Showing posts with label Hunger Games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hunger Games. Show all posts

Saturday, November 22, 2014

New Hunger Games film is not for ‘real adults’ - opinion BBC article

Review: New Hunger Games film is not for ‘real adults’

Jennifer Lawrence in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1(Lionsgate)
(Lionsgate)
Jennifer Lawrence leads a revolution in the third Hunger Games movie. But can a YA novel yield a worthwhile film? Critic Owen Gleiberman delivers his verdict.
Early in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part I, Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence), nestled 50 storeys underground in a top-secret rebel command station, is summoned to a strategy meeting. Alma Coin (Julianne Moore), the high-handed leader of the rebellion, and Plutarch (Philip Seymour Hoffman), the movement's jaunty minister of propaganda, explain that the proletarian revolt that Katniss ignited now has the chance to take wing. If she can find it within herself to become the icon of revolution known as ‘The Mockingjay’, then the oppressed districts of the dystopian nation Panem will rise up, join forces, and break the fascist grip of the Capitol. Faced with this offer, Katniss seems neither pleased nor particularly incendiary. Instead, with a look of glazed yearning, she wants to know just one thing: "What about Peeta? Is he alive?"
This moment has an unmistakably kitschy ring to it, and it speaks to the quintessence of young-adult fiction and why no real adult should take it seriously (though more than ever, they do). Civilisation hangs in the balance, but what's really at stake is Katniss' feelings for Peeta – the dewiest of junior love stories. Of course you could argue that Casablanca, minus the puppy-love factor, works in pretty much the same way, with the outcome of World War II hinged on the issue of whether Humphrey Bogart's Rick will remain with Ingrid Bergman's Ilsa. But if Katniss is the forceful prime mover in Mockingjay – Part I, Peeta, let's be clear, is no Ilsa. As played by Josh Hutcherson, he has all the charisma of the least interesting member of the Yale crew team. Katniss, for most of Mockingjay – Part I, is more interested in saving this preppy hand-puppet than she is in bringing about the overthrow of tyranny. By now, even much of the audience may not share Katniss' Peeta fixation. Three movies into the Hunger Games series, their bond comes off as more desperately theoretical than ever.
Lawrence, who had the implacability of an Olympian in the first two Hunger Games films, now plunges Katniss into a mood of Hamlet-esque doubt: having become the poster girl for revolution, she's not at all sure if she wants the role. She's wary and woeful, just like the Katniss who first volunteered for the Hunger Games to save her sister. Lawrence has a chance to show some more vulnerability, but Katniss' tearful ambivalence about whether she's committed to the cause, or merely to saving Peeta, plays out in a less than scintillating way. It's not the actor’s fault. This is what happens when you split the third installment of a YA series into two blockbuster movies: Part I is basically all dragging exposition.
Games, must we?
When Katniss shot an arrow  at the end of the previous film and shattered the forcefield covering the Capitol’s barbaric children-killing-children contest, she did more than bring down the Hunger Games. She effectively eliminated the premise of reality TV as a death match – and the critique of it – that had been the liveliest element in this series so far. The closest thing that Mockingjay – Part I comes up with to replace it is a televised war of propaganda. Plutarch, played by the late Hoffman with a sly-dog cynicism that makes you realise how much you'll miss him even in a franchise movie like this one, produces a series of propaganda videos, or 'propos'. They feature Katniss in her black-latex archer suit (so fetchingly colour-coordinated with her dark tresses) making revolutionary speeches to camera. At first, her words sound stilted and fake, but then Plutarch sends Katniss and a team of young cohorts to survey the smoking ruins of her home. Suddenly, her outrage is real. She's on fire again.
The Capitol’s wily President Snow (Donald Sutherland) comes up with a PR weapon of his own: it's the captured Peeta, interviewed, as if on some nightly chat show, by Stanley Tucci's unctuous, high-haired host. Peeta has been set up to preach to the Capitol’s subjects against Katniss, and that makes it obvious to us he's been drugged, or brainwashed, or something. His fate probably shouldn't amount to a hill of beans, but Katniss is fixated. And President Coin, who knows she needs Katniss to lead the revolution, agrees to her demand: that the rebels go in and rescue him.
Directed by Francis Lawrence (who made the franchise’s previous film, Catching Fire, as well as the upcoming Mockingjay sequel), Part 1 has gravity and sweep, with grandly sombre visual motifs lifted out of films from Metropolis to the original Star Wars. There are also some gripping scenes of impending battle. The destruction of a dam by rebel explosives gives a little rush of triumph: the revolution has begun! Yet for anyone who's not emotionally immersed in Suzanne Collins' book trilogy to begin with, your ultimate reaction may still be: why should I care? Sutherland continues to make President Snow a compelling despot with a Machiavellian twinkle in his eye, but in a funny way you like him more than you do the good guys.  Lawrence, as a director, hasn't figured out how to turn the ragtag masses of Panem into anything more than a sodden tableau of oppression. And why does Moore play the leader of the revolt like Eva Peron with a touch of Pol Pot? She doesn't exactly inspire sympathy for the cause. Of course, I sound like I'm missing the point: it's all about Peeta! I just wish that wasn't the point.
★★☆☆☆

