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The Hunger Games [2]: Catching Fire (2013) [Blu-ray]
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Rated: |
PG-13 |
Starring: |
Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Lenny Kravitz, Elizabeth Banks, Jena Malone, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Stanley Tucci, Amanda Plummer, Woody Harrelson, Donald Sutherland, Liam Hemsworth,
Sam Claflin.
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Director: |
Francis Lawrence |
Genre: |
Action | Adventure | Sci-Fi | Thriller |
DVD Release Date: 03/07/2014 |
Hunger Games 1 | Hunger Games 2 | Hunger Games 3 | Hunger Games 4 | Xtra Info
Tagline: The sun persists in rising, so I make myself stand.
Academy Award winner Jennifer Lawrence returns as Katniss Everdeen in this thrilling second adventure from The Hunger Games saga. Against all odds, Katniss and fellow tribute, Peeta, have returned home after surviving the games. Winning means they must
turn around, leaving their loved ones behind, and embark on a Victory Tour through the districts. Along the way, Katniss senses a rebellion simmering - one that she and Peeta may have sparked. At the end of the Victory Tour, President Snow announces a
deadly 75th Hunger Games (Quarter Quell) that could change Panem forever.
Storyline: Twelve months after winning the 74th Hunger Games, Katniss Everdeen and her partner Peeta Mellark must go on what is known as the Victor's Tour, wherein they visit all the districts, but before leaving, Katniss is visited by President
Snow who fears that Katniss defied him a year ago during the games when she chose to die with Peeta. With both Katniss and Peeta declared the winners, it is fueling a possible uprising. He tells Katniss that while on tour she better try to make sure that
she puts out the flames or else everyone she cares about will be in danger. Written by rcs0411@yahoo.com
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman on February 27, 2014 -- The natives are increasingly restless as The Hunger Games: Catching Fire gets underway, and that includes heroine Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence). In fact, it seems
no one is more restless than Katniss. Having outfoxed the government at the close of The Hunger Games, along with her District 12 male "tribute" Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson), Katniss is now an ostensible "victor", but one who is carrying
around a lot of post traumatic stress disorder baggage. The Hunger Games: Catching Fire picks up in the wake of the pair's subterfuge, which sought to portray them as a kind of dystopian Romeo and Juliet. Now the government is trumpeting the
supposed love affair between the two as a romance for the ages, a nice distraction for the hoi polloi from the rigors of life in every district outside of the Capital. Katniss is haunted by visions of the people she killed, while Peeta has become
increasingly sullen over the realization that his pretend love affair with Katniss is just that—pretend. When President Snow (Donald Sutherland) shows up unexpectedly at the Everdeen family home (hovel might be more like it) one day to smarmily threaten
Katniss' family if Katniss does not make the public believe in her romance with Peeta, Katniss sees the writing on the wall and tries to dissolve her burgeoning relationship with her real love, Gale Hawthorne (Liam Hemsworth). Forced to
partake in a tour of all the districts, Katniss and Peeta become increasingly distraught at the prefab, made for television aspect of their appearances, where they're given scripts written by Effie Trinket (Elizabeth Banks) which pay homage to each
district's fallen tributes. Katniss is especially taken by signs of an incipient revolution, something President Snow is only too aware of himself and which he is seeking to tamp down at virtually any cost—which may include terminating Katniss with
extreme prejudice, since she seems to be the rallying figure for many of the disaffected. From this roiling atmosphere of jilted lovers and political machinations The Hunger Games: Catching Fire builds most of the intrigue which will inform this
second outing in the franchise. While it takes writers Simon Beaufoy and Michael de Bruyn close to an hour to set all the chess pieces on the board and then into motion, once the film's central plot point—a 75th anniversary Hunger Games where only
previous victors are combatants—things explode in an exciting and suspenseful manner that makes this one of the few cinematic sequels that betters its predecessor.
The press tour arranged for Katniss and Peeta in the wake of their 74th Annual Hunger Games victory comes at great emotional expense, to the point that when the two are finally presented to a glittering crowd at the capitol mansion, in front of a slimily
unctuous President Snow, Katniss especially is ready to snap. She's introduced to Plutarch Heavensbee (Philip Seymour Hoffman), the new Head Gamemaker, who seems as bored and even disgusted with the fête as Katniss herself. However Heavensbee is later
seen with Snow machinating to keep Katniss in line as her further shenanigans only add fuel to the revolution fire. The ultimate outcome of that scheming is the Third Quarter Quell, a kind of "very special" Hunger Games where only previous victors will
fight to the death. Snow is obviously hoping that his "Katniss problem" will be solved "naturally", all before a nationwide television audience numbering in the tens of millions.
