Tag Archives: ‘the hunger games: mockingjay – part 2’

Interview flashback: Jennifer Lawrence talks the first ‘Hunger Games’

Natalie Dormer and Jennifer Lawrence in 'Mockingjay Part 2'

Note: Originally published in March 2012

By Tim Lammers

It’s a question that’s collectively weighing on the minds of its legions of fans, wondering whether the movie version of “The Hunger Games” will be faithful to author Suzanne Collins’ blockbuster source material.

If you take it from Jennifer Lawrence — and there’s absolutely no reason you shouldn’t — then there’s nothing to worry about. After all, Lawrence, who plays the movie’s heroine, Katniss Everdeen, is a huge “Hunger Games” book fan herself, having read the international best-seller even before she auditioned for the part.

“It’s one the hardest things to do, to try make a book into a movie. If you focus too much on trying to keep everything accurate to the book, you could say, ‘Yeah, everything is in there,’ but at the same time, it could end up being a bad movie,” Lawrence told me with a laugh in a recent interview. “Instead, you have to take a chance and change small things and focus on making a movie, and that’s what they had to do. They wrote a script and from that script, they made a movie and didn’t go back to the book.”

The main thing, Lawrence added, is that there are no fundamental differences between the two. The script — co-written by Collins and director Gary Ross — had to be condensed simply because it’s the nature of moviemaking.

“Some things are shorter than you’d expect, because we didn’t have room,” Lawrence said. “Otherwise you’d have a five-hour movie.”

Opening Friday in theaters nationwide, “The Hunger Games” is set largely in the evil Capitol of the nation of Panem, the future ruins of what was once known as North America. It’s there where each of the country’s 12 Districts annually sends a teenage boy and girl to compete in the Hunger Games: a nationally-televised event where the participants, known as Tributes, must fight each other to the death, until one survivor remains.

Representing District 12 in the games — a twisted form of punishment for a past uprising — are Katniss and Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson), a baker’s son who has long-suppressed feelings for his fellow Tribute.

Of course, a lot of buzz over the movie’s faithfulness to the book has been generated online, and while Lawrence, 21, said that she cares about what the fans think about movie, she ultimately can’t let it influence how she does her job on screen.

“The online talk is the first thing that you’re aware of, and you definitely have to take that into account and respect it. But the talk also has to be the first thing you forget because your job is to make a movie just like you would any other movie,” Lawrence said. “From there, I have to use my instinct and go by what my director wants. When I’m on set, I can’t have everybody else’s voice in my head to the point where I can’t hear my own.”

Tim Burton Book 2
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Rising star

Lawrence’s star has no doubt commanded Hollywood’s attention in the past few years, spurred by her Best Actress nomination in 2011 for her harrowing turn in the gritty drama “Winter’s Bone.” That was followed by a high-profile role as the blue-skinned mutant Mystique in the 2011 summer smash “X-Men: First Class.”

But before that, Lawrence got her big break from actor/Blue Collar Comedy Tour star Bill Engvall in the TBS comedy series “The Bill Engvall Show.” During the series run from 2007 to 2009, Lawrence played Lauren Pierson, one of the children of therapist Bill Pearson (Engvall).

“I could not be more proud of her if she was my own daughter,” Engvall told me in a direct message on Twitter. “I always knew she was destined for great things the first time I saw her act.”

During the filming of “The Hunger Games,” there was no question Lawrence’s fellow stars were convinced that Lawrence was destined to play Katniss.

“Working with Jennifer was unlike any experience I’ve had before as an actor — she is so in the moment,” Hutcherson told me in separate interview. “That’s the No. 1 thing I try to do when I’m filming, and when I looked into her eyes making ‘The Hunger Games,’ she was Katniss. She believed it through-and-through, and if she believed it, you believed it. It meant I believed I could be Peeta, also. Anytime you work with that level of an actor it really elevates your level of performance.”

Two of the younger stars of the film — Jacqueline Emerson (Foxface) and Isabelle Fuhrman (Clove) — told me they were worried about working with Lawrence at first because of her soaring level of stardom, but that changed quickly.

“I know I was personally nervous to meet her on set, because I was thinking, ‘Is she going to be one of these types of actresses who say, ‘You can’t talk to me before I film and get into the zone’ and I that I would annoy her,” laughed Emerson. “But she was so funny and put everyone at ease. She’s a great person.”

Fuhrman said Lawrence’s level of professionalism is something she strives toward.

“Jennifer would make all of us feel so comfortable in a scene no matter how serious it was,” Fuhrman said. “Just the way she could slip in and out of character was so admirable. I definitely learned a lot from her.”

A View To A Kill

While Lawrence played an Ozarks survivalist in “Winter’s Bone” — the role that she said tipped off filmmakers to cast her in “The Hunger Games” — she said the idea of being thrown into the competition where tributes have to kill another human in order to “win” has been a difficult one to wrap her head around.

