On the bright side, there are two characters from the second Maze Runner movie who were on the car they rescued but I will be damned if I remember them and they are done in the movie once they are rescued and acknowledged. Anyway, Thomas and his team are trying to save Minho and fail miserably when they steal a plane and then rescue the wrong train car full of children who were to be experimented upon by WCKD. I am still describing the first five minutes of this terrible movie and already I am desperately distracted. I spent a good deal of time considering the name because I had little else holding my interest. My best guess is that his name is pronounced Min-Ho but I can’t be sure about that. I’m not kidding at various points in the movie, Minho is called Minnow, Mean-Ho, and Meano. Thomas and his team are here to rescue their friend Minho (Ki Hong Lee) whose name changes at least seven times throughout the movie, depending on which character is talking. I assume the evil corporation is called Wicked just in case the audience is dumb enough not to realize who the bad guys are. Our hero Thomas (O’Brien) and his allies are attacking a train owned by the evil, post-apocalyptic corporation WCKD, pronounced Wicked. Maze Runner: The Death Cure opens with an incredibly poorly staged action sequence. And on top of the homework the producers expect you to do in order to follow the plot the film is 2 hours and 25 tedious minutes long. The Death Cure is an utterly moronic and misguided action movie that relies heavily on you remembering the two previous movies which may not have been terrible but were far from memorable. Now that we arrive at the final movie in the franchise, Maze Runner: The Death Cure, we get the first genuinely bad entry in the series. The expansive, bland but handsome teen cast was too large and not well developed enough as individuals to be memorable and lead Dylan O’Brien wasn’t bad either but the script did him few favors. The films weren’t terrible, they weren’t poorly made the movies’ just didn’t leave much of an impression. The problem with the first two movies in The Maze Runner franchise was simple mediocrity and blandness.