferred to the "damaged" souls out there. While Tris is intrigued by the CEO's intention for bettering the impoverished population Four is skeptical about David's focus on his gun-toting honey bunny. To say that **The Divergent Series--Allegiant** is clunky and convoluted even for a showy older kiddie caper is an understatement to say the least. Director Robert Schwentke is basically on auto pilot here as the cameras roll while capturing the drawn out degrees of splashy stunts, showdowns and bombastic special effects flourishes. The silly-minded plot and utter familiarity of the "Big Brother watching over the young perished pretty people" feels empty and repetitive at its compelling core. One cannot perceive the transparent concept of **Allegiant** going through the motions without looking at this anemic actioner as a convenient means to bridge the upcoming remaining installments to protect its promising box office clout. So for those looking forward to **Ascendant** please hold your horses because this is what **Allegiant** strives for...to make one salivate over the next due edition to this tiring movie series. Sure, **The Divergent Series--Allegiant** and perhaps **Ascendant** will offer more of the same and if this is something that its avid fans do not mind then fine...knock yourselves out to your heart's redundant content. **The Divergent Series--Allegiant** (2016) Lionsgate 2 hrs. 1 min. Starring: Shailene Woodley, Theo James, Naomi Watts, Octavia Spencer, Ray Stevenson, Jeff Daniels, Zoe Kravitz and Miles Teller Directed by: Robert Schwentke MPAA Rating: PG-13 Genre: Sci-Fi/Action & Adventure/Fantasy/Romance Critic's Rating: ** stars (out of 4 stars) (c) Frank Ochieng 2016

Reno

6/10

> Realising what's left behind was the home. Here comes the most expected adventure in the 'Divergent' series. I always wondered what lies outside the wall. So this sequel takes us to the new land where a fresh development takes place. A few old characters were terminated in order to introduce a bunch of new ones. As a theme, it just looked like 'The Scorch Trial', but of course totally a different setting. The director was retained from the previous installment and I think he did a good job. The concept was too familiar. 'Scorch Trial', 'Catching Fire', 'Aeon Flux', all these films are just like this one. Thankfully, this story was decent. At least better than the previous and weaker than the first. The pace drastically held back due to the split of a book into two films. It has been done in the old days, but the present trend began after 'Deathly Hallows'. I was excited to know how big stretch it is going to be as a story wise. Because it looked like the things they've accomplished in one place and looking to explore beyond the boundary. I couldn't predict the story, but I knew what's going to happen in the end of every scene. The dystopian theme was clichéd, not the storyline. The way it ended is a sign for a big finale to commence in the final film of the series. Let's hope for 'Ascendant' to end on a high note. 6/10

CinemaSerf

5/10

Picking up where "Insurgent" left off; "Tris" and "Four" determine that they must escape the walls of Chicago and make a new life for themselves - regardless of the risks and uncertainty. Once free - perhaps the only few moments of tension in the film - they hook up with a group of ostensibly like-minded rebels; but are they who they say they are? Seeds of suspicion are sewn that test the relationship between Theo & Shailene; and frankly the patience of the viewer. Jeff Daniels tries hard to inject some menace as "David" but Miles Teller "Peter" is just plain irritating. We are clearly heading for a grand-scale denouement, but where is it? Instead someone decided to leave us with some ambiguity (I suspect a fourth in the franchise may have been, at one stage, on the cards?) The actors are going through the motions as though they, too, can't wait for the conclusion so they can all go home for ice cream. It looks good, they look good, but it isn't much good...

Andre Gonzales

7/10

Probably my favorite out series. They finally make it past the wall and find a whole new world with advance technicallogy. Just like there world the other civilization has there own evil agendas.

RalphRahal

4/10

Allegiant takes the Divergent series in a direction that just doesn’t work, despite having the same strong visuals and solid score as the previous films. The plot feels stretched thin, trying too hard to expand the world while failing to give any real weight to the story. There’s an attempt to build tension and introduce new conflicts, but the character depth just isn’t there. Tris, who started as a strong lead, feels sidelined by a weak script, and halfway through, I found myself disconnected from her journey. The pacing is all over the place, with rushed moments that should have been developed and long stretches that drag without real purpose. The directing tries to hold things together, but it feels like the movie is constantly fighting against itself. Key decisions, especially involving Miles Teller’s character, make no sense at all. Shailene Woodley does her best with what she’s given, but the material doesn't support her performance. The rest of the cast ranges from passable to forgettable, with little to no meaningful character growth. Even the chemistry between characters, which was at least somewhat engaging in the previous films, feels forced and lifeless here. Visually, the cinematography and effects are decent, but they can’t save the film from its weak storytelling. The score is one of the few redeeming factors, adding some much-needed emotion and tension, but it isn’t enough to carry the film. The biggest issue is the lack of a satisfying climax or resolution. The movie builds toward something, only to fizzle out completely, leaving an empty, frustrating ending. It’s no surprise this installment flopped, considering how little effort seemed to go into improving the story. Instead of elevating the franchise, Allegiant feels like a step backward, making it clear why the final chapter was scrapped.

All Trailers

The Divergent Series: Allegiant IMAX® Trailer
THE DIVERGENT SERIES: ALLEGIANT - OFFICIAL UK TRAILER [HD]
THE DIVERGENT SERIES: ALLEGIANT - OFFICIAL TEASER TRAILER [HD]

Teasers

The Divergent Series: Allegiant IMAX® TV Spot

Part of the Series

Insurgent

Insurgent

2015EN
Divergent

Divergent

2014EN