“That’s just one of those things that, you can try to imagine it as hard as you can, but you can never fully grasp that feeling,” Lawrence said. “It didn’t affect me that much as an actress, but more as a human. It’s something you really don’t want to ever think about. You never know where it could happen or how you could do it. Nobody could ever describe that to you.”

Thankfully, since “The Hunger Games” is only a movie, the first and foremost thing Lawrence wants for fans is to be entertained by the spectacle of it all. She ultimately hopes, though, that the film will also affect them as a cautionary tale — much in the same way the book has to readers worldwide.

“It’s amazing how these characters are so beloved and it’s so widespread. It’s affecting so many people and it actually has substance,” Lawrence enthused.

“There is actually something you can learn from this. There’s actually a great message in there for our generation, our society and for our young people.”

Movie reviews: ‘Mockingjay, Part 2,’ ‘The Night Before’

Jennifer Lawrence in 'Mockingjay Part 2'

By Tim Lammers

“The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 2” (PG-13) 3 stars (out of four)

The final arrow has been slung – but doesn’t have nearly as much zip – in “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 2,” a solid yet underwhelming conclusion to the franchise based on Suzanne Collins’ best-selling book trilogy. Jennifer Lawrence is superior once again as Katniss Everdeen, but a lumbering start followed by uneven pacing makes the hotly anticipated final installment in the four movie saga the weakest in the series. It’s still a good movie, just not as accomplished as its three predecessors.

“Mockingjay, Part 2” picks up almost immediately where “Part 1” left off, with a rescued but emotionally damaged Peeta (Josh Hutcherson) still strapped to his hospital bed after he tries to choke Katniss to death. He’s clearly traumatized – maybe for life – by the treacherous President Snow (Donald Sutherland at his menacing best), who is laying a trap for the inevitable invasion of the Capitol by the District 13 rebellion. Despite his troubled mind, Peeta is sent along with a strike force including Katniss to execute the plan, and with any luck, give the symbolic Mockingjay her chance to assassinate Snow for all the pain and death he’s caused her and the oppressed districts of Panem.

“The Hunger Games” series has generally had three major things going for it the entire time: A story that became more textured and thought provoking as it progressed; exciting direction by Garry Ross for the first film and Francis Lawrence for the remainder, and an enormously talented ensemble cast led with ferocity by Lawrence. “The Hunger Games” of course were about adolescents dueling to the death, and “Catching Fire” upped the stakes by pitting former champions against each other. That, of course, led to the rebellion against the Capitol in “Mockingjay,” which in typical Hollywood money-grab fashion, was split into two movies to maximize profits.

Rarely has that formula worked. “Harry Potter” introduced it with “The Deathly Hallows” to great effect, but since then, it’s been employed by the dreadful “Twilight” series and much better but “Hunger Games”-like “Divergent” series.

As the 2 hour 20 minute “Mockingjay, Part 2” plays out, you begin to get the sense that the move was made solely to please the fans who want the detail and nuance of the books. That’s all well and good, so long as it translates to an exciting movie experience, and that’s exactly where this final chapter in “The Hunger Games” series is lacking. As a two-part film that nearly runs 4 1/2 hours, “Mockingjay, Part 2” simply feels stretched too thin.

For all its shortcomings, “Mockingjay, Part 2” still feels complete with this latest chapter, and doesn’t, well, leave you hungry for more. With most of his scenes opposite Julianne Moore as shifty District 13 President Alma Coin, you can’t help but be left with a bittersweet feeing watching the late Phillip Seymour Hoffman in his final role as gamemaker Plutarch Heavensbee, as the character seems far less involved than in the previous two films as “Mockingjay, Part 2” draws to a close.

One word of warning, like “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King,” “Mockingjay, Part 2” can’t quite seem to settle on an ending. Book fans will know the ending when they see it, but for the rest of us, the conclusion seems filled with indecision until the credits roll.

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“The Night Before” (R) 2 stars (out of four)

Seth Rogen is haunted by the ghost of stoner movies past with “The Night Before,” a retread of the dopey film formula that has followed the actor throughout most of his career. The raunchy Christmas comedy isn’t a complete disaster – Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Anthony Mackie make up for Rogen’s lame presence – it just requires a lot of patience as you’re hoping for fresh laughs amid the same old tired jokes.

Gordon-Levitt stars as Ethan, an aspiring musician whose life was rocked by tragedy in his early 20s when his parents were both killed in a traffic accident on Christmas Eve. To help their friend Ethan cope, his two closest friends, Issac (Rogen) and Chris (Mackie), start a Christmas Eve tradition where they party their way across New York City – all in the hopes of getting passes into the ultimate bash called the Nutcracker Ball. Unfortunately, the annual event seems to be losing its luster as Isaac is preparing to start a family and Chris is enjoying success as an NFL star.

“The Night Before” is packed with everything you’d expect out of a Rogen movie: Lots of drugs, booze and jokes about a certain member of the male anatomy. It’s really only saved by the charm of Gordon-Levitt and Mackie, and a welcome, unexpected comedic turn by Michael Shannon as a small-time dope dealer who doubles as a “Christmas Carol”-type ghost of past, present and future.