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| Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games |
Part 1 of the Review in Conversation on The Hunger Games.
Megan’s Take:
In a dystopian future, the nation of Panem stands where North America once existed. The government at the Capitol, which controls the country, mandates a girl and boy between the ages of 12 and 18 are selected by lottery in each of the 12 Districts as tributes to compete in a fight to the death called the Hunger Games aired on live television. 16-year-old Katniss Everdeen volunteers when her little sister Prim’s name is called. But in the Hunger Games, only one person can survive.
I devoured The Hunger Games trilogy, reading all 3
books in a matter of 2 days. Katniss descends from a line of strong literary
female protagonists (Karana in Island of the Blue Dolphins, Miyax in Julie
of the Wolves, Jo March in Little Women, Anne Shirley in Anne of
Green Gables, Jane Eyre, Meg Murray in A Wrinkle in Time,
Hermione Granger in Harry Potter) for young adult readers. The story
echoes themes in The Lottery, The Most Dangerous Game, Gladiator, 1984,
Island of the Blue Dolphins and Battle Royale, yet forges a new
path. The female-centric series’ haunting themes – poverty, war, sacrifice,
love, starvation, media influence, government control, class difference, and
economic inequity – riveted me. The books’ memorable characters lingered long
after I closed the pages. I didn’t want to say goodbye. So my expectations for
the film were high when I saw the midnight premiere.
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| Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss |
While other female film franchises exist, no female-centric
movies aside from Twilight, Bridesmaids and Mamma Mia have
experienced this meteoric success. Some people pit Katniss and Bella against each other as if there isn’t room in this world for both.
While I’m no fan of the Twilight Saga (I’ll admit it makes me want to
gouge my eyes out), putting them in a dichotomy implies girls and women can
only identify with either Katniss OR Bella, not both or neither. Thankfully, others question this comparison.
I thought the movie was fantastic. I often lament the lack of strong female protagonists in film. We desperately need more characters like Katniss on-screen. A skilled archer, Katniss is smart, stubborn, brave, abrasive and self-reliant. She not only fights for her own survival; she’s compelled to protect her family. Living in the most impoverished neighborhood in the poorest of the 12 Districts, Katniss is the resourceful breadwinner, illegally hunting for food to feed her family. She’s a surrogate mother to her sister Prim and even her own traumatized mother, grief-stricken over the death of her daughters’ father. Despite her tough exterior, she possesses a vulnerability. What makes Katniss unique is that she “feels empathy when nobody else does.” She’s compelled to defend others, even her competition.
I thought the movie was fantastic. I often lament the lack of strong female protagonists in film. We desperately need more characters like Katniss on-screen. A skilled archer, Katniss is smart, stubborn, brave, abrasive and self-reliant. She not only fights for her own survival; she’s compelled to protect her family. Living in the most impoverished neighborhood in the poorest of the 12 Districts, Katniss is the resourceful breadwinner, illegally hunting for food to feed her family. She’s a surrogate mother to her sister Prim and even her own traumatized mother, grief-stricken over the death of her daughters’ father. Despite her tough exterior, she possesses a vulnerability. What makes Katniss unique is that she “feels empathy when nobody else does.” She’s compelled to defend others, even her competition.
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| Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss |
Jennifer Lawrence’s powerful performance as the “Girl on
Fire” has been lauded by critics. And rightfully so. She’s
stunning, perfectly conveying strength, rage, fear, and vulnerability through
her body language, a flick of her eyes, never needing to utter a single word.
She trained in archery, free running, yoga, climbing and combat. Regarding
Lawrence’s casting as Katniss, director Gary Ross, moved by her powerful audition,
called it “the easiest casting decision” of his life. Author Collins also fully supported Lawrence as Katniss.
The casting call, however, wanted an “underfed but strong”
actor, and was limited only to “Caucasian” women. What. The. Fuck. I mean
really, Hollywood?? No, women of color could even audition?! Collins describes
Katniss’ appearance in the book as olive skinned with black hair. Hello…that
could be tons of female actors of color! Why the hell must she be white?!
