The Hunger Games: Spoiler Free AND Spoilerfull
March 24, 2012 3 Comments
Disclaimer: Parts of this review WILL contain spoilers for those who’ve read the books. However, they will be hidden AND clearly marked! So if you don’t want to read spoilers, do not worry! You’ll be able to skip over them without surprise.
I am a huge fan of The Hunger Games. I read the books just before the release of the final novel in the series was released in 2010 and ever since, I have been waiting for this day. Like any obsessed fan, I’ve kept up with the casting information, how the fandom reacted, the locations of filming, the incredibly inventive Capitol.pn websites, and I even reported on the Atlanta Mall Tour.
By the time I finished reading Mockingjay, the final installment in the series, I knew that The Hunger Games would be THE NEXT BIG THING. Not only is Suzanne Collins an immensely talented writer, the books are full of actions scenes and layered characters. The Hunger Games series is topical, and wide-reaching in subject matter. As a series The Hunger Games explores oppression, poverty, revolution, war and the tolls those things take on people. It’s a story about how the personal becomes political.
The Hunger Games takes place in the country of Panem (formerly known as North America): a land that had been ravaged by fires, floods, and civil war. As a reminder to never rise against the Capitol, each year one boy and one girl between the ages of twelve and eighteen is chosen from each of the 12 districts to act as what is euphemistically referred to as a “Tribute.” Tributes are pitted against each other to fight to the death in an Olympic pomp meets Gladiatorial arena known as The Hunger Games.
Katniss Everdeen (played by Jennifer Lawrence) is a 16-year-old coal miner’s daughter from the poverty-stricken District 12. When her twelve-year-old sister is chosen to compete, Katniss volunteers to take her place. Lawrence’s performance of the controlled and nearly myopically focused Katniss is well executed. She is stoic, but not unkind; strong, but not unaffected. You believe her as a survivor and as a vulnerable teenage girl
Also chosen from District 12 is the baker’s boy, Peeta Mellark (portrayed by the gentle faced Josh Hutcherson). Peeta acts as a foil for Katniss; where she is reserved and suspicious, he is charming, affable, and eager to help. When Katniss is thinking of purely surviving and existing, Peeta yearns for freedom to be himself and to live by his own principles.
Whisked away by their Kabuki Theater styled Chaperone, Effie Trinket (Elizabeth Banks), the two are taken to the Capitol. The unusual color, lavish designs, ostentatious decor, futuristic technology, and abundant food will remind you of the journey Dorothy mad from bland, black and white Kansas into the full color Oz. This all illustrates how much the Capitol’s citizens are out of touch with the surrounding districts.
Immune from the Treaty of Treason, citizens of the Capital never have to send their children to The Hunger Games to watch them be paraded around and then murdered on live television. For them, the Hunger Games is the ultimate reality show that unites the country in sportsmanship. The distance, figurative and literal, between The Capitol and District 12 is evident in every way.
Spoilers START here: Highlight with your cursor to read.
I am not an adaptation purist. I understand and accept that some things work better in print than they do in film. For example, the make artists and costumers did try coloring the extra’s skin colors like pink and green, but found it just didn’t translate well. Instead, they used influences from the most decadent periods in fashion. I believe this works just as well and it’s great visual feast for the eyes.
From watching the trailer you probably know that things were changed so that the Mockingjay pin is given to Katniss by her sister, Prim. I understand the change; it has more emotional impact and eliminates a character that doesn’t have as much impact on the story or characters. However, as a friend said to me (and I agree), I liked Katniss having a friendship with Madge. It was her only friendship with a girl of her age in the entire series.
The film does not ignore the back story of what the loss of Katniss’ father did to the family, but I also feel it wasn’t as fully explored as it should’ve been. What Katniss’ relationship with her father was is completely eliminated and I wish it wasn’t. Her acute loss informs her character so much.
Also cut is Rue’s description of her district and what her district provides. Although those who have not read the books probably won’t question how Rue knew what leaves to use to draw out the tracker jacker poison, I so wish this had been included. I felt the reality that Rue’s district sounded a hell of a lot like plantation was important to me.
Even though I have seen this movie twice, I am not sure about the way Rue’s whistle song comes about. Rue whistles a four note tune, but then so does Katniss—and they don’t sound very similar. However, the tune that Katniss whistles is the one that’s used on the soundtrack and in trailer.
Most importantly, Rue’s death is given all the gravity, grief, anger, and respect as it was in the book. There is a flash to District 11 as Rue’s death is televised and there are lots of POC faces in the crowd. The first time I saw it I cried and I was not alone. The second time I saw it, I got chills. It was so well done.
Thresh is on film as he was in the books; nothing more, nothing less.
Peeta is to the letter in this film. I like and understand Peeta more thanks to Josh Hutcherson’s performance. Near the end, where Katniss and Peeta hold the berries there is this incredibly tender moment where anyone who might have been unsure as to whether Peeta truly loved Katniss will cast away all doubt.
Cinna is so well done by Lenny Kravitz. After seeing Kravitz in Precious, I had no doubt he could do it as the characters are both quiet mentors full of calm who fully support their young female star.
Lastly, I believe the actress who portrayed Clove, Isabelle Fuhrman, is much better visual interpretation of Katniss than Jennifer Lawrence. Fuhrman is smaller, browner, and younger looking.
Considering this movie is a full 2hrs & minutes I know they had to cut a lot, so I hope these things might be on the DVD.
Spoilers END here.
The action and brutality are handled very well in this film. The violence in the books is not gratuitous, but it is unforgiving, shocking, and horrifying. Many fans were very worried that the PG-13 rating would diminish the shocking violence forced upon and committed by children. Most of the violence happens just off-screen; however, the results—splattered blood and crumpled bodies— are played for maximum impact. One particular scene of nonchalant murder made the entire audience gasp each time. Still, the violence is not as disturbing as it was in the book.
This film is a fantastic adaptation of the book. The book’s narrative takes place completely in Katniss’ voice; if she is not witness to an event, neither is the reader. This perspective has been abandoned for the film but it does not diminish the quality. Not being in Katniss’ head allows for greater freedom to fill in those gaps that Katniss could not have known and creates a richer world on-screen. Moreover, this isn’t just a movie for book fans, but it stands on its own as a solid film.
{Parts of this review appear on Shakefire}














