![]() |
| Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games |
Guest post written by Molly McCaffrey. Originally
published at I Will Not Diet.
Cross-posted with permission.
***SPOILER ALERT: Though there are no real spoilers here,
one scene and the basic premise of the film are discussed in detail. If you’ve
seen the preview for The Hunger Games, reading this review won’t reveal
anything new, but if you haven’t seen the preview, I’d suggest you skip the
part I’ve marked below.***
Possibly the most important moment in the film adaptation of
The Hunger Games occurs when protagonist Katniss Everdeen (played with a
perfect cross of vulnerability and strength by Kentucky native Jennifer
Lawrence) confesses to her stylist Cinna (the circumspect Lenny Kravitz who
aptly conveys the enormity of Katniss’ situation with his searing eyes) that
she’s not very good at making people like her.
Katniss has just arrived in the capital to participate in
the 74th Annual Hunger Games and is about to be interviewed on television by
Caeser Flickerman (a blue-haired, ponytailed Stanley Tucci doing a slightly
more likeable version of reality show host Ryan Seacrest). Her interview will
be seen by absolutely everyone in Panem, the futuristic version of North
America where this story takes place, so the stakes are high.
For this reason, Katniss is more than a little anxious.
SPOILER ALERT: SKIP THIS PARAGRAPH IF YOU HAVEN’T SEEN
THE HUNGER GAMES PREVIEW . . . Adding to her anxiety is the fact that, just
days before the interview takes place, Katniss volunteered to take her
sister’s place when she was chosen by lot—calling to mind Shirley Jackson’s
classic short story “The Lottery”—to
represent their district in the Hunger Games that year.
The “Hunger Games” is a twisted, fight-to-the-death,
televised competition—think William Golding’s Lord of the Flies and
Richard Connell’s “The Most
Dangerous Game” crossed with a reality show like Survivor—designed
by Panam’s capital city to punish and intimidate the outlying districts of
Panem for the uprising they orchestrated unsuccessfully against the
capital 74 years before.
That risky political move ultimately led to the obliteration
of one of the thirteen districts and the virtual enslavement of the other
twelve districts (creating a world not totally unlike George Orwell’s 1984 or
Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale). As a result, the people who live
in the districts are now forced to live in such extreme poverty that dying of
hunger is one of their greatest fears.
Katniss isn’t just nervous because she’s about to appear on national television or enter an arena in which only one person will come out alive; she’s also apprehensive because she knows that one of the ways a “tribute”—meaning a player in the Games—can get ahead is by making the people of the capital fall in love with her since they are allowed to sponsor tributes in the Games and send them gifts—medicine, water, weapons, anything—to help them win. So if she doesn’t make them like her, she could be sacrificing her own life in the process.
Katniss isn’t just nervous because she’s about to appear on national television or enter an arena in which only one person will come out alive; she’s also apprehensive because she knows that one of the ways a “tribute”—meaning a player in the Games—can get ahead is by making the people of the capital fall in love with her since they are allowed to sponsor tributes in the Games and send them gifts—medicine, water, weapons, anything—to help them win. So if she doesn’t make them like her, she could be sacrificing her own life in the process.
![]() |
| Stanley Tucci as Caesar Flickerman and Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games |
But Katniss feels that she isn’t the kind of person people
like—she’s not warm or engaging, positive or open, nor is she particularly
feminine (at least until her prep team in the capital puts her through a Twilight
Zone-esque makeover process), yet these are the qualities that television
audiences usually respond to. So when she is faced with the task of
entertaining an entire country of viewers, she is terrified not just that they
won’t like her, but that they’ll go so far as to root against her.
This is a common fear for women in our society, especially
young women who are expected to be have cheerful personalities and sunny
dispositions, who are supposed to be both people pleasers and objects of the
male gaze. They are not supposed to be contemplative or cynical, as Katniss
certainly is after having grown up in a society that forces her to kill
squirrels on a daily basis to feed her fatherless family. So her fears about
not being able to woo her television audience are not only valid, but also
relatable.
If Katniss’ apprehensions about not being able to put on the
right face for society are driven by her very real fear of dying in the arena,
the fears of young women today are usually motivated by less sober concerns,
but ones that surely feel just as profound when you’re sixteen years old.
Like Katniss, young women today worry about not being pretty
enough or likeable enough, but they also worry about how their ability to do
those things will ultimately affect their ability to find both happiness and
success in life, a fate that may seem as serious as losing your life when
you’re a teenager. So it’s no wonder this story appeals to young
people—girls and boys alike. It speaks to their most overwhelming concerns:
Will I be good enough? Will I be strong enough? Will people like me?
Ultimately Katniss is able to perform for the audience
during her televised interview and win them over: not by being sunny or
charismatic or entertaining—though she is forced to do the latter when she
twirls in her designer ball gown, alighting the flames inside its skirt (an
allusion to Katniss’ inner strength)—but by being herself, by being a real
person with genuine thoughts and emotions, making her more honest and
vulnerable than anyone else in the giant theatre full of costumed adults who congratulate
and cheer for the tributes in a way that reveals their inability to understand
the gravity of what they are doing to them.
It’s a message repeated throughout the rest of her story
and, more importantly, one we need to send more often to young people: Be
yourself—not who other people expect you to be—and we will like you for who you
are.
I cannot explain how much I appreciate Suzanne Collins for
putting such an important message out in the world and for giving us the great
gift of Katniss Everdeen, one of the most admirable and honest young heroes
ever committed to the page or screen. And I hope you will appreciate her as
much as I do.
Molly McCaffrey is the author of the short story collection How to Survive Graduate School & Other Disasters, the co-editor of Commutability: Stories about the Journey from Here to There, and the founder of I Will Not Diet,
a blog devoted to healthy living and body acceptance. She teaches
English and creative writing classes and advises writing majors at
Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, Kentucky.


2 comments:
thank you for this post!
This is one of the many reasons I love these books and movies!
Post a Comment