You’re going to exclude young women of color and, on top of that, you only want
malnourished-looking women?! Yes, starvation is a vital issue in the series.
But in the book, Katniss says she possesses lean muscles from hunting.
Lawrence is receiving an assload of toxic bodysnarking from the misogynisitc media. The NY Times’ Mahnola Dargis claimed “her
seductive, womanly figure makes a bad fit for a dystopian fantasy about a
people starved into submission,”Hollywood
Reporter’s Todd McCarthy commented on her “lingering
baby fat,” Hollywood Elsewhere’s
Jeffrey Wells accuses Lawrence of being “big-boned”
and “seems
too big for Hutcherson” as male romantic partners should at least be as
tall as their female counterparts (heaven forbid a woman is bigger or taller
than her love interest…gasp!). The media constantly tells women we must be
skinny. This toxicity destroys women’s body image.
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| Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss |
Amber’s Take:
I agree with all your comments on Katniss being a strong
female protagonist, and what a relief it is for a franchise fronted by a young
woman to win the box office (as of this writing) four weeks in a row. Although
the Twilight comparisons irk me, too, they almost seem inevitable, as so
few big Hollywood releases have featured female protagonists. As with so many Hollywood
franchises, however, this one takes a small step forward: a strong young woman
is in the lead, but she is whitewashed to “play it safe” with the viewing
public. Although the film is set in—and was filmed in--modern-day Appalachia, I
see no reason why the lead needed to be “Caucasian.”
I have to talk about the “body snarking,” because while I
would never call Jennifer Lawrence “too big” to play Katniss, she is older than
Katniss. The 17-year-old Lawrence who starred in Winter’s Bone would
have been a more convincing 16-year-old Katniss than the actor at age 21. Women
in their 20s playing teenagers certainly isn’t a new thing (how many times have
you watched a movie or TV show and noticed twenty-somethings playing high
school students?), but the tendency for this to happen does create unrealistic
expectations for teenage girls and conflate girlhood with womanhood. I think
this problem will only become more apparent in the following two films of the
series, too.
Much has been said about Lawrence’s body, but I’m not really interested in analyzing it—the incessant discussion of female bodies is part of the problem. What I do want to discuss is the film’s handling of food and hunger (a conversation I think many people are sincerely trying to have who end up derailing into critiques of Lawrence’s body). Everyone in District 12 is hungry, including Katniss. Winning the Hunger Games isn’t just about surviving; it’s also about bringing extra food home to your district—especially important for the poorer areas. The Capitol uses hunger as a political tool—a fact that doesn’t come through clearly enough in the movie. (An anecdote: The person who saw the movie with me didn’t understand why it was called The Hunger Games.)
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| Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss |
Much has been said about Lawrence’s body, but I’m not really interested in analyzing it—the incessant discussion of female bodies is part of the problem. What I do want to discuss is the film’s handling of food and hunger (a conversation I think many people are sincerely trying to have who end up derailing into critiques of Lawrence’s body). Everyone in District 12 is hungry, including Katniss. Winning the Hunger Games isn’t just about surviving; it’s also about bringing extra food home to your district—especially important for the poorer areas. The Capitol uses hunger as a political tool—a fact that doesn’t come through clearly enough in the movie. (An anecdote: The person who saw the movie with me didn’t understand why it was called The Hunger Games.)
Megan’s Take:
I didn’t really have a problem with Lawrence being older
than Katniss. Although I totally agree about the concern for girls “conflating
girlhood with womanhood.” But I suppose it didn’t bother me so much because
Katniss is never sexualized. She cares about archery, not what she’s wearing.
While Katniss receives a pageant-style makeover, so do the male tributes. While
it hints at it, I just wish the movie had conveyed the book’s satire of toxic
beauty standards.
