The silver screen has never seen a contemporary ideal the likes of Katniss Everdeen, male or female. Jennifer Lawrence’s rise to superstardom is wrapped up in her personification of this revolutionary hero, this secular Joan of Arc for our post-modern times. J.Law channels J.Arc to become K.Eve you might say.
Fortunately you don’t have to grok The Hunger Games’ deeper meanings or know the book to dig the movie. It helps to have seen the first movie, though that’s not necessary given how well told this one is. Familiar or not, the vivid characters are well drawn – Katniss and her little sister Prim; the two guys who love her – Peeta the pretty and Gale the handsome; Hamish the hammered; Effie the fashionable; and so on.
New behind-the-camera talent probably deserves much of the credit for Catching Fire being distinctly better than even its great origin story. Director Francis Lawrence masters a range of scale from massive to intimate, while classically employing closeups that are bigger than life, especially on a huge IMAX screen.
Suzanne Collins’ literary creation has deepened in brilliance, imagining a very unAmerican economic and political setting and yet populating it with very American-like people. It’s as if Vladimir Putin ran a country full of Scots-Irish Americans. Now that’s some serious literary alchemy.
Like the Harry Potter series before it, the end of the HG trilogy is being split into two concluding movies. Given the ascending greatness of The Hunger Games and now Catching Fire, perfection may await in those.
Saw it at the Tech’s Hackworth IMAX Dome, which really is the ultimate IMAX theater. I sat in the center of row 7, right next to the projector. This put me a good 20’ above row 1, which suggests how steeply raked the theater is. From this vantage point, much of the movie was literally over my head, though it was easy enough to lean back and watch it. Spectacular.
One other note about my Saturday night showing: There were some Katniss-like girls scrambling around the steeply raked theater, including one who caught her foot when vaulting over a row of seats, yet managed to right herself before disaster took hold. Very Katniss of you girl.
Jennifer Lawrence has taken Katniss Everdeen to a whole new level in the pantheon of populist heroes: of the people yet apart, soft yet hard, feminine yet Joan of Arc tough. JLaw is such a remarkable superstar, being both glamorous and normal. As an example of the latter, her closeups reveal many moles, the sort most stars would hide or eliminate. Not our heroine, who implicitly declares her humanity by leaving them visible. More significantly, she demonstrates yet again her rare ability to plumb the depths of emotion while remaining a relatable person, as she did so well in The Burning Plain and elsewhere.
Many of her costars from the first movie not only return, their characters get more development, allowing them to shine right along.
New in this episode are:
The film is a masterclass in pop political posturing, with reality TV employed for propaganda effects that Goebbels would envy.
Director Francis Lawrence is returning for the two concluding Mockingjay films, albeit screenwriters Simon Beaufoy and Michael Arndt are not. Pity, their Catching Fire script is elegantly spare.
That said, the story is occasionally loopy and therefore hard to follow. Let’s see if the new writer can do better with Suzanne Collins’ superb raw material.
The violence is affecting but largely bloodless, keeping the whole thing PG-13.
Covered in my Reality Commentary from the origin Hunger Games, just more so here, being a sequel and all.