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THE HUNGER GAMES Reviews Pt.1

   

Alexander Ludwig Cato The Hunger Games Jack Quaid Isabelle Fuhrman
Clove (Isabelle Fuhrman), Cato (Alexander Ludwig), Marvel (Jack Quaid), Glimmer (Leven Rambin), The Hunger Games

The Hunger Games opens March 23. It’s expected to earn anywhere between $70-$100 million at the North American box office alone. Jennifer Lawrence has been so widely praised she can already — I kid you not — be considered a potential Best Actress Oscar 2013 contender. As for Gary Ross‘ film version of Suzanne Collins‘ bestselling novel — which Collins herself helped to adapt to the big screen — things are a little iffier.

Reviews so far have been overwhelmingly positive — though mostly positive with reservations. Sometimes, strong reservations. There have been favorable comparisons to Twilight, even though The Hunger Games is quite different to the vampire-human love story in terms of tone and feel.

True, both are adaptations of books written by women (Stephenie Meyer wrote the Twilight Saga book series), both are centered around a female character (Lawrence’s Katniss Everdeen, Kristen Stewart’s Bella Swan), both feature more than one love interest (Josh Hutcherson / Liam Hemsworth, Robert Pattinson / Taylor Lautner), both feature nasty villains, and both have led/will lead to sequels. But that’s about it.

In addition to Winter’s Bone’s Jennifer Lawrence, The Expendables 2 / AWOL / The Last Song’s Liam Hemsworth, and The Kids Are All Right / Journey 2: The Mysterious Island’s Josh Hutcherson, The Hunger Games features Movie 43 / Man on a Ledge’s Elizabeth Banks, Rampart / The People vs. Larry Flynt’s Woody Harrelson, The Devil Wears Prada’s Stanley Tucci, Salvation Boulevard / The Healer’s Isabelle Fuhrman, MASH / Ordinary People’s Donald Sutherland, American Beauty’s Wes Bentley, Snow White and the Huntsman / Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets Toby Jones.

The Hunger Games director Gary Ross’ two previous features were Best Picture Oscar nominee Seabiscuit (2003) and Pleasantville (1998), both starring Tobey Maguire. Preceding the film on March 23 screenings will be the teaser for the Kristen Stewart / Robert Pattinson / Taylor Lautner fall entry The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2, directed by Bill Condon and adapted by Melissa Rosenberg.

Below are snippets from several reviews of The Hunger Games, which currently has a 100% approval rating among Rotten Tomatoes‘ critics, though figures will surely change once more reviews are posted online.

"Dystopian sci-fi, tense action-thriller, soapy teen romance, grim social commentary: The big-screen adaptation of The Hunger Games certainly doesn’t lack for ambition, and although it’s mostly successful, one can’t help wishing the film could have better integrated its different tones and agendas. … [T]his much-anticipated film is anchored by Jennifer Lawrence’s strong central performance, which helps compensate for a somewhat derivative storyline and worldview." Tim Grierson, Screen Daily.

"The Hunger Games is that rarest of beasts: a Hollywood action blockbuster that is smart, taut and knotty. … [I]t’s a compelling, lightly satirical tale of a post-apocalyptic entertainment industry, set in a dystopian US in which the terrified contestants are selected via lottery and second place does not exist. …

"Riffing off her recent role in Winter’s Bone, Jennifer Lawrence gives a performance of stoic, solemn intensity as Katniss, the coalminer’s daughter who finds herself schooled in the art of killing …" Xan Brooks, The Guardian.

"Probably the greatest achievement of The Hunger Games, and there are many, is that in adapting a phenomenally successful teen novel its creative team have produced something that works as a film, not just as an adaptation of a book. There’s no required reading before entering the cinema in order to ‘get it’, and it’s well above the ‘all your favourite bits but with pictures’ business that has become the accepted standard. … The Hunger Games as a novel has been dissected, expanded and retooled into something intelligent, immersive and powerfully current." Olly Richards, Empire.

[Continues on next page. See link below.]

Isabelle Fuhrman / Alexander Ludwig / Jack Quaid / Leven Rambin / The Hunger Games photo: Murray Close / Lionsgate.

   

Continue Reading: THE HUNGER GAMES Reviews: Jennifer Lawrence Praised

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