Mar 23 2012

ReThink Reviews — ‘The Hunger Games’

Rethink Reviews | Published 23 Mar 2012, 10:23 am | Comments Off on ReThink Reviews — ‘The Hunger Games’ -

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Rethink ReviewsTaking a deeper look at current and past films and how they relate to the world today.

Jonathan Kim is an independent film critic who writes and produces film reviews for Uprising and other outlets. He is a former co-producer at Brave New Films.

Read his reviews online at ReThinkReviews.net. Watch his videos at www.youtube.com/user/jsjkim, and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/ReThinkReviews. ReThink Reviews’ theme song is by Restavrant.

The Hunger Games

‘The Hunger Games’ is based on the first installment of the young adult book series whose popularity rivals that of the ‘Twilight’ and perhaps even the ‘Harry Potter’ franchises. The books follow Katniss Everdeen, a sixteen-year-old played in the film by Jennifer Lawrence, who volunteers to compete in a deadly game where twenty-four teenagers from the twelve districts of a dystopian United States (renamed Panem) fight to the death until only one remains.

When a teenage literary phenomenon emerges, I’m always curious about what young people are connecting with so powerfully that they’re willing to wait in long lines until midnight to buy a book. The ‘Twilight’ series seems to be very much about the all-encompassing nature of teenage love and lust, which at that age are almost indistinguishable, with some supernatural forces and intrigue thrown in to put the series’ damsel in adequate distress.

With ‘Harry Potter’, everyone wishes they had magic powers, a group of good friends to solve mysteries with, and that not only do we have amazing natural talents, but that we’ll be sent to a special school to develop them. Author J.K. Rowling also deserves much credit for creating such a fascinating, detailed world and exploring themes that grew in maturity with both the characters and the books’ readers.

But what to make of ‘The Hunger Games’? In the story, Katniss lives in impoverished coal-mining District 12, where she uses her intelligence, toughness, and hunting skills to care for her younger sister, Primrose, eventually volunteering to take Primrose’s place when she’s selected to be a Hunger Games contestant, also known as a tribute. Katniss and the male tribute, Peeta (played by Josh Hutcherson), are taken to the futuristic Capitol, whose citizens live in grotesque opulence while ignoring the rest of the nation’s suffering.

The Games themselves are a spectacle watched by all of Panem’s citizens, particularly those in the Capitol, so naturally Katniss and Peeta are assigned a PR person and minder (played by Elizabeth Banks), a stylist (played by Lenny Kravitz), and a trainer (played by Woody Harrelson) who is the last Hunger Games winner from District 12. Just as important as their physical training, the tributes must also learn to play the media game, since their attractiveness, likeability, and personal stories can earn them important advantages during the competition.

‘The Hunger Games’ is steeped in the languages of reality television and instant celebrity, which young people speak fluently. When the games finally begin in a simulated forest, they’re remarkably brutal, especially for a PG-13 film, but I’m sure kids growing up today are sadly familiar with the cruelty teenagers and their cliques are capable of.

Before the games start, Peeta expresses to Katniss that he doesn’t want the glare of the spotlight and the viciousness of the games to change him, even if he doesn’t survive. Katniss, who has struggled for most of her life to keep herself and her family alive, claims this is a luxury she can’t afford. But faced with the most powerful and effective symbol of the Capitol’s efforts to keep its citizens subjugated and distracted, Katniss realizes that abandoning her humanity for the sake of survival and riches is exactly what her oppressors want.

However, a lot of these ideas go unsaid (or at least undersaid), in the movie, presumably to be fleshed out more in the upcoming sequels. And without the book’s first-person narrative, Katniss’ feelings about her situation and the disparity in wealth and status she witnesses — as well her true feelings for Peeta and her hunky best friend Gale back home — feel underdeveloped, despite Lawrence’s undeniable talents. Still, the fact that both boys and girls have embraced a story featuring possibly the strongest female character in literary history; who rejects the lures of fame and fortune; and challenges the wealthy, decadent one-percenters who exploit Panem’s poor; certainly speaks well of the new generation, who might be following our political climate more than we give them credit for, with the potential for some pretty subversive chapters to come.

‘The Hunger Games’ is rated PG-13 and opens today.

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