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Every year in the ruins of what was once North America, the nation of Panem forces each of its twelve districts to send a teenage boy and girl to compete in the Hunger Games. Part twisted entertainment, part government intimidation tactic, the Hunger Games are a nationally televised event in which “Tributes” must fight with one another until one survivor remains. Pitted against highly-trained Tributes who have prepared for these Games their entire lives, Katniss is forced to rely upon her sharp instincts as well as the mentorship of drunken former victor Haymitch Abernathy. If she’s ever to return home to District 12, Katniss must make impossible choices in the arena that weigh survival against humanity and life against love. The world will be watching.

Jennifer Lawrence as  Katniss Everdeen
Josh Hutcherson as  Peeta Mellark
Liam Hemsworth as  Gale Hawthorne
Woody Harrelson as  Haymitch Abernathy
Elizabeth Banks as  Effie Trinket
Lenny Kravitz as  Cinna
Stanley Tucci as  Caesar Flickerman
Donald Sutherland as  President Coriolanus Snow
Wes Bentley as  Seneca Crane
Toby Jones as  Claudius Templesmith

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Reviews

juanmirocks
2012/03/23

I just watched it to get to know this pop-culture piece. Overblown, terrible performances, worse script, ... what's to like?? I could have perhaps enjoyed the thing more if there were really more hunger games, but +1 hour was dedicated to bs sentimentalism and other blah. And well then, watching kids killing each other is also not my thing. WTF and why is this movie so beloved????

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johnnyboyz
2012/03/24

What I admired most about "The Hunger Games" was how it managed to resist the temptation to leap into the second unit material straight away - a misstep so many films of this genre, especially those geared towards the same demographics as this one is, have done so. Instead, "The Hunger Games" earns the right to 'go there', so to speak - taking its time to establish character and situation. What I also appreciated was its subtext to do with violence and entertainment; de-sensitisation and trivialisation, and more broadly how governments are able to utilise such things to control populations. Jennifer Lawrence plays the rather conspicuously named Katniss Everdeen, a young woman living somewhere in a North America which has gone to the dogs through war and now suffers life under a totalitarian regime in the far-future. Where she lives, the equally conspicuously named Panem, possesses in its constitution a highly questionable law which dictates that, every year, one male and one female between the ages of 12 and 19 from each of the country's dozen or so districts must face off to the bloody death in a large gamezone carved out of the forests in what are the eponymous 'hunger games'. The reasons for this brutal regulation pertain to the dictatorial government wanting to keep up the traditions of honour and willpower synonymous with its national identity, but these days everybody largely agrees it is down to the sheer fact that said contest makes for damn good television. Questions pertaining to how old the nation is and what they did before television was invented are not answered... As a character, Everdeen is nobody special - nobody in Panem is, because the grip the rulers have on the country keeps anybody from broadening out too far into becoming anything at all. She maintains her friendships; lives in her rudimentary village; takes care of her younger sister and spends enough time fooling around with a bow and arrow to become a bit of a crack-shot. Will the skill come to benefit her later on in the tale? Disaster strikes when, through reasons I will leave unspoilt, Everdeen winds up appearing in the yearly contest having been selected as the female to represent her district. This plunges Lawrence's character into a whole new world of colour; energy and fame, not to mention life-threatening danger on account of having to do battle with a motley group of compatriots from the other districts which range from robust, muscular black males on the very brink of being too old to compete to mousey younger girls too young to possess any real clue as to what is even happening. "The Hunger Games" is not an especially exhilarating character piece, but it does do the basics required of both the action and horror (and, in part, romance) genres especially well. The film is an energetic post-modern fusion of all sorts of things ranging from "Predator" to "TRON" by way of the 2000 Japanese film, to which it seems to owe its greatest debt, "Battle Royale". It allows its premise and the sheer scope afforded to it in terms of whatever content it might possess to make a scathing attack on modern American (even Western) free-market consumer entertainment. This is unsubtly presented to us for the first time quite early on when one character quips about the contest that "...if no one watched (on TV), they (the government) wouldn't do it", eventually becoming a film depicting a society with a violent, deranged spectacle at the very core of its identity. Indeed, while nothing in the world (that we know of) can quite match the barbarity of what Gary Ross' film depicts here, we should be aware by now that WWE is adored by millions; heavyweight championship boxing matches can make billionaires out of its participants in one evening and that some of the highest grossing films of all time are action (or violence) packed blockbusters. This begs the question: how do WE - the film-going audience - react to the violent action when it finally starts? Are we entertained? Do we fall into the trap of rooting for a character because we want them to succeed? Is it not too often the case that the target audience for the film roll from multiplex screening to multiplex screening absorbing the latest actioner? By the time the "Games" themselves have begun, the film has earned the right to take us to where we go. To complain that they are episodic, and that the set-pieces & killings might happen in any order, seems silly, but the best action films have always had a sense of grace and timing to their second unit sequences as events unfold around their characters: "Terminator2" and "Jurassic Park" might be two good examples from recent history. The screenplay possesses very little of any terrific profundity, while the lead's taking in under her wing of a fellow female contestant far too young to survive on her own merely proves what we already knew: she is a good older sister - a more affecting arc may have been to establish her earlier as a bully to her sibling and have her return much kinder. Irrespective, there is enough in "The Hunger Games" to get stuck into and enjoy.

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laszlol-90748
2012/03/25

This is pretty overrated. Might make a video about all the problems of this movie

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laurentiumihalcea-66817
2012/03/26

If you're a science fiction geek then you'll undoubtedly love the movie 'The Hunger Games'.It is an adaptation of Suzanne Collins' book bearing the same name and is directed by Garry Ross.The star of the film is no other than the renowned and adored Jennifer Lawrence playing the role of the controverted and rebellious Katniss Everdeen.Set in a far and dystopian future where people are categorised in different sectors based on their social status, the film features the young Katniss trying to defy the ways of the Capitol as she struggles to survive the 'Hunger Games'.As the story unfolds, the protagonist slowly and painfully finds out that the world is much more cruel and heartbreaking than she thought and is put through many difficult scenarios and choices.Under the excellent guidance of Garry Ross, every actor plays their bit in an almost perfect way.Obviously, the film is thought provoking and riveting not only due to the outstanding storyline and plot, but also due to the special effects and overall imagery.Of course, there are no perfect movies so this one has its flaws too, the main one being the rapid pace at which the action develops (they don't really allow you to get sad because of a character's death because something else happens immediately).That being said, I consider this a well-made movie which is really worth the time.I'd gladly recommend it to everyone.

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