Wednesday, 13 May 2026

The Hunger Games - 2012 film review



Given everything that is going on across the globe right now, you could argue that what the world does not need right now is a dystopian film. Reality can be dark enough, perhaps. Yet I wouldn't agree with that argument. A good dystopian story can cast light on society in a valuable way, and perhaps it's even more valuable when things seem rather chaotic everywhere. 

All this is by way of preamble to my confessing that I'd managed (not by a deliberate choice, though) to avoid reading Suzanne Collins' books in the Hunger Games series and to avoid seeing the 2012 film based on her first story in that series. One of many gaps in my cultural awareness, I'm afraid. But finally I've caught up with it. 

The premise is simple. At some future date, Panem is a country (a sort of reincarnation of the US on a smaller scale due to natural catastrophe) ruled from 'the Capitol', which is rich and well-resourced. Twelve districts exist in a much poorer state. As punishment for a past failed rebellion, each year a boy and a girl from each district must take part in the Hunger Games, which quite literally involve a fight to the death.

Jennifer Lawrence and the rather less famous Josh Hutcherson are the pair from District 12 for whom we are rooting from the start. The cast also includes Woody Harrelson, Stanley Tucci, Lenny Kravitz and Donald Sutherland. Sutherland plays President Snow with his usual style and there's also a smallish part for Jack Quaid, who was good in Companion. I'd have liked the satire on reality television to be a little sharper, but overall it's an entertaining blockbuster. 

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