On The Hunger Games

Sammy 2022-04-22 07:01:04

A little better than the average teen movie, the author still understands revolution. Capitol, an object of revolution, despite its obvious totalitarian aesthetics, was enough to absorb the populist wrath of Western teenagers. Its relationship with power in different regions is not only like the flashy financial center of the credit and currency society, but also like the central city gathered by the state capitalist society relying on power, or the false display window of the communist state. The difference lies in the way of social control. The differences in the landscape between them naturally form a dramatic tension. Media reflexivity is equally ambiguous in the film. It is not only a carnival game that entertains to death, but also turns into a tool for shaping revolutionary idols. Fortunately, Katniss is not a party girl in Yan'an, but more like a disarmed and returning home to Washington, so the myth of the founding of the United States is repeated here from the perspective of a real heroine.

View more about The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 2 reviews

Extended Reading
  • Nicklaus 2022-03-25 09:01:06

    This movie takes the dregs of the original work, but does not take the essence of the original work. The longer the battle line, the more I feel that Katniss has not grown up. She is pushed away and her character cannot determine her destiny. She was shown as a hero created by a reality show in the media, and the truth and falsehoods in politics are all burdened on her, but the line gets lost more and more. Only Elizabeth Banks in the three parts is very complete and performs well. Finally, the casual design is weird.

  • Destin 2022-03-25 09:01:06

    Out of inertia, I finally finished reading it all. Let's put it this way, except for the first half of the second part, the other three and a half of this series are all trifles of varying degrees.

The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 2 quotes

  • Gale Hawthorne: What's goin' on in your head?

    Katniss Everdeen: I don't know.

    Gale Hawthorne: That's like kissin' someone who's drunk. Doesn't count.

  • Peeta Mellark: Friend, lover, Victor, fiancé, enemy, target, mutt. And now ally? Yeah, I'll add that to the list of words I use to try to figure you out.