THE HUNGER GAMES (2012) Directed by Gary Ross.

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THE HUNGER GAMES (2012) Directed by Gary Ross.
“I know one thing, though: The Capitol can never take Lenore Dove from me again. They never really did in the first place. Nothing you can take from me was ever worth keeping, and she is the most precious thing I’ve ever known. When I tell her that, she always says, “I love you like all-fire.” And I reply, “I love you like all-fire, too.”
― Suzanne Collins, Sunrise on the Reaping
TOM BLYTH & RACHEL ZEGLER behind the scenes of last day of reshoots on set of The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (2023)
If you can eat and drink, sleep in a bed, read these words, and have a bank account—you have the power to help. Don’t stay silent. Do something for Gaza today.
The Sameer Project
Dahnoun Mutual Aid
Mona's Initiative
Hussein Team
Water is Life Gaza
Katniss... remember who the real enemy is. THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (2013, dir. Francis Lawrence)
SUNRISE ON THE REAPING (2026)
If we can stop the games, we can stop The Capitol, too.
THE HUNGER GAMES: THE BALLAD OF SONGBIRDS AND SNAKES 2023, dir. Francis Lawrence
The Casting for Panache Barker in the Sunrise on the Reaping film adaptation is Anti-Black and Tone-Deaf
In the book Sunrise on the Reaping, Panache Barker is a minor antagonist from District 1. Based on his spots in the new trailer, it looks like the film adaptation is going to keep the role pretty accurate. Which makes the fact that they cast Jhaleil Swaby, a young Black man to play the character, pretty damn problematic. I'm not saying Swaby won't be able to do a good job with the role - but I do think that this is a case where racebending a character is really out of touch with the character's role in the story, to the point of creating hugely racist connotations.
Panache in the book is hyper-violent, hotheaded, and unintelligent. He is first introduced as breaking the train window when he steps out of it. Later in the showers, he literally swings his dick around in peoples faces. During training sessions, he talks over the female instructors and bullies the other tributes. At his interview, the Capitol just laughs at him for being dumb.
There is not much sympathetic about Panache, because he chooses violence every time. He chooses to hype up the system while refusing to believe in the fact that he himself is suffering from that same system. He refuses to believe in the fact that he has more in common with the other tributes than he does with the Capitol people he eagers to impress.
All this is to say, Panache's character represents toxic masculinity. And while I'm definitely not going to claim that Black boys and men cannot fall into that hole like men of any other ethnic background, I will say that there is nothing about Panache that reads as Black in the book. If he was Black, I would think that his toxic masculinity would have been displayed a little differently; it would have included the context of his race within the threads of that type of violence. Instead, I personally read him as a big white guy abusing underfed brown kids, in attempt to appease the overlording Capitol.
But instead of critiquing toxic masculinity as the book does, the film instead chose to make the hyper-violent, hotheaded, and unintelligent antagonist a Black boy. This instead now presents horrible, dangerous, racist stereotypes for Black boys and men as if they are true.
The Hunger Games films have a strong history of whitewashing, but this is the opposite of the answer. If the only roles you're willing to cast visible minorities in are villains and dead characters, that's adding to the problem.
THE HUNGER GAMES: THE BALLAD OF SONGBIRDS AND SNAKES
THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE
THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY – PART 1 (2014) dir. francis lawrence
THE HUNGER GAMES (2012) dir. Gary Ross
No, you can't catch me now.
THE HUNGER GAMES: THE BALLAD OF SONGBIRDS & SNAKES 2023 | dir. Francis Lawrence
"Then he climbs into bed to hold me until I fall back to sleep. After that, I refuse the pills. But every night I let him into my bed. We manage the darkness as we did in the arena, wrapped in each other’s arms, guarding against dangers that can descend at any moment."
THE HUNGER GAMES ↳ Catching Fire ↳ Mockingjay
the hunger games prequel books basically break down the themes of rebellion into more digestable subthemes which helps explicitly detail the severe level of manipulation and narrative control thg has already emphasised on but also exemplifies how rebellion requires so many facets of underground resistance before it can come together into one cohesive machine
This is how we remember our past. This is how we safeguard our future.
The Hunger Games (2012) dir. Gary Ross
People of Panem, we fight, we dare, we end our hunger for justice!
Lucy Gray Baird, Coriolanus Snow and Sejanus Plinth as the three different social contracts of the philosophers Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Hobbes and John Locke.