If you already know how the "Hunger Games" saga
ends, you may want to skip this third installment--unless you are fond of
tedium. The beginning gets off the ground well enough with lots of dialogue and
ominous music that is just setting the stage for future action scenes. However,
said action scenes drag on and on, do little to advance the story, and one
infuriatingly long sequence involves scores of fantastical creatures that just
keep coming and coming and coming at our characters. It became almost comical
and all I could do was envision those police cars piling up and up and up in
"The Blues Brothers," or myriad clowns piling out of a VW.
TO EDIT OR NOT TO
EDIT? EDIT
At times toward the middle and end of the film, the movie
felt almost unedited, like the filmmakers just let the camera run, or they just
got tired of editing, but I suspect they were running out of ideas at this
point in the film and also just wanted to make the ending of the whole series
feel epic (by its completely unnecessary length of 137 minutes). This lack of
editing gives the story an uninteresting, amateurish feel, like first-time
filmmakers who are so attached to their every shot that they can't decide which
"gems" to get rid of. This desperate need for editing was felt not
only in the action scenes, but also when the camera constantly plays on
Katniss' (Jennifer Lawrence) face for prolonged periods of time. Granted,
Jennifer Lawrence may prove to be the Meryl Streep of her generation, and she masterfully
holds the camera's (and our) attention with every slight shift in mood, every
small twitch or squint, but...enough already.
Another consistent flaw with The Hunger Games, IMHO, is the
fact that Katniss' love interest is all wrong. The characters and/or actors of
Peeta and Gale should have been switched.
I find no chemistry between Peeta (Josh Hutcherson) and Katniss, but lots
between Gale (Liam Hemsworth) and Katniss. Am I wrong?
WAR AND PEACE
Let's recall at this point, Suzanne Collins' intention for
writing "The Hunger Games" in the first place. She came from a
military family and wanted to get young people thinking about the seriousness
and horror of war before they might blithely or naively consider enlisting at
the tender age of 18. Although--as I stated in my reviews of the previous films
in the series--I have big problems with the milieu of children killing children
(even granted Collins' noble cause), this film has some excellent ethical
discussions that unfold organically as the characters are forced to make
decisions, react, retaliate and plan their course of action.
The strongest point of the film is Katniss' moral compass
that just won't quit. She gets the complexity of the situation, but she never
wants to lose her humanity. She is not afraid of the hard thing, of the hardest
thing if it's the right thing. The questions the film raises are worth looking
at carefully: If we are willing to use the same ruthless tactics as our
"enemy," what makes us so different from our enemy? Does it matter if
we're any different from our enemy? And how different are we from our enemy, really,
as fellow human beings? Can we win if we use ethical tactics and our enemy doesn't?
What if we begin to commit the same atrocities that kicked off a war in the
first place--then what are we fighting for? Where does it all end? What happens
when authority breaks down in the ranks? Is there one mutual enemy of us all?
Clarity is needed more than ever in times of armed conflict.
SAVING LIVES IN THE
MIDST OF WARFARE
There are some good shockers at the end--but getting there was
fatiguing to say the least (I can't tell you how many times I looked at my
watch), and the relentlessly heroic soundtrack was draining. Katniss is still
looking a lot like Joan of Arc (and a bit like Cupid in the promo pic above), even literally "catching on fire" in
a bad way (Joan died by being burned at the stake at 19 years old). Joan prided
herself on never having killed anyone personally and even reached out to the
enemy, begging them to save their lives, even as she was in the thick of battle
with her men. (Katniss, also, is always concerned about saving as many lives on
both sides as possible.) When President Coin (Julianne Moore) sees that a
French Revolution-style bloodbath is imminent, she finds a creative way to
lessen the bloodshed.
In some ways, the whole "Hunger Games" experience
is summed up toward the end of the film in a letter from Plutarch (Phillip
Seymour Hoffman, RIP) to Katniss. He tells her that they have now entered that
sweet period of peace that happens after a bloody conflict while the horrors
are still fresh in people's minds. The question to all of us is: how quickly
will we forget and return to our all-too-easy bloodlust? To violence as one of the
first and best solutions?
OTHER STUFF:
--Caesar Flickerman's (Stanley Tucci) purple eyebrows
--Like "Twilight," two men love one woman (the
ultimate female fantasy)
--People are more scary than fantastical creatures. Fantastical
creatures are non-sadistic and, well, dumb.
--This movie could have been named "Sewer Games."
--This movie could have been named "Sewer Games."
--So many plot points
of the advance on the Capitol were unrealistic: they were in broad daylight and
didn't get killed? Didn't the Capitol have face-recognition software and
surveillance technology everywhere?
--Irish music is always the go-to music for weddings, happy
times and happy dances
--MY REVIEW OF PRECEDING "HUNGER GAMES" FILMS:
"Hunger Games" (2012) http://hellburns.blogspot.ca/2012/04/movies-hunger-games.html#.VlUd9fmrSM8
"Hunger Games: Catching Fire" (2012) http://hellburns.blogspot.ca/2013/11/movies-hunger-games-catching-fire.html#.VlUeKfmrSM8
"Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1" (2014) http://hellburns.blogspot.ca/2014/11/movies-hunger-games-mockingjay-part-i.html#.VlUeXvmrSM8
"Hunger Games: Catching Fire" (2012) http://hellburns.blogspot.ca/2013/11/movies-hunger-games-catching-fire.html#.VlUeKfmrSM8
"Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1" (2014) http://hellburns.blogspot.ca/2014/11/movies-hunger-games-mockingjay-part-i.html#.VlUeXvmrSM8
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