Nov 21, 2014
It’s fitting that the opening and closing scenes of “Hunger Games: Mockingjay” feature miserable people being held on lockdown in a mental ward, because that’s how anyone suckered into spending $12 to $15 on a ticket to the film is going to feel the entire time. A grim, depressing and thoroughly unexciting slog through two hours of time you will never get back, the third entry in the heretofore sterling series has lost all sense of what made the prior films so exciting.
A large part of the problem is that this edition of the series is actually just part one of the film adaptation of the “Mockingjay” novel by Suzanne Collins. That means that, in keeping with a tradition set by the final two films in the “Twilight” and “Harry Potter” series, the final novel in the series is split into two parts on the big screen. While in the “Potter” series, the idea made sense since the book being adapted was over 700 pages long, in “Twilight” and now “Mockingjay” the movies are just normal-length books stretched thin to make double the money.
The “Hunger Games” series centers around a feisty older teen named Katniss Everdeen who appears to be living in the colonial past, but in fact is about 75 years in the future and living in the aftermath of a second Civil War. In the prior two films and books in the series, she volunteered to take part in a series of nationally televised games in which teenagers are chosen by the national government to fight each other to the death until only one is left standing.
Katniss won over the hearts of the movie’s populace as well as filmgoers worldwide with a gutsy yet endlessly inventive and ethically high-minded standard of play that enable d her to survive the games twice. But in the stunning final moment of the last film, Katniss shot one of her arrows through the force field the government had constructed to keep the Hunger Games participants confined to the treacherous playing fields and was snatched away the forces of a rebellion.