Once again, another third book in a trilogy has been
broken into two (cleft in twain?) to stretch out the movie revenue in a
successful franchise. But this time, with the Hunger Games:
Mockingjay: Part 1, it may actually work.
Why? Well, for fans of the books, the finale is
seen as the weakest in the link. I tend to think its because the final
book tells the story of revolution in Panem, and as the books are told first
person from Katniss’s point of view, its hard to really experience all the
disparate events that this might entail.
The movie though is not tied down to a first person point
of view. The film can go and see President Snow (the grippingly evil
Donald Sutherland, just awesome) and what vile machinations he is up to; it can
follow handsome Edward/Gael (Liam Hemsworth) as he does brave and manly things
without needing to hang on to Katniss’s (the always incredible Jennifer
Lawrence – can she be more perfect?) leather pants; it can show Jacob/Peter
(Josh Hutchison) and his story in the Capitol; and it can show Julianne Moore
and Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Elizabeth Banks and all the other actors and
their characters and really give us that overall picture of how things are
changing.
That it doesn’t though is what makes the film a bit slow
and feel very much like a placeholder. Watching Lawrence is never a
chore, but her change from Victor to Rebel Inspiration is slow and a bit
tedious. Without the Hunger Games making Katniss act the heroine, the
film shows that she is less a force for good but more a canvas on which others
put their hopes and dreams, with the occasional profound act to get you on her
side.
That is not to say the story is bad. The bigger world
is painted (even if it doesn’t always make a huge amount of sense to me) and
the rebellion spreads, including an interesting “bomb the dam” scene that had
me bamboozled as to how anyone was able to successfully place bombs and who
would have actually survived afterwards. At any rate, the actors (if not
the story) are enough to propel you through to the end, where the inevitable
cliff hanger gets your ready for part two. A year away. Huh.
Verdict: The Hunger Games: Mockingjay: Part 1
is a long title on a longish film that throws a little bit of action and
character development in amongst a whole lot of padding. While it is an
okay film, here is hoping Part 2 really lifts the Game. May the odds be
ever in its favour. 3 out of 5 explosive arrows.
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