Derek and I went to see “The Hunger Games” this past weekend. For those
of you who have not yet read the books, I’m going to start here with two
thoughts on JUST the movie without giving away any plot spoilers.
1.
As movies-from-books go, this one was well-done. The movie does not
deviate from the book much (although in places it definitely shows you
stuff that isn’t in the first book, at least... but since the book is
written in first-person all from the perspective of Katniss... something
had to be done in the movies so as not to alienate their audience), and
it follows the storyline without any major differences. The acting is
good, the cast was well-chosen, and the special effects were spot on.
2.
Have I mentioned that I detest shaky cam? When I watch a movie
(especially when I pay to see it in the theater) I'm sorry, but I want a
movie that looks better than if I handed my 3 year old a camcorder and
told her to run around with it. The camera work in this movie was
horrible. This, in and of itself, could have ruined the movie for me
instantly. (I actually almost walked out in the first 30 minutes). It
felt as though there were two people in charge of the camera work who
had completely differing views on how the movie should be shot, and
nobody ever told them which one of them was the Head Camera Guy. In 2
hours and 22 minutes, I think the camera angle changed 2,880 times
(which is an average of an angle change every 3 seconds). I only saw one
smooth transition between all these camera angle changes. Add that to
the “shaky cam” style of shooting the movie (if you are unfamiliar with
that term, it is the style used to make you feel as though someone is
holding the camera and running - it is used in Bourne Ultimatum and
Cloverfield and generally gives me a migraine) and you get a recipe for a
very unpleasant time in the theater. The shaky cam stuff does get
better once the tributes reach Capitol, but only marginally. It was as
if the director told the camera-people, “Katniss is feeling confused,
nauseous, has a headache, and can’t stop trembling in these scenes...
please make the audience feel that way as well.” Sigh. Rant over.
Ok.
If you have not yet read the book or seen the movie and you do not want
to accidentally read/hear any plot spoilers, I’d stop reading now.
Last
week, I finally sat down and read The Hunger Games. After at least a
year of listening to other people rave about the books, and then with
the movie coming out recently, and all the reviews being posted about
them online by friends, family, etc... I decided it was finally time to
start reading them - before it became impossible to set foot in
cyberspace without running into plot spoilers at every turn.
Two
quick disclaimers here: I’m not going to be “reviewing” this story the
way I normally do. I’m assuming anyone reading this has already read the
book or seen the movie, so instead of taking you through the storyline,
I’m just going to be posting my reactions and a critique of that
storyline. Again, this post will most definitely contain spoilers for
anyone who has not yet read the first book/seen the movie: read on at
your own risk.
Another disclaimer: although I fully intend to do
so, I have not yet read the second and third books and therefore do not
know how the whole story ends - so if I post something in my reaction
to this first story that the end of the series negates, please take my
words here with that particular grain of salt.
Ok, I think I’ve covered all my bases there. On to the critique -
First
of all, I enjoyed reading the book. I usually don’t like reading novels
that are written in the first-person, so it is always nice to come
across one that is well-written and not annoying. As I read the story
last week at breakneck speeds so that Derek and I could go to the movie
this past weekend, I found myself sucked in by the easy-to-read writing
style, by the descriptions, by the characters. I can see why this book
has been such a hit. As futuristic dystopias go, this one was
interesting. I wanted to know more about how this future had happened. I
wanted to know (still do) if there is a happy ending in view, if things
change. The book raises some thought-provoking moral questions that
keep the reader’s mind engaged and I was very much looking forward to
the movie.
However, despite my enjoyment of the book, something
nagged at me as I read it. Something seemed out of place. For some
reason I felt that maybe I didn’t like the story as much as I thought I
did. I found myself telling Derek about the book, starting discussions
about it and then going to bat for the book when he asked questions or
raised concerns about the storyline.
Then we went to see the
movie, and I was finally able to put into words all the things that I
didn’t like about the story in general:
My number one issue is
with the target audience for this story. It is a story marketed to
teenagers. The story is charged with a sociopolitical commentary that is
interesting, but vague. Even after reading the book and watching the
movie, I’m not sure what Suzanne was driving at. Is she concerned that
our culture has become desensitized to violence to the point where we
might reinstate gladiatorial games? Is she worried that our country is
on the verge of complete collapse? Does she think the government is evil
and that we should revolt against it? Or is she wanting kids to ask if
there is ever a good reason to lie or to kill someone? Or did she
simply want to recreate the story of “Gladiator” in her own way and
capitalize on a story that had already been told? Perhaps she just
really, really, really hates reality tv (and who can blame her?).