Monday, April 14, 2014

Hunger Games Rules MTV Awards - pics


Rita Ora, left, rips open Zac Efron's shirt as he accepts the award for best shirtless performance on stage at the MTV Movie Awards. Photo / AP
Rita Ora, left, rips open Zac Efron's shirt as he accepts the award for best shirtless performance on stage at the MTV Movie Awards. Photo / AP
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire earned the prize for best film at the MTV Movie Awards, besting even top Oscar winner 12 Years a Slave.
Hunger Games stars also took home some of the night's biggest awards. Jennifer Lawrence won best female performance and Josh Hutcherson was voted best male performer.
Zany categories were also in abundance. Zac Efron earned best shirtless performance, while properly accepting his award shirtless.
Honours also went to Mark Wahlberg and Channing Tatum. And a special tribute was paid to the late Paul Walker.
But it was summer movie teasers, from X-Men: Days of Future Past to The Amazing Spider-Man 2, that dominated the live ceremony hosted by Conan O'Brien.
Winners of the 2014 MTV Movie Awards:
Movie Of The Year
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
12 Years a Slave
American Hustle
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
The Wolf of Wall Street
Best Female Performance
Jennifer Lawrence - The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Amy Adams - American Hustle
Jennifer Aniston - We're the Millers
Sandra Bullock - Gravity
Lupita Nyong'o - 12 Years a Slave
Best Male Performance
Josh Hutcherson - The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Bradley Cooper - American Hustle
Leonardo DiCaprio - The Wolf of Wall Street
Chiwetel Ejiofor - 12 Years a Slave
Matthew McConaughey - Dallas Buyers Club
Breakthrough Performance
Will Poulter - We're the Millers
Liam James - The Way Way Back
Michael B. Jordan - Fruitvale Station
Margot Robbie - The Wolf of Wall Street
Miles Teller - The Spectacular Now
Best Kiss
Emma Roberts, Jennifer Aniston and Will Poulter - We're the Millers
Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Adams - American Hustle
Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Scarlett Johansson - Don Jon
James Franco, Ashley Benson and Vanessa Hudgens - Spring Breakers
Shailene Woodley and Miles Teller - The Spectacular Now
Best Fight
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - Orlando Bloom, Evangeline Lilly vs. Orcs
Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues - Will Ferrell, Paul Rudd, David Koechner and Steve Carell vs. James Marsden vs. Sacha Baron Cohen vs. Kanye West vs. Tina Fey and Amy Poehler vs. Jim Carrey and Marion Cotillard vs. Will Smith vs. Liam Neeson and John C. Reilly vs. Greg Kinnear
Identity Thief - Jason Bateman vs. Melissa McCarthy
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire - Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson and Sam Claflin vs. Mutant Monkeys
This is the End - Jonah Hill vs. James Franco and Seth Rogen
Best Comedic Performance
Jonah Hill - The Wolf of Wall Street
Kevin Hart - Ride Along
Johnny Knoxville - Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa
Melissa McCarthy - The Heat
Jason Sudeikis - We're the Millers
Best Shirtless Performance
Zac Efron - That Awkward Moment
Sam Claflin - The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Jennifer Aniston - We're the Millers
Leonardo DiCaprio - The Wolf of Wall Street
Chris Hemsworth - Thor: The Dark World
Best Villain
Mila Kunis - Oz The Great and Powerful
Barkhad Abdi - Captain Phillips
Benedict Cumberbatch - Star Trek into Darkness
Michael Fassbender - 12 Years a Slave
Donald Sutherland - The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Best On-Screen Transformation
Jared Leto - Dallas Buyers Club
Christian Bale - American Hustle
Elizabeth Banks - The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Orlando Bloom - The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Matthew McConaughey - Dallas Buyers Club
Best Musical Moment
Backstreet Boys, Jay Baruchel, Seth Rogen and Craig Robinson perform in heaven - This is the End
Jennifer Lawrence sings Live and Let Die - American Hustle
Leonardo DiCaprio pops and locks - The Wolf of Wall Street
Melissa McCarthy sings Barracuda - Identity Thief
Will Poulter sings Waterfalls - We're the Millers
Best Cameo Performance
Rihanna - This is the End
Robert De Niro - American Hustle
Amy Poehler and Tina Fey - Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
Kanye West - Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues
Joan Rivers - Iron Man 3