The Hunger Games | Eastern North Carolina Now

    
The Treatment by Comparison is Unavoidable

   Entire Film shot in North Carolina

   The hugely popular film, "The Hunger Games," by virtue alone of its unavoidable comparison to the recently completed titular series of novels, by Suzanne Collins, and other memorable films by cinematic directors of high standing, may have unduly influenced the opinion of many, who might have otherwise formed an unbiased opinion. I endeavored to accomplish this, as is my practice in reviews, and I hope to have succeeded; however, I too may have fallen prey to comparisons, unfair or not.

   My wife and youngest daughter read the first Suzanne Collins novel, and they immediately formed an opinion of the film, by comparison to their "silver screen" experience. I have not read that first book in Collins's "The Hunger Games" trilogy; however, I have watched many films that have a similar theme of systematic killing for community entertainment juxtaposed against the underlying systemic decay of societal structure, most notable of which, is the inarguable film classic, "Gladiator." The 1959 classic "Ben Hur" is less allegorically similar, but a fair comparison nonetheless.

   And that is what futuristic society, 200 years hence did: Make comparisons, for critical review, to ultimately devise the clear winner, and thereby champion those results - the winners over the losers, vile in the ultimate violence of battle. A callous community bearing witness of the struggling survivors, whom offer to these decadent spectators some semblance of a repetitive hope of an improved situation, if only by vicarious proxy.
The flamboyant and ostentatiously coiffed Effie Trinket (left), played by Elizabeth Banks, introduces the inhabitants of District 12 to their new Tribute, Katnis Everdeen (right), played by Jennifer Lawrence. Katnis was not selected by lottery in this particular reaping (reaping is the taking of the Tributes to participate in the games), but elected to selflessly volunteer to take the place of her 12 year old sister, Primrose Everdeen, who would have certainly been one of the first to perish in the games: Above.
   This, too, was the lasting symbol of the last gasp of a dying decadent Rome, almost 2,000 years earlier. The futuristic (200 years in the future) decay of a similar great society - The United States of America, through the allegorical surrogate of the pan-continental (boundaries stretching from Northern Canada to the Panamanian Isthmus), Panem, was hard for this patriot to stomach. Witnessing the filming location of the mountainous rugged terrain of the Nantahala and Pisgah National Forest of North Carolina, and employed generously in this film for great effect, drove that salient point home - that this futuristic terrible world could one day stretch into a viable reality - to this native of the "Old North State."
Katnis, Jennifer Lawrence, a true marksman with the bow, spies a deer (the first one she had seen in a year), and prepares to hit her mark: Above. Katnis has a quiet moment with Gale Hawthorne, played by Liam Hemsworth: Below.

   For those of you who did not read the book, and those who have not yet seen this movie, this unsettled, inhospitable world inherited by this film's heroine, Katnis Everdeen, is the remnants of total war, and then open rebellion. In the aftermath of the war and rebellion, the United States, Canada, Mexico and assorted Central American counties ceased to exist in their former state, and in time were aggregated into one nation known as the aforementioned Panem. In Panem, there were created 12 districts (13 original districts if you read the book), with little societal parity, with the individual districts in league with the wealthier and most decadent Capitol of Panem.

   Was the Capitol controlled Panem as debased to the point of the last days of the Roman Empire? It was hard to tell from the film; however, they were governed in a similar manner, and in some measure, these governed people, especially within the confines of the Capitol, acted accordingly.
Not unlike the labyrinth of under-stadium compartments and egress points under the Roman Colosseum, Katnis Everdeen, Jennifer Lawrence, is led underground to her respective starting point, to begin her part, in the controlled exercise of the Hunger Games: Above.
Public celebrity, acting as part Hunger Games' color analyst / government propaganda minister, Caesar Flickerman, played by character actor Stanley Tucci is a great example of the flamboyance that was Panem fashion: Above. Flickerman once again (left) introducing Katnis, Jennifer Lawrence, to the soul-less mob in attendance for his mindless Hunger Games interview show in the Capitol: Below.

   Not unlike the misguidedly decadent times during the reign of the bloodthirsty Roman Emperor Commodus, 180 AD to 192 AD, on whom the antagonist of the classic film, "Gladiator," is loosely based: The Gladiatorial-like combat of the Tributes, assembled in the Capitol to fight to their death in the Hunger Games, were employed as surrogate pawns to both placate and control the people en masse in the Capitol, and the outlying districts. The games, with their arbitrary rules leading up to the combat, and within the fighting-to-the-death phase, were the measured controls of a ruling body that sought to exact the remaining strains of liberty from these contestants, but moreover, to use the symbol of the games to both restrain and mostly demoralized their native people. These imperial subjects, whose children were reaped as Tributes to participate in the barbaric 74th annual Hunger Games, knew both hope, but mostly fear in measured doses, and like a mistreated but obedient yard dog, were taught to know their place.
A reflective moment for the malevolent President Snow, played by Donald Sutherland: Above.
   President Snow, who was more imperious than presidential, and ably portrayed by journeyman actor Donald Sutherland, best summed up the socially irresponsible, misplaced basis and intrinsic need for the Hunger Games:

    President Snow (welcoming the masses to and explaining the Hunger Games): "And it was decreed that each year, the 12 districts of Panem should offer up a tribute of one young man and woman between the ages of 12 and 18 to be trained in the art of survival and to be prepared to fight to the death."

   President Snow (explaining the political reasoning of the Hunger Games): "Hope, it is the only thing stronger than fear. A little hope is effective, a lot of hope is dangerous. A spark is fine, as long as it's contained."

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( April 18th, 2012 @ 9:26 pm )
 
Wyatt,

I did not read the book, but I have seen the movie, and I noticed other holes in the story that just did not make any sense, and I could not suspend disbelief as well.

The holes that I noticed: the reaping of the children in district 12, which I presume would be part or all of the southeastern United States. The reaping stipulated that all children between 12 and 18 must participate - no exceptions.

Where were all the children from District 12?

If there are 12 districts in Panem, and let's say that 90% of the present population is gone for what ever reason, 200 years into the future. For just North Carolina alone, there would still be a million people. Now that is a lot of 12 to 18 year-olds.

The next gaping hole in the story is the fire storm use to rout-out Katnis. That fire induced maelstrom would have been inextinguishable in a matter of hours. That is just the reality of it.

It was a decent movie; however, there are certain limitations in this physical world that can not be breached, unless you consider that your audience is patently stupid, and will accept this nonsense.



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