The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1. Rated M (mature
themes and violence). 123 minutes. Directed by Francis Lawrence. Screenplay by Peter
Craig and Danny Strong. Based on the novel by Suzanne Collins.
Verdict: A bloated
outing for the first of the two-part cinematic climax to The Hunger Games.
Beginning where
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire left us, Katniss (Jennifer Lawrence) has been
relocated to District 13, a rebel-held underground fortress, to recover from
the Games. It is in District 13 that the rebellion against The Capitol is
overseen by President Coin (Julianne Moore) and Plutarch Heavensbee (the late
Philip Seymour Hoffman, to whom the film is dedicated).
Knowing Katniss is
capable of inspiring people to rise up against The Capitol’s President Snow
(Donald Sutherland), Coin invites her to assume the title of ‘Mockingjay’, a
symbol of the rebellion. Once she witnesses the extent of the destruction inflicted
on the Districts, Katniss agrees to take on the responsibility, but only if the
brain-washed Peeta (Josh Hutcherson), who Snow is using a weapon to destroy
Katniss' influence over the rebels, is rescued from The Capitol and reunited
with her.
Whether it is
because the final book in the trilogy is being turned into two films (a trend that
began with The Hobbit, then the Harry Potter and Twilight films), or that there
are not actually any sequences involving the infamous Games, Mockingjay – Part
1 is a mostly forgettable affair. While it ramps up the tension and the action
in the second half, much of the first half ambles along in a bloated,
self-satisfied manner that is completely at odds with its cinematic pedigree.
Francis Lawrence (The
Hunger Games: Catching Fire, Water for Elephants, I Am Legend, Constantine) and
the always excellent Jennifer Lawrence work wonders with the material’s limited
range. And while it might be long time to have waited, the final sequences
between Peeta and Katniss are extraordinarily powerful, with Hutcherson bringing
real acting clout to the screen for the first, and possibly only, time in the entire
movie.
This review was
commissioned by the West Australian Newspaper Group.
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