Whatever her motivations, Collins has marketed this story, a story in
which kids are killing other kids, to teenagers; I have a problem with
that. Partially because by adding in the “love story,” the
oh-so-insightful discussions about this book amongst teens has
degenerated into such “deep thought” in the form of arguments over “team
Gale” versus “team Peeta” - which just goes to show that the target
audience for these stories may not be mature enough for it.
Now,
before you jump down my throat - I’m not saying that no teen should be
allowed to read this book or that no teenager is capable of the maturity
needed to read this book. I’m just saying I have a problem with this
story being MARKETED to that audience.
My second issue with this
story is its unbelievability. I believe it was Tom Clancy who said, “The
difference between reality and fiction? Fiction has to make sense.”
This story doesn’t. As I read the book, I found myself comparing it to
the Twilight books, and couldn’t figure out why at first. Besides the
fact that they are written in first-person narrative from the
perspective of a sixteen-year old girl, they really are nothing alike.
Now,
confession time: I actually enjoyed the Twilight books rather a lot.
Are there things about those books that I don’t like? Yes. But it’s hard
to get overly excited about those issues because the books are also
somewhat ridiculous. I can’t get worked up about books that are so
“fluffy” and unrealistic. It’s vampires and werewolves, for crying out
loud - you suspend your disbelief before you even open the book.
However, Suzanne Collins has written a story that she appears to want
taken seriously. The dark and serious nature of the themes alone make
this apparent. But the story itself is unbelievable. I can’t be asked to
take this story seriously, and then also be asked to suspend my
disbelief so much. I do not believe that Americans would ever allow this
kind of “national punishment” to occur... to paraphrase my dad: Why
every single dad in the country wasn't more willing to risk their own
lives in revolt rather than run the risk of one of their children ending
up in these games is hard to fathom.
The third thing I disliked
about the story was how the author tried so hard to make me put a value
on each character’s life. Why should I be more broken up about Rue’s
death than Cato’s? Why should Thresh dying make me feel sadness when
Foxface’s didn’t? Why should I not care about the boy Katniss kills in
revenge for Rue’s death? None of these kids are here because they WANT
to be. Even if some of them volunteered, they aren’t there because they
want to be, but because they have to be. I guess what I am getting at is
that it bothers me that in this story some young people can die and/or
be killed and it's just fine because they were mean or they said "snotty
things" while others are killed or do the killing and we are not
supposed to be very concerned. Tying back to my first point, why would I
want my 16 year old son or daughter to ever think it’s okay to beat up
their peers, or murder them?
The fourth and final thing that I
did not like about this story is that it asks all the wrong questions.
Is killing ever ok if it is in self-defense? In defense of others? As
revenge? Is lying ever ok in those circumstances? But that is not the
issue in this story. Because none of these kids is the true murderer in
the story. The adults are. Capitol, President Snow, the Gamemakers, they
are the murderers. Every one of these kids is placed in an arena by
chance. None of them asked to be there. (Technically there are
volunteers, I know... but if there were no mandatory hunger games, there
would be no volunteers). You really see this in the movie, where you
get to watch the Gamemakers at work: this is not a story about kids
being forced to kill each other - this is a story in which kids are
being used to commit murder.
Now... the only thing that could
make me change my opinion about this story is if somebody can tell me
for a fact that Collins wrote these books specifically as an
illustration of what could happen in a society that begins to devalue
children so much that it begins to condone things like abortion, or
awards parents vast sums of money in “wrongful birth” lawsuits. If the
author was trying to show how evil it is for adults to murder children,
and is using this story to show that murdering children is no different
whether they are twelve years old, twelve hours old, twelve minutes old,
or as yet unborn... then perhaps this story is brilliant... but if that
is the case, then she kept that point very subtle. (So much so, that it
is a stretch for me to even come up with it).
Gladiators
happened, yes. Corrupt governments have come and gone. Children are
often the innocent victims when poverty and tyranny prevail. Some
children turn into bullies. It is wrong to make kids kill each other.
These things I already knew. I feel like this story took old themes,
wrapped them up in “shock value” and tried to pass them off as unique.
So
my final word? If you want to watch an excellent but violent movie
about an underdog thrown into an arena to fight for his life while
attempting to spit in the eye of an evil tyrant and ultimately managing
to overthrow a corrupt government... go rent Gladiator.
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