""

THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY

Share:

It’s de rigueur by now, of course, to lớn break the final book in any juggernaut Young Adult series into two films. “Harry Potter” did it. “Twilight” did it. Why not tantalize & torment the fervent fans of these series even further? Why not make twice as much money?

So now we have the absolute, ultimate, this-time-we-mean-it finale of the “The Hunger Games” series, the clunkily titled “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2.” But really, if we’re talking about things lượt thích art và narrative drive—which actually can & do exist in this franchise—a single film would have worked just fine. Last year’s “Mockingjay – Part 1” felt lượt thích one long placeholder. It featured a lot of wheel spinning và repetitive imagery, & it served as a glaring reminder of what a cynical cash grab this finale-splitting business truly is.

Bạn đang đọc: The hunger games: mockingjay


With the exception of a couple of truly dazzling action set pieces, “Mockingjay – Part 2” provides more of the same. The stakes are higher because this is the end—It really is this time!—but the first hour or so of returning director Francis Lawrence’s film is legitimately nap-inducing. From the very first moments, when Jennifer Lawrence’s Katniss Everdeen struggles to speak her name as the late, great Philip Seymour Hoffman looks on sadly as gamesmaker-turned-ally Plutarch Heavensbee, it’s just unrelentingly dour, even for a film mix in a dystopian future. Mercifully, the script from Peter Craig và Danny Strong offers a few glimmers of sardonic humor, including quips from Jena Malone as Katniss’ fellow victor, the quick-witted Johanna.

It would be reasonable for us khổng lồ hope for something better, however. Based on Suzanne Collins’ best-selling trilogy, “The Hunger Games” series has set the gold standard for all adaptations of post-apocalyptic Young Adult novels. “Divergent,” “The Maze Runner,” “The Giver”—regardless of when the actual books came out, they always seemed lượt thích knock-offs of “The Hunger Games” films in terms of narrative thrills, weighty themes, production values and star-studded casts. The presence of serious, seasoned actors like Hoffman, Donald Sutherland, Julianne Moore, Woody Harrelson, Stanley Tucci & Jeffrey Wright gave these movies a gravitas but also elevated them above your expectations for material aimed at angsty tweens. They were violent, exciting blockbusters but they were also About Something—at least the first two movies were.

Many of those stars get just a few lines in the finale—a curtain điện thoại tư vấn of sorts, when you’d long lớn see more of them. The abbreviated presence of Hoffman, who died in 2014 of an accidental overdose, is heartbreaking. Tucci appears all-too briefly as unctuous television announcer Caesar Flickerman. Elizabeth Banks shows up in a couple of her typically outrageous outfits as stylist and social climber Effie Trinket, và that’s about it.

Lawrence herself already seemed to lớn have outgrown the role of plucky teen Katniss Everdeen when “Mockingjay – Part 1” came out a year ago. By then, she’d won an Academy Award for “Silver Linings Playbook” và done diverse & dramatic work ranging from “American Hustle” khổng lồ “X-Men: Days of Future Past.” It’s more than time for her to give a wistful, three-fingered Mockingjay salute goodbye to lớn this character và this franchise once and for all. 


But Lawrence takes this career-making role seriously, as always—and brings her usual, accessible phối of bravery và vulnerability—as Katniss prepares for the ultimate showdown with Sutherland’s diabolical President Snow in hopes of bringing an elusive peace to war-torn Panem. Leading up lớn that climactic moment at the Capitol are a lot of dreary strategic conversations in a lot of poorly-lighted, underground hideouts. For a movie about a society that’s on the brink of destruction, “Mockingjay – Part 2” features a lot of hurry-up-and-wait.

Xem thêm: Vụ Án Giết Người: Đọc Tin Tức Những Vu An Giet Nguoi Mới Nhất 24H

It picks up at the start right where “Part 1” left off, with Katniss reeling from an attack by brainwashed Capitol mouthpiece Peeta (Josh Hutcherson), her fellow former District 12 tribute-turned-fiancé. Merely serving as a symbol of hope in manufactured propaganda films is no longer enough, she realizes. She must join forces with her fellow rebels in their quest to lớn bring down the totalitarian regime that has torn apart the land & taken so many young lives.

Among Katniss’ fellow fighters in Squad 451 (a number that may ring a bell with you from high school English class) are her hunky BFF & hunting buddy Gale (Liam Hemsworth, relegated to lớn sulking & shooting); the charismatic Finnick O’Dair (Sam Claflin); tatted filmmaker Cressida (Natalie Dormer); and the all-business Boggs (Mahershala Ali), the soldier who’s the right-hand man of rebel President Coin (Moore, whose severe bob says everything you need khổng lồ know about her trustworthiness). 

Eventually, they also take in Peeta, who provides some poignancy as he’s clearly working through post-traumatic bao tay disorder. And as for the potential awkwardness of the Katniss-Gale-Peeta love triangle in close quarters, it’s lớn the film’s credit that the boys are the ones discussing it—and their respective roles within it—rather than Katniss herself. She’s got more important things to lớn do, as she has throughout the series, lượt thích liberate a nation.

Along the way to lớn the president’s mansion, they must avoid a series of “pods”—think of them as high-tech IEDs—scattered throughout the city. These obstacles provide the film’s few heart-pounding thrills. A wall of black ooze surges toward the rebel fighters, swallowing several of them whole in gnarly, ferocious fashion. But it’s the lizard mutt attack in the sewers that’s the film’s high point—or low point, if you want lớn get literal about it. Reptilian và ravenous, these fast-moving creatures are just devastating, và they add an element of paranoia & fear that the rest of the film desperately needed. (Seriously, I was curled up in a ball, watching this scene through my fingers. And James Newton Howard’s appropriately insistent score definitely ups the anxiety factor.)


I wouldn’t dream of spoiling how the whole series concludes. If you’re emotionally invested at this point, you should see it through for yourself, even if it’s a disappointment. But I will say that there’s a tacked-on, extra ending that’s needless and tonally inconsistent with everything that came before it. It’s a sun-dappled coda in a meadow that belongs in a different YA franchise (one with sparkling vampires, perhaps) when there’s a moment right before it that would have ended the movie, & the series, on a perfectly poignant & satisfying note.

Katniss may still be The Girl on Fire, but the flame has turned down to a simmer.


Science Fiction
Adventure
Action
*

Christy Lemire

Christy Lemire is a longtime film critic who has written for phukiennail.net since 2013. Before that, she was the film critic for The Associated Press for nearly 15 years and co-hosted the public television series "Ebert Presents At the Movies" opposite Ignatiy Vishnevetsky, with Roger Ebert serving as managing editor. Read her answers khổng lồ our Movie Love Questionnaire here.

Bài viết liên quan