Also the lack of romance in the movies and the sheer amount of Everlark moments they cut gets me anyways, but especially because I firmly believe Jen and Josh were going at it (at one point at least) during this franchise.
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Also the lack of romance in the movies and the sheer amount of Everlark moments they cut gets me anyways, but especially because I firmly believe Jen and Josh were going at it (at one point at least) during this franchise.
Odesta
"My love,
you have my heart for all eternity.
And if I die in that arena,
my last thought
will be of your lips."
the movies fumbled both the exploitive media commentary and the love story SO TRUE like i think it wouldâve been way less irritating had they focused explicitly on one, and i think they couldâve done so, but instead we got an awkward loveless romance plot AND no social commentary with any real substance. so frustrating!! and it just makes me think about how people misread/misremember thg and the love story, and i think so much of that is because the movies really failed to understand what made the love story compelling. but then people also forget so much of the social commentary on the exploitation of children and the beauty industry, because the movies cast fully grown adults and katniss never had to really go through the ordeal of âprepâ because she was already beautified in the district 12 scenes. ugh im rambling but like. they couldnât do EITHER one well and the entire story suffers for it
I get spicy like a hot sauce when I read complaints that the movie suffers because of the romance and I think âthe romance is in the book and itâs important!â ⊠but itâs not played right in the films (not least because the characters of Katniss and Peeta lose a lot of their equality in the name of âgirlboss and simpâ đ) and some of the depth is lost! The point is that the love is real, in spite of how so much of the Games and what Katniss and Peeta are forced to do is not real.
I donât hate the movies completely and I certainly donât think poorly of anyone who likes them! Thereâs things I like! But theyâre quite a separate media from the book, and should be considered as such IMO.
I just got home and am catching up - âHappy Hunger Games!â
As I reread and rewatched THG again I was struck with the careers enthusiasm for the games. What in society would cause teenagers to volunteer to risk their lives for the opportunity to take the lives of others? Is it brainwashing? Does their community remove the moral dilemma by lessoning the value of life as they are brought up? If so, are there things we see in our culture today that are heading us down a similar path?
I've never really considered this before. Would be curious your thoughts.
Do you feel like the Gamemakers and their lackeys are shipping it????
I like the prolonged period with almost no dialogue. It does give it the isolated feel from the books.
This movie hits different as a parent with small kids đŹ. Prim đ