
Showing posts with label suzanne collins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label suzanne collins. Show all posts
Friday, November 21, 2014
Mockingjay Part 1

Friday, November 22, 2013
Catching Fire
Last year I finished all three books in the
series “The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins. When I was reading the books I
couldn’t put a single one of them down for a single second. Like most teenagers,
I became completely enthralled in the 12 districts that made up the
post-apocalyptic nation of Panem. So last night, when I went to see “The Hunger
Games: Catching Fire”, the second movie in the series, I had extremely high
expectations about how I wanted the movie to play out. In the end, I was more
than satisfied.

The movie begins with Katniss crouching in a bush hunting for animals in the forbidden part of her district. This opening scene reminds us that Katniss is just as bad-ass as she was in the first movie. That is, until her best friend Gale (Lian Hemswirth), startles her into a nervous breakdown. Then, we see her for what she has become since the first Hunger Games, a complete emotional wreck. But what else would you expect from a girl who had been dropped into an arena forced to kill the surrounding 23 people in order to continue living?

The second movie tells the story of a new game
that took place on an island set up as a clock to reveal a different lethal
event with each new hour. The idea itself is intriguing, but on the screen it
was completely engrossing. The poisoning fog, killer monkeys, raining blood, threatening
lighting and more was exciting for any age.

The ending may have been disappointing, but it is
hard to criticize it since it had ended exactly as the book had. In fact, most
of the movie had followed the book, but not in a negative or downgrading
manner. Rather, the movie did not take away from the book but only expanded on
its ability to tell such a fantastic and symbolic story. The script, written by
Simon Beaufot and Michael DeBruyn completed the difficult feat of adapting such
a popular book. Typically, movie adaptations fail at properly adapting a
popular book. However, this was not the case with this big-studio, beautifully
visual adaptation. Although the ending was a chest, overdone concept of
displaying the main character’s facial expression as she realized the
consequences to her action, the scene did fill me with anticipation and
excitement for the next two movies to come.
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