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Old 02-01-2012, 03:08 AM
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Hey guys, this is the Empire article in case anyone who can't get the magazine wants to read it

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The Hunger Games World Exclusive.

The Girl Who Played with Fire.

Teens in peril. Love triangle. Based on a popular young-adult book series. Think The Hunger Games is another Twilight wannabe? Empire presents five reasons why you should definitely think again.

When Gary Ross first read Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games, he couldn’t stop until he’d turned the final page. The Pleasantville and Seabiscuit writer-director had only picked it up on the recommendation of his kids; his daughter, he recalls, “disappeared” into it for about 48 hours. Ross himself began reading at 10pm one Friday evening. He’d finished it by 1am. The following Monday he was flying to England to meet with Nina Jacobson, producer of the cinematic version. He had to direct it.
When Jennifer Lawrence first read The Hunger Games she “just got it”. Here was a story of a girl plucked from a simple but hard life and transported to a glamorous but dangerous world where she’s dressed up and forced to put on a show – in this case, participate in a nationally televised fight to the death. “She doesn’t understand,” says Lawrence of Katniss Everdeen, thrust suddenly into the harsh glare of national attention. “She thinks she looks weird and uncomfortable.” The Kentucky-born actress instantly felt the resonance, having been herself flung into the spotlight, and onto the Oscar red carpet, when her performance in excellent indie noir Winter’s Bone earned her an academy award nomination. “It touched me on a personal level.”
To date, almost 3 million copies have been printed, with another million eBooks sold. It’s spent 100 weeks on The New York Times’ bestsellers list. Inevitably, comparisons with Twilight have come. No doubt about it, Ross’ adaptation is a big deal. And while studio Lionsgate would not doubt be overjoyed for it to do similar numbers to that other franchise based on a teen-genre-lit sensation, the comparisons should really end there. This is far more than some woolly tale of adolescent romance and lip-biting. The Hunger Games means business.

1. It’s gonna be brutal
In Collins’ post-apocalyptic, dystopian America, aka Panem, 24 young people, two from each of the future nation’s 12 ‘Districts’, are transported to the ‘Capitol’ and forced to battle to the death. By the end of the Games, 23 of those contestants should’ve been eliminated. They’ll fall prey to giant, mutant wasps, or rocks to the head, or spears through the stomach. There will be poisoned berries, literal backstabbing and mutated dog-monsters.
There will be death; some fast and shocking, some slow and agonizing.
Collins’ novel, the first of a trilogy, was published to critical acclaim in 2008, blending reality-TV satire with Roman history and science-fiction. Stephen King is a vocal fan.
“It’s real, and it’s violent,” says Lawrence when Empire meets her at a London hotel in early December. “If we toned down the violence…” Ross and Jacobson had to commit to a PG-13 rating. Any higher and they’d be shutting out half of their target audience. But Lawrence assures us that none of the story’s impact has been lost, “even if we don’t show much blood.”
“I don’t think it has to be violent in order to be urgent,” insists Ross. “For the majority of the movie Katniss is being pursued and it’s a violent universe she’s in. But that doesn’t mean the violence has to be depicted gruesomely or exploited in any way.”
Even so, it will be action-packed, and as such proved a particularly grueling physical challenge for its cast – especially its star. Lawrence went straight from shooting X-Men: First Class into training. Archery, stunt work, free-running, combat… Then she was hurled into the shoot itself. The day she filmed the opening of the Games, she tells us, it was 115*F and 10% humidity without rain. “It was awful. I had to sprint across this field with long grass – sprint sprint sprint – and then get into this fight. And then start over. I was running every day. Physically it was just non-stop. It was insane.”
Shooting such intense action led to some rather odd notes from her director. “I used to tell Gary I was going to make a coffee-table book of his directions because they were always so funny,” Lawrence laughs, recalling the time he told her “not to think like an orange-utan”. It was during a scene where he sprint through a forest is suddenly interrupted by a fireball exploding into a tree nearby. She was thrown back, and didn’t realize that at the time she’d raised her arms into a perfect circle above her head. “I watched it on playback,” she says, “and I did look exactly like an orange-utan…”