Because only victors will compete, District 12 has three potential candidates, with Haymitch Abernathy (Woody Harrelson) rounding out the focal pair. While Katniss' part in the new Quarter Quell is a done deal, she's hoping that Haymitch will be chosen,
for she wants to save Peeta at all costs. When Haymitch is chosen, unfortunately Peeta immediately volunteers and is so thrust back into the maelstrom. At this point Haymitch attempts to moderate the damage by getting Katniss to stop stubbornly
refusing to ally with other victors, which might end up protecting her and Peeta. After one final act of antagonism against President Snow, and a last ditch (unsuccessful) effort to stop the games, the two District 12 "lovers" are thrust once again
into the Hunger Games.
The Games aspect plays out with its requisite high tech drama and a couple of significant sacrifices. Once again Katniss' fast thinking brings the Games to an unexpected close, at which point the film's "big twist" is revealed, which plants the seeds for
what will be the final two parts of the film franchise. While this late plot development will certainly not be any surprise to those who have read Suzanne Collins' source novels, it may not even be that spectacularly unexpected to anyone with a fine
feeling for third act denouements.
This second film is much better paced than the first Hunger Games, and the interpersonal relationships are now well developed enough that less time needs to be spent delineating characters and more can be devoted to the increasingly labyrinthine
plotlines. As heretical as it may sound, I personally found Jennifer Lawrence a little less effective this time around, with a few too many histrionics for the film's good. That's more than offset by the stellar work of the large supporting cast,
especially people like Elizabeth Banks who really begin to fully flesh out people like Effie Trinket, who could otherwise be not much more than a caricature. Director Francis Lawrence (no relation to star Jennifer) stages things extremely well, modulating
well between big (often special effects laden) set pieces and more intimate character drama.
While The Hunger Games: Catching Fire is better constructed and more viscerally compelling than the first film, it's not without its issues. The film is probably too long by about 20-30 minutes, and despite the fact that characters are in place and
the basic plot well into motion by the opening of this film, the first act still takes a lot of time to further set things into motion. A lot of people loved Jennifer Lawrence in this film, and while I'm in no major way critical of her work here,
it struck me as overly hysterical on a few occasions, something that belies Katniss' steely fortitude. On the whole though, this is an incredibly exciting and worthy sequel to the first film and it certainly sets things up for what should be a fantastic
conclusion. Highly recommended.
[CSW] -3.8-
Cast Notes: Jennifer Lawrence (Katniss Everdeen), Liam Hemsworth (Gale Hawthorne), Jack Quaid (Marvel), Taylor St. Clair (Ripper), Sandra Ellis Lafferty (Greasy Sae), Woody Harrelson (Haymitch Abernathy), Josh Hutcherson (Peeta Mellark), Paula
Malcomson (Katniss' Mother), Willow Shields (Primrose Everdeen), Donald Sutherland (President Snow), Elizabeth Banks (Effie Trinket), Bruce Bundy (Octavia), Nelson Ascencio (Flavius), Lenny Kravitz (Cinna), Stanley Tucci (Caesar Flickerman).
IMDb Rating (07/08/18): 7.5/10 from 554,012 users
IMDb Rating (02/10/15): 7.3/10 from 583,227 users
Additional information |
Copyright: |
2013, Lionsgate Films |
Features: |
- Divergent - Sneak Peek (1080p; 6:43) offers a look at the upcoming science fiction film.
- Audio Commentary with Director Francis Lawrence and Producer Nina Jacobson. This is a curiously blasé
commentary, and a somewhat sporadic one as well, with both participants regularly falling silent for a few seconds at a time
before starting up again. There's the requisite "now we're seeing" trinkets, along with some actually interesting information
about the rigors of the shoot, as well as occasionally amusing anecdotes (one about an elevator opening unexpectedly on
the wrong floor, with one actress disrobed, is pretty funny).
- Surviving the Game: Making The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (1080p; 2:24:55) is an incredibly in
depth and informative
compendium of nine featurettes that address virtually every aspect of the film, from the adaptive process through the
special effects, stunts and
production design. There are a number of really well done interviews with most of the principal cast and crew.
- Deleted Scenes (1080p; 4:35)
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Subtitles: |
English |
Video: |
Widescreen 2.40:1, 1.78:1:1 Color Screen Resolution: 1080p Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1, 1.43:1 |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 2.0
SPANISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
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Time: |
2:26 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1 |
ASIN: |
B008JFUS8M |
UPC: |
031398181521 |
Coding: |
[V4.5-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC |
D-Box: |
Yes |
Other: |
Producers: Jon Kilik, Nina Jacobson; Directors: Francis Lawrence ; Writers: Simon Beaufoy and Michael Arndt (screenplay) , Suzanne Collins (novel "Catching Fire"); running time of 146 minutes; Packaging: Slipcover in original
pressing; Packaging: HD Case. Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of violence and action, some frightening images, thematic elements, a suggestive situation and language. (Codes added 03/19/2014) Blu-ray Only --- (DVD and
DVD-Digital Copy and UV-Digital Copy --> Given Away)
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