I could NOT agree more with you on the themes of hunger and
food or rather how they’re severely diminished almost to the point of erasure
in the film. As a feminist vegan, I’m passionate about food justice and our
relationship with food. Food and hunger are vital themes in the trilogy. Food
is used as a reward while withholding food a punishment wielded as a weapon
against Panem’s citizens. While the movie hints at these themes through the
Capitol’s citizens’ garish costumes versus District 12’s simple garb or the
lavishness of food at the Capitol, it doesn’t fully capture the book’s themes
of food justice, food shortages, hunger and class inequities.
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| Elizabeth Banks as Effie Trinket and Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen |
It’s rare to see an impoverished protagonist and a film
contend with economic inequities. Even within the impoverished District 12,
there are class distinctions. In the book, Katniss tells Peeta he doesn’t
understand her desire to not owe anyone anything because he’s not from the
Seam, the poorest neighborhood in District 12. The reason Gale had his name in
the Reaping 42 times was so he could obtain more rations for his family.
Katniss continually describes food and she always gorges herself like she’ll
never eat again…because she doesn’t know if she will.
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| Jennifer Lawrence and Amandla Stenberg as Rue |
Society equates food with morality -- healthy food is good,
decadent food sinful. While eating should be a sensual experience, through diet
ads the media constantly tells us that women shouldn’t enjoy food. Food is
constantly a threat to women’s bodies and we must resist its seductive allure.
That’s why it was so refreshing to read Katniss’ delight in savoring food.
Beyond nourishment, I saw hunger serving as a metaphor for
consumption -- consumption of merchandise and media with its gravitational pull
of reality TV and celeb culture. To eliminate the message of food, hunger and
consumption dilutes its powerful message.
Speaking of parts eliminated from the book, I was
disappointed the film eliminated the leads’ disabilities. In the book, Katniss
loses her hearing, becoming deaf in one ear, and Peeta has his leg amputated.
The movie hints at her hearing loss with sound effects but doesn’t actually
address it. People often say that losing their hearing would be the end of
the world but Katniss must adapt as a hunter and survive. It’s also a
powerful message that in the book the Capitol “fixes” people’s disabilities
without their consent. Sadly, it says even more that the film erases disabilities altogether. The fact that a movie can’t have a disabled protagonist or a disabled love
interest is pathetic.
Amber’s Take:
The film really diminished a lot of powerful themes and
messages from the book, and I couldn’t agree more with you about minimizing
injury, or what equates to erasure of disability. Ironic that the book has the
Capitol “fixing” disability, but the film itself erases it--making the
filmmakers the Capitol. We -- the viewers -- are already in the uncomfortable
position of watching the Games much like the Capitol citizens (something else
the film minimizes, I think).
In a way, it’s funny that we haven’t really talked
about violence, and how -- in order to get a PG-13 rating -- the film sanitized
violence. The books are intended for a Young Adult audience, but are filled
with brutal murders. The movie is, too, and I think we could see the
de-emphasis of violence as either positive or negative: Positive in that the
movie doesn’t glorify violence, or depict it graphically (which movies do too
much of in general), but bad in that the movie isn’t as dark or complex as it
could have been. While I realize that a filmmaker must make difficult choices
when adapting a book (series), every choice made about The Hunger Games
made it safer -- and more likely to not put off, offend, or disturb mainstream
viewers. In essence, making it a successful blockbuster.
Stay tuned for the next part of the Review in
Conversation on The Hunger Games,
in which we’ll discuss race in the world of the film, female relationships, and
that love triangle.
Amber Leab is a Co-Founder and Contributing Editor to Bitch Flicks.
Amber Leab is a Co-Founder and Contributing Editor to Bitch Flicks.
Megan Kearns is a Bitch Flicks Contributor and Founder of The Opinioness of the World.








1 comment:
The Hunger Games casting brought out some very unpleasant feelings from people. From those who didn't think Rue should have been black to people who claimed Lawrence was too thick to be Katniss. I did find it odd that film Katniss had zero appetite since there was enough talk of food to inspire a cookbook!
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