2. It has a truly strong female lead
At the heart of all the violence is a character who could well prove to be the best young lead – male or female – of the 21st century. Katniss Everdeen is a teenager already providing for her starving family when she volunteers for the Games in her younger sister’s place. “In this very harsh universe where these kids are literally forced to fight for their own survival, Katniss fights for her own humanity,” says Ross. “At first she’s just fighting to live and in the end she finds something she is willing to die for. It’s a very harsh world, a very violent premise, but underneath that there’s humanity. I think that’s what’s really drawn people to the book, and Katniss as a heroine.”
Ross was keen to tell the story entirely from Katniss’ point of view, in keeping with Collins’ first-person narrative. “If you looked at the story from the outside,” he says, “it would be the most forbidding story in the world. But Suzanne was wise enough to write it from the inside so you have all of these human yearnings from a well-drawn protagonist. I tried to make the movie the same way. You’re walking in Katniss’ shoes. You don’t give the viewer information that the protagonist doesn’t have, and you shoot in a very subjective style, so we’re following a serpentine path with Katniss. There is a certain roughness in the way I shot this compared to other movies, because it demanded that.”
Determined, terrified and more capable than any of her opponents suspect, the role required an actress who’s tough, with a steely grace, who could project steadiness rather than sexiness. Thus began a high-profile search, taking in around 30 stars, reportedly including Saoirse Ronan, Chloe Grace Moretz, Emma Roberts and True Grit’s Hailee Steinfeld. But, according to Ross, it had to be Lawrence. “If she hadn’t been born I don’t know what I would’ve done,” he says. “I work with a lot of great actors, but in my life I don’t think I’ve ever worked with anyone more talented. She just has this strong vitality; she knows her own strength and doesn’t hide it in any way. She’s a very modern heroine. When she came in and read for me I was knocked speechless.”
There was some initial skepticism, though, from fans who felt that Lawrence was too old for the part, or too blonde. Lawrence herself had some worries – primarily about accepting the lead in a new franchise and taking public perception of her to a whole new level. “If this is as big as it’s anticipated to be,” she says, “there will have to be some changes to my life – security systems and all that stuff. Now I’m living on the beach without a care in the world. It’s a hard thing to think about, your life being completely different. But I didn’t want to miss out on something because I was scared.”
In person, Lawrence exhibits the same steely grace we’ve seen on screen, and she’s certainly no clothes horse, nor a star who meticulously stage-manages her image. She laughs raucously when she tells us about her first encounter with co-star Woody Harrelson, who plays her Capitol mentor, Haymitch. Upon spotting a strange contraption in his trailer, she accused him of having “a sex wing”. (Harrelson later assures us it was for doing yoga.)
There are also the undeniable similarities between Katniss and Ree Dolly, her character in Winter’s Bone – right down to their impoverished mountain homes. “I do see similarities,” says Lawrence. “They’re both young adults who have to deal with responsibility far bigger than themselves and have to bring out a warrior side to care for their family. They’re incredibly alike in that way.” But compared to Katniss, Ree had it easy, braving beatings, corpses and meth addicts – rather than an entire society set on killing her.

3. It’s set in a compelling dystopia
That society, divided into the dozen aforementioned Districts, finds its heart – or rather the iron fist which rules it – in the Capitol. Ross filmed Katniss’ District 12 scenes largely in the forests and semi-derelict industrial buildings of North Carolina, but the Capitol itself required a very different treatment. In Collins’ novel it is an exercise in intimidation, filled with spoiled, bored people who while away their hours inventing ever-more outrageous fashions. “The contrast Gary created with the set designers was incredible,” grins Josh Hutcherson, who plays Katniss’ fellow District 12 competitor, or “Tribute”, Peeta. “You cut back and forth between the Games, where you see this battle unfold, and the Capitol, where people are sipping cocktails and watching it on TV.”
“It’s set in the future but it needs its own past,” says Ross. “So the Capitol had to have a sense of history. So we went for architecture that was massive, concrete, monumental. We took our inspiration from mid-20th century Brutalism – and as I was looking at this I realized that power is expressed through open spaces, so that was the first reference point. We looked at great seats of power, like Red Square, and went from there.”
The Games themselves begin with a melee and progress as a campaign of attrition. Some of the bigger, tougher Tributes, from Districts where being chosen is an honor rather than a horror, form feral packs that roam the arena in search of easy prey, while others lurk in wait and set deadly traps. And the fact that it’s televised further raises the stakes: the Games’ sadistic controllers, led by Wes Bentley’s Seneca Crane, can introduce new hazards into the Arena or chance the rules of engagement any time the death rate flags or viewing figures wane.
There is an obvious parallel here to Kinji ***asaku’s 2000 cult hit Battle Royale, in which, in the Japan of the near-future, a class of ninth-grade delinquents are transported to an island, armed and tasked with killing each other until only one survives. Yet it’s one that Ross politely circumvents. “I think that is something glimpsed from outside, just from the premise. This is something that proceeds inside out, from inside Katniss’ shoes. This is also about the structure of this society – the way Suzanne created this relationship between the Capitol and the Districts and the way they use the Games to segregate people and as the ultimate extension of this kind of entertainment. So yeah, have there been premises like this? Sure. But it’s the interpretation of that [which marks The Hunger Games out].”

4. It has a hell of a supporting cast
Katniss isn’t in this alone. Not only does she form an unlikely alliance with a young girl called Rue (Amandla Stenberg), she also finds friendship – romance, perhaps – with a Tribute named Peeta (Josh Hutcherson). “Peeta knows that if it ever comes down to a head to head with Katniss, he’s in love with her so it’s an obvious choice what he’d do,” says Hutcherson. “But Katniss has to survive for her family, so it’s very different for her she doesn’t have that certainty.”
Not only does Katniss barely know Peeta, she suspects his declarations might be some Games tactic – and she’s at least half in love with Liam “Younger Brother of Chris’ Hemsworth’s Gale, her hunting buddy back home. Says Hemsworth, “Gale’s very similar to Katniss: he’s constantly trying to figure out a way to fight back against the system but he’s really powerless, he’s on his own. He ends up having to watch his friend go into it and doesn’t want to watch her possibly die. But what can he do against a whole government?”
The suggestion of a love triangle shouldn’t put you off. “These are not love stories,” stresses Hemsworth. “They’re not presented in a sexy way. It’s not about relationships for Katniss but survival. The only way this story is similar to Twilight is they both have huge audiences.”
The key Capitol characters, meanwhile, are played by an array of impressive adult actors. In addition to Harrelson as former contender Haymitch, Stanley Tucci plays Games presenter Ceasar Flickerman (who sports a powder-blue wig and has orange skin), Donald Sutherland is President Coriolanus Snow, leader of Panem’s totalitarian regime, Lenny Kravitz is Katniss’ stylist, Cinna, and Elizabeth Banks is the amusingly named Effie Trinket, the Capitol’s pink-wigged representative in District 12, tasked with bringing its Tributes back to the Capitol.
“Some people only see Effie as comic relief, and some only as an evil puppet of the Capitol, but I think she’s really complicated,” says Banks. “She understands that everything she has built up can be taken away from her at any moment; in this world every character knows that any minute they could have their tongue lopped off. So there are moments where Effie is truly behind her mentees, and moments where she is great comic relief, because she takes everything so seriously and is inappropriately optimistic about things where the outcome is literally pre-determined.”

5. It has satirical bite
Banks certainly doesn’t buy the Twilight comparisons. She wouldn’t even cite Battle Royale, or other properties which were suggested that one day death will be televised entertainment, like The Running Man or Series 7: The Contenders. “I would compare it to Lord Of The Rings or Lord Of The Flies or 1984. I mean, I like the Twilight movies, but I don’t know what they’re saying about society. They’re fantasy. We’re making a movie that’s about something.”
The inspiration for The Hunger Games arrived one night as Suzanne Collins idly flicked between a news channel showing the progress of the war in Afghanistan, with young soldiers running to their deaths, and a reality show of the Survivor sort. What, she wondered, of the two were put together? It’s not such a leap. “This is the most important thing I’ve ever done,” your typical reality show contestant will tell us. “My family, and my whole town, are counting on me. I can’t give up now. I have to win.” All they’re talking about is glorified Karaoke, or a show in which people eat insects for our amusement. But what if the stakes really were life or death, if the hyperbole were in fact the plain and simple truth?
“We all can’t wait to tune in to the new season of The Kardashians to watch a marriage be destroyed,” says Lawrence. “That’s such a heartbreaking, terrible thing to happen to anybody, and we tune in and watch it. We’re becoming more desensitized to the things we see on TV,” she grimaces. “That’s our entertainment: people suffering.”

The Hunger Games is out on March 23 and will be reviewed in a future issue.



The Hunger Games briefing:
Released: March 23
Director: Gary Ross
Starring: Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Elizabeth Banks, Woody Harrelson, Stanley Tucci, Lenny Kravitz, Donald Sutherland
Story: In post-apocalyptic America, the new nation of Panem holds yearly Games in which teenaged contestants fight to the death as televised entertainment. Katniss Everdeen, aged 16, is one such contestant, who volunteers to take the place of her younger sister. An intense fight for survival begins.
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Old 02-01-2012, 03:11 AM
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Thanks for typing it out and posting it, Reina
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Old 02-01-2012, 03:13 AM
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thanks reina
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Old 02-01-2012, 03:40 AM
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No problem

I love how everyone is working so hard to ensure that THG doesn't get typecast as another Twilight
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Old 02-01-2012, 06:40 AM
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Great article, thanks for typing it up.
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Old 02-01-2012, 08:39 AM
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I want the superbowl vid now I can't wait anymore And the promised Jen&Josh interview will be posted this week right?
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Old 02-01-2012, 10:26 AM
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the Josh and Jen vid, was said to be posted later on in the week. But my guess is on Wednesday night or Thursday,



rolling-stone-reveals-new-cinna-katniss-image-interview-with-lenny
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Old 02-01-2012, 01:02 PM
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Thanks for bringing this over Beth I really like this still
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Old 02-01-2012, 01:10 PM
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Behind the Scenes of THR's 'Hunger Games' Cover Shoot (Exclusive Photos) Gallery - The Hollywood Reporter
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Old 02-01-2012, 01:20 PM
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BTS Video from The Hollywood Reporter’s Hunger Games Shoot | The Hob
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Old 02-01-2012, 01:26 PM
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Love the pictures and new still. There's really good info at THR and their 9 screts.

Here's the main article:

Quote:


The High Stakes Behind 'Hunger Games'
10:03 AM PST 2/1/2012 by Stephen Galloway

Director Gary Ross and the cast on the behind-the-scenes drama of the $90 million Lionsgate epic that should bring young people back to the movies, propel Jennifer Lawrence into the stratosphere and launch another (fingers crossed) "Twilight"-sized franchise.

On Sept. 6, 2010, Gary Ross boarded a plane from Los Angeles for New York, carrying art boards and a seven-minute film he'd made with thousands of dollars of his own money.

Ross was nervous: He was about to meet with the top brass at Lionsgate and pitch himself as director of their most high-profile project, The Hunger Games. The then-53-year-old hadn't made a film since Seabiscuit seven years earlier, and even though he was a four-time Oscar nominee, he was an unlikely candidate for what the independent studio hoped to be a major franchise.

"You wouldn't look at a premise like Hunger Games and think Gary Ross," he admits of the venture, based on Suzanne Collins' best-selling young-adult novel set in a futuristic America where a bright 16-year-old girl is forced to take part in gladiator-like combat -- kill or be killed.

So Ross came prepared. "I had seven or eight concept artists put boards together," he recalls, "and I interviewed my kids and a lot of their friends to hear what they thought about the book."

For two hours, he laid out his vision, helped by stacks of images from artists including Max Beckmann that he'd lined around the walls and by the short film featuring his teenage twins, Claudia and Jack, explaining why the book meant so much to them.

"You could really feel his passion," says producer Nina Jacobson, "and it was channeled through the young people in his life."

One week after the Toronto film festival, Ross learned he had the job. He knew it was a plum gig but didn't realize what a phenomenon Games would become -- and how much his film, the first of a planned four movies based on Collins' trilogy (including sequels Catching Fire and Mockingjay), meant to the studio releasing it.

The first book, published in 2008, was just beginning its vertiginous ascent of the best-seller list (with some 23.5 million copies of the trilogy sold as of late January). There had been no event like it in the white-hot young-adult genre since Stephenie Meyer's Twilight. Unlike her novels, the Games books appeal to male as well as female readers, further upping the potential for a blockbuster, four-quadrant series -- which may bring back young audiences who've been fleeing the multiplex in droves.

"After the trailer launched Nov. 14, we had 8 million views in the first 24 hours," says Lionsgate Films president Joe Drake. "We were the No. 1 Twitter trend on the planet. Since then, the book sales have jumped 7.5 million copies. That kind of data gives us enormous confidence."

Hollywood is expecting the PG-13 Games to be the dominant picture of the spring when it opens March 23 on more than 4,000 screens. Its reception could determine whether its stars -- Jennifer Lawrence, 21; Josh Hutcherson, 19; and Liam Hemsworth, 22 -- ascend to Stewart-Pattinson-Lautner superstardom and fill the gap as Twilight heads toward its final chapter.

For Lionsgate, which has struggled recently at the box office, Games is its first major test since acquiring Summit Entertainment, the studio behind Twilight, in January -- a move that yokes together execs responsible for the most recent youth phenomenon with those hoping to launch the next. Games' success could impact the future of many at Lionsgate, all eager to claim credit for the Collins adaptation, now that Summit's Rob Friedman and Patrick Wachsberger have been tapped to run the film division.
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Old 02-01-2012, 01:40 PM
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Thanks for that, Belle I absolutely love how invested Gary is in the movie
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Old 02-01-2012, 01:50 PM
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Same!He is really part of the crew/cast, I love that
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Old 02-01-2012, 01:52 PM
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Interview with Jennifer!

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Jennifer Lawrence: A Brand-New Superstar
10:10 AM PST 2/1/2012 by Steven Galloway

Jennifer Lawrence turned to her mom, who runs a summer camp, for advice on whether to play Katniss Everdeen.


THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER: You hesitated when offered the part. What finally made you say yes?

Jennifer Lawrence: I called my mom, and she called me a hypocrite because when I was doing indie movies and everyone was asking why I didn't do studio movies, I said, "The size of the movie doesn't matter." And she said, "Here's a movie you love, and you were thinking of turning it down because of its size." I thought: "I don't want to miss out because I'm scared. Me being scared, I never want that to stop me from doing something." But I knew in my heart that I wanted it -- it was about working out all the fears.


THR: How did you prepare?

Lawrence:I did a lot of running because that's all she does -- track running and free running -- then hand-to-hand combat and yoga. We trained to be able to do every stunt in the movie, and the ones that didn't work out, my stunt double would do. I trained about four hours a day. Trying to find what Katniss' body should look like put a lot of pressure on my shoulders. And it was stressful because I didn't want to disappoint anybody -- there was a lot of pressure to get your body to a place where an entire franchise is based [on it].

THR: Did you spend time with author Suzanne Collins?


Lawrence: I met her on set, and we also had a lot of very long conversations when I was still in England [visiting friends]. When we met, I asked her about how she had come up with the book. She said she was flipping between reality TV and the war in Iraq, flipping back and forth, and came up with the concept.


THR: How has your life changed compared with a year ago?

Lawrence:It hasn't really, I'm happy to say. I have my family, my friends, my dog -- he's a Yorkie, but he's been taken by my parents because they just lost their dog -- and I'm leaving the country a little. But I haven't changed my personal life.
Jennifer Lawrence: A Brand-New Superstar - The Hollywood Reporter
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