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The Hunger Games
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I can see how the trailer looks lame if you haven't read the books.

I have to say the trailer looks pretty decent. I'm vaguely interested in seeing the movie, even though I was underwhelmed by the book. For me, most of the books issue was that I never really felt the tension or suspense, and I think a lot of that had to do with poor narration. (Sorry to those who loved it, that's just what I thought.)
But I think the movie could take the idea and perhaps up the ante.
But that trailer making people cry and freak out? Erm... it looks like a lot of other action movies I've seen. Maybe 'cause it's kids, though. I know that's what some people I knew reacted to - not just the notion of having people fight for their lives in this arena kind of combat, but the fact that it was kids doing it.
Does anyone know the rating? I assume they'll be going for a PG-13 on it.


But the trailer does make me want to watch it. The film might be even better than the books.


I thought the books were entertaining, although since I *had* seen (if not read, it wasn't translated into any language I could read until years later) Battle Royale the whole premise didn't feel particularly new and shocking to me. I hope some of the narrative issues might be taken care of by turning it into a movie as well, and I gather Jennifer Lawrence is supposed to be a pretty good actress?

@Trike - I really enjoyed City of Ember and Cirque du Freak as family movies. To me they weren't hard-core fantasy type movies.
I share other opinions with the The Hunger Games Trilogy Boxset. The first book was pretty good the other two were very predictable but reasonable extensions of the first book. I read them in anticipation of the movie coming out.

I think this is one reason I never really felt the tension or suspense of the stories, precisely because everything was so obvious that I was never in any real fear for the main characters or anything.

I feel bad now and can't really say anything because I'm not a published author like her, but I mean COME ON, drop a small hint, but don't freaking tell us exactly what is about to happen to her. The medicine to make Peeta fall asleep in the first book, GOOD! The bomb idea in the last book with the healer people... BAD! She ruined the whole shock at the end.


The only potentially shocking thing will be how violent the film will be but I can see it all being pretty tame, hence I can't get excited about it,
I'll probably end up watching it though.


I find that's true with a lot of these uber-popular books. I read Wicked and was all, "What's the big deal? He reimagined Wizard of Oz from the witch's perspective. Been there, done that." Now we have a whole slew of these things coming out in books and movies and I have to wonder where all these people have been for the past 60 years.

To be fair, that's what we mean by "starving" in America.
"Oh God, I am STARVING! I haven't eaten in," checks smart phone, "Two hours!"

A pot-bellied malnourished female star would have been a bit off-putting?

She's GIGANTIC. She must weigh, what, 100 pounds? I mean come on, a size zero as a starving waif? Preposterous!

I'm going to watch it, but I know I'm going to be mad with the inaccuracies. There are always a few.





As far as the movie goes, I'm always leery of books adapted into movies. It's a tough thing to do satisfactorily. I took 3 people who had not read Hunger Games to see the film. They all liked it. And even though there were some different choices I would have made, I thought they did a pretty good job of it. They hit all the major plot points and visually it was interesting (although the Cornucopia was strangely smaller than I had always imagined).
I also thought Jennifer Lawrence was an excellent Katniss, although I didn't think Peeta or Gale were cast as well. But, we all have our own vision of what the characters are like when we read a book.
Snail in Danger (Sid) wrote: "I have a theory that people who don't/haven't read much SF are likely to be shocked and awed by this series. But people who have, especially people who have read post-apocalyptic SF before, are mo..."

I found the movie to be a little pointless. I liked it well enough, and I think they did a very good job with the "reaping" scene in particular, but overall it was just a summary of the high points. the major flaw, i think, is that they had to soften a whole lot of things to keep this from being an R-rated movie: other than Rue, I felt most of the characters looked older than teenagers. the book was filled with occasional reminders that this was a truly horrible situation where children were forced to kill each other, and I just didn't get that same gut-punch from the movie at all. in a weird way, I guess, the toning down of the violence made what they did show seem to be not as big a deal, not as truly life-or-death, not as inhuman as the way it read.

I after reading something and then viewing it in movie form my brain sometimes fills in missing information from the film that other audience members won't get. Guess I'll never really know how it stands on its own.
And sadly, I bet my expectations of books-to-movies has been lowered over years of disappointment. They're two very different mediums and it's near impossible for a movie to convey all that a book does.
Michelle wrote: "Danika, I was likewise with people who hadn't read the books, and they also liked (but were not gushing with love for) the movie.
I found the movie to be a little pointless. I liked it well enoug..."


It's also a huge revenue ploy for the movie studios. So it really wasn't all that surprising to me when they announced it.




I also thought Mockingjay was a hot mess, but that was mostly due to the first person POV. Fortunately the movie doesn't have that constraint.
Books mentioned in this topic
Mockingjay (other topics)The Hunger Games Trilogy Boxset (other topics)
It seems quite pedestrian to me, far less exciting than most other based-on-a-YA-novel trailers I've seen. I'd never heard of City of Ember, but this trailer made me want to see it. Same for The Lightning Thief, and even Cirque du Freak. (Which has the same kid from Zathura as sidekick.)
The Hunger Games looks pale by comparison. Kind of like a teenage Running Man. I assume people who are freaking out about this trailer are bringing their feelings about the book to the trailer, because looking at it as someone who hasn't read the books, this doesn't make me want to see it. Or read the book, for that matter.