Movie of the Day – The Hunger Games

Thank God there is finally some type of strong, female character out for those sad, mopey teenage girls to look up to.  Christ, if that Bella Swan character is a role model for kids these days, I welcome whatever apocalypse that awaits us and soon.  I have read the series (yeah I know) and really ended up enjoying both the film and book series to a rather large degree.  I was excited to see how well a violent sport where kids kill other kids would end up playing here in America considering Battle Royale was never allowed a theatrical release here.  To my surprising, despite some cinematic faults, The Hunger Games is a worthy and desperately needed movie to get these brain dead kids some character depth and better role models.

The Hunger Games got a favorable review from me initially, as in repeat viewings kind of dragged down my excitement from a technical aspect, but overall the final product ended up being incredible.  I mean don’t get me wrong, seeing Jennifer Lawrence running around the forest for 2 hours is a big selling point for me, visually it was a dystopian landscape which I love a lot.  The action was interesting, the character colorful and vibrant, the outlook bleak and bloody, and aside from the dumb character names, I was more or less stoked for the future of facial hair in The Hunger Games timeline.

FUTURE BEARD!!!!

Anyways, below is an excerpt of my review I did when it debuted and also a link to the full article.  It came out on DVD and Blu-Ray so it is well worth the rent if you haven’t seen it.

If anything, the film is carried by an incredible cast of young actors and some hammy acting from a few particular characters.  But the bulk of the film is placed on the young heroine Katniss, played by the gorgeous and ferocious Jennifer Lawrence.  So delicate and melancholy is her looks and demeanor, that when pushed to the edge of her limits, you see the seething need to survive at all costs.  This is the way a strong female lead needs to be shown in films.  How anyone can look at the other young adult fiction counterpart Bella Swan and see her as anything but helpless is beyond my comprehension.  Lawrence’s pure raw emotion comes through in every scene, either when she is bucking the establishment of the Capitol or fighting to survive.  The intensity of her skills with the bow and physicality of role cement and bring to life what you imagined Katniss is like in the book series.  Continue Reading Here

Movie Review – The Hunger Games

(As an editor’s note, I will make few to little comparisons to the book series as I want to objectively review this film based as just a film.  There are many people who have not read the series and I wish that they would.  If going into the movie without any knowledge, this will be a review about the movie itself.)

In some instances, I kind of weep for the future children out there that line up for movies like Twilight.  With a female lead who is about as a moopy as Droopy the Dog, it saddens me that someone like Bella Swan is looked up to as a role model and something to aspire to for teens.  Sure, Twilight Books and their films are about as empty and trashy as they come, but making fun of those mediums is like shooting fish in a barrel and waste of coherent thought.  So this evening I attended the midnight screening of The Hunger Games, a film that has been catching on like wildfire and the next film series lifted from the every growing young adult book genre.  In the midst of a fever pitch of excitement and many teens staging their own occupy AMC theater for the showing of the film that might define their lives, I smiled a bit inside because what they were going to see and experience is a film that would make them take their Bella Swan posters and replace with Jennifer Lawrence.

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