Oh, did she sell the movie rights? Not sure how I feel about that, as of course what Hollywood will do is dumb them down and cast someone like Miley Cyrus in the role. Forgive me if anyone likes her. I shudder to think how awful they'll be. Well, one can hope. The LoTR movies were pretty damn good adaptations, after all.
I love dystopian fiction despite being terrified by it. The Dark Tower by Stephen King is probably my favorite book series of all time, which definitely fits that category.
Thanks for the feedback, Matt!
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The Hunger Games series by Suzanne Collins
- Matt Phillips
- Reader
- Posts: 100
- Joined: August 2009
- Matt Phillips
- Reader
- Posts: 100
- Joined: August 2009
Jennifer Lawrence it is.
http://www.thewrap.com/movies/column-po ... 2?_r=true#
She will be good. I don't know if you saw Winter's Bone, but her role seems to have a lot in common with Katniss: independent, tough, hunter, survivor, fiercely protective of younger siblings, setting (Ozarks have a lot in common with the Appalachian setting of District 12).
Looks like the big screen might get this franchise right.
http://www.thewrap.com/movies/column-po ... 2?_r=true#
She will be good. I don't know if you saw Winter's Bone, but her role seems to have a lot in common with Katniss: independent, tough, hunter, survivor, fiercely protective of younger siblings, setting (Ozarks have a lot in common with the Appalachian setting of District 12).
Looks like the big screen might get this franchise right.
I haven't seen that film, but at my local murder mystery bookstore they rave about it and the book. I'll have to now. I see that the same man who wrote "State of Play" (Russell Crowe film? I think) wrote the screen play. Also that kid Alex Pettyfir (he's in Beastly, which was awful, but he did a good acting job) is the frontrunner for Peeta. I love these books so much I will reserve judgment until I see them...but let's hope they're at least close to the story line.
I have a film production degree, and while I don't work in the industry anymore, I still care and still love movies, especially when they're adapted from books that I love. I appreciate you keeping me up to date!
I have a film production degree, and while I don't work in the industry anymore, I still care and still love movies, especially when they're adapted from books that I love. I appreciate you keeping me up to date!
- Matt Phillips
- Reader
- Posts: 100
- Joined: August 2009
Who's seen the movie yet?
I was pleased with it. Overall it lacked the same intensity of tension the novel has, but it was probably about as good of an adaptation that could be done of this book. Of course, that's with the proviso that the movie has to be PG-13. The violence was certainly sanitized.
Jennifer Lawrence is fantastic as Katniss. With facial expressions, actions, and limited dialogue, she captures the heart-rending emotional and physical whirlwind the character experiences and that Collins conveys in the novel mostly through interior monologue.
The movie portrays District 12, the Capitol, and the residents much as I envisioned. And I enjoyed the behind-the-scenes subplots the movie reveals involving President Snow and Seneca Crane that we don't see in the novel, since the novel is first-person from Katniss's POV.
But the cost of translating a very close, emotionally powerful POV into a multi-POV movie is losing layers and nuance. Rue's And the movie doesn't quite achieve the level of suspense nor convey Katniss's degree of suspicion and guardedness on the question of whether Finally there were a few other things that were minor in the book individually, but collectively amplified the reader's experience of vicarious terror, like
Definitely worth seeing, though, whether you've read the books or not.
I was pleased with it. Overall it lacked the same intensity of tension the novel has, but it was probably about as good of an adaptation that could be done of this book. Of course, that's with the proviso that the movie has to be PG-13. The violence was certainly sanitized.
Jennifer Lawrence is fantastic as Katniss. With facial expressions, actions, and limited dialogue, she captures the heart-rending emotional and physical whirlwind the character experiences and that Collins conveys in the novel mostly through interior monologue.
The movie portrays District 12, the Capitol, and the residents much as I envisioned. And I enjoyed the behind-the-scenes subplots the movie reveals involving President Snow and Seneca Crane that we don't see in the novel, since the novel is first-person from Katniss's POV.
But the cost of translating a very close, emotionally powerful POV into a multi-POV movie is losing layers and nuance. Rue's
Definitely worth seeing, though, whether you've read the books or not.
- MLE (Emily Cotton)
- Bibliomaniac
- Posts: 3566
- Joined: August 2008
- Interest in HF: started in childhood with the classics, which, IMHO are HF even if they were contemporary when written.
- Favourite HF book: Prince of Foxes, by Samuel Shellabarger
- Preferred HF: Currently prefer 1600 and earlier, but I'll read anything that keeps me turning the page.
- Location: California Bay Area
I saw the movie and thought the adaptation was excellent. What they couldn't put in Katniss' internal monologue, they showed with the behind-the-scenes shots and clips of former hunger games. Also liked how they had clips of Haymitch wheeling and dealing on her behalf.
The internal feelings that the medium lost were more than compensated for by the way a movie should show the game arena and what was happening behind the scenes.
The internal feelings that the medium lost were more than compensated for by the way a movie should show the game arena and what was happening behind the scenes.
- Alisha Marie Klapheke
- Avid Reader
- Posts: 376
- Joined: November 2010
- Location: Franklin, TN
- Contact:
There's been debate about the rabid response to black characters in the movie. Very bizarre and disturbing.
http://www.wildcat.arizona.edu/index.ph ... nwarranted
http://www.wildcat.arizona.edu/index.ph ... nwarranted