The Hunger Games

The Hunger Games Movie (2012)

Katniss Everdeen voluntarily takes her younger sister's place in the Hunger Games, a televised competition in which two teenagers from each of the twelve Districts of Panem are chosen at random to fight to the death.

In a dystopian future, the totalitarian nation of Panem is divided into 12 districts and the Capitol. Each year two young representatives from each district are selected by lottery to participate in The Hunger Games. Part entertainment, rutal retribution for a past rebellion, the televised games are broadcast throughout Panem. The 24 participants are forced to eliminate their competitors while the citizens of Panem are required to watch. When 16-year-old Katniss' young sister, Prim, is selected as District 12's female representative, Katniss volunteers to take her place. She and her male counterpart, Peeta, are pitted against bigger, stronger representatives, some of whom have trained for this their whole lives.
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Movie Comments & Discussion

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The movie adaptation of the book The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins is one of the most eagerly anticipated movies since the first of the Harry Potter films came out. Fans of the book eagerly packed midnight screenings of the movie its opening weekend in order to be the first to see it. The Hunger Games as a book was a tightly written thriller that was almost impossible to put down once you started. Many people reported taking it along with them to work and to school to sneak reads when they thought no one else was watching. So, the question for fans of the series and for everyone else is if the story will translate as well to the screen?

Fortunately, the answer is yes. To start with the casting, the producers of The Hunger Games nailed it when they chose Jennifer Lawrence to play its heroine Katniss Everdeen. Lawrence first attracted notice for her performance in the 2010 film Winter's Bone. She plays a similar character in The Hunger Games. Fierce and indomitable, Lawrence portrays bravery in a way that very few actresses can pull off. Her character is a warrior and her most prominent feature is the fact that she's unafraid. Parents should be very pleased to have a role model like this for their young girls in a hit movie.

Gary Ross, the director of The Hunger Games brought in Suzanne Collins to help collaborate on the script for the movie and it shows in the excellent pacing and truth to the book's themes. The Hunger Games is fun but it's also about things that really matter. Set in a dystopian future, The Hunger Games is really a morality tale and a parable as much as it is a cliffhanger. Both as a book and a movie, The Hunger Games is about what values we most cherish and whether we'll stand up for them.

The Hunger Games takes place in a future America that has been divided into 12 districts ruled over by a single capital city called Panem. Once, 74 years ago, all the separate districts rose together in an attempt to remove the wealthy Panem from its place of power. The rebellion was crushed, and as punishment each year every district is forced to send two of its adolescent children to compete in a gladiator competition to the death.

Before she is chosen by lottery to compete in the Games Katniss has already been facing questions of basic survival as a provider for her family. Ross has done an excellent job in conveying the poverty and the misery of the people living in the 12 districts and then contrasting it with the decadence and wealth of Panem. In order to keep her family fed Katniss has been forced for years to hunt game with only a bow and arrow and there is much of the frontier survivalist about her character.

Some of the best traditions of the American character seem to be embodied in this young girl who uses her hard won sense of morality and decency to navigate a world that is filled with terror and danger. Americans still treasure their myth of the frontier and The Hunger Games takes full advantage of this fact to add both a certain romance to the story and also a certain contemporary relevance.

How do Americans see themselves? Are they now more like the wealthy and cynical citizens of Panem or the scrappy and brave Katniss? The Hunger Games both as a book and as a movie fails to tell you the answer to that question. The Hunger Games is about moral choices and the different paths that we can chose to take over the course of our lives, both as individuals and as a country.

Jennifer Lawrence's performance is so striking and new that it might lead reviewers to overlook some of the other excellent performances in The Hunger Games. This would be a mistake, as The Hunger Games is filled with a fantastic ensemble cast that helps further separate it from your average action movie.

Donald Sutherland is at his best playing the cruel President Snow of Padem and makes something positively magnetic out of his villainy. Stanley Tucci also makes an excellent villain playing Caesar Flickerman as the crass television presenter of the Games. Woody Harrelson has his best performance in years as the constantly drunk Haymitch Abernathy, a former victor of the Games.

There is no clear target to the satire in The Hunger Games, but the movie seems to poke fun at a lot of different subjects at once while maintaining a certain ambivalence about them. People will obviously make a comparison of the Games in The Hunger Games with current contemporary reality television. This comparison is intentional both in the book and in the movie. It's still a question, however, exactly how close the comparison is. No one dies in reality television. There are no real life and death stakes. No one is forced to participate. So how close should we say we are to really being Padem?

The Hunger Games never hits you over the head with any of its messages and the viewer is left to decide for herself what she thinks about what she sees. The Hunger Games is finally the teen movie that teens deserve. It never panders and it never simplifies its message. The Hunger Games is a fun movie, but it's also one that manages to be more than just that. The cinematography provided by veteran Clint Eastwood collaborator Tom Stern is beautiful and is the viewer's first clue to the deeper mythic significance of The Hunger Games.

The Hunger Games is a movie with both heart and meaning in it throughout. You should go to see The Hunger Games if you want to be entertained and also if you want to see a movie that reaches after something more than just entertainment. There's nothing cynical about The Hunger Games, it's a real film with real questions that its viewers will want to find the answers to.
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Storyline

In a dystopian future, the totalitarian nation of Panem is divided into 12 districts and the Capitol. Each year two young representatives from each district are selected by lottery to participate in The Hunger Games. Part entertainment, rutal retribution for a past rebellion, the televised games are broadcast throughout Panem. The 24 participants are forced to eliminate their competitors while the citizens of Panem are required to watch. When 16-year-old Katniss' young sister, Prim, is selected as District 12's female representative, Katniss volunteers to take her place. She and her male counterpart, Peeta, are pitted against bigger, stronger representatives, some of whom have trained for this their whole lives.
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Jun 2013
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