Game Over: A "The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2" Review
I
should be blaming the Harry Potter films for starting the trend of splitting a
franchise’ supposedly final movie into two parts. The first installment is
usually dragging while the second one ends up becoming some sort of stretched
climax.
Such is the case with Hunger Games: Mockingjay. What could have been just a single 2-and-a-half-hour movie has been extended to become two films, with the obvious reason of trying to milk more money from the franchise. I’m pretty sure that this is going to be another financial success, but all at the expense of a movie’s quality. Mockingjay Part 1 was uneventful so I was pretty thankful that Part 2 somehow redeemed the third book.
All
the thirteen districts of Panem have united against the Capitol, and with
Katniss Everdeen inspiring the revolution as the Mockingjay, the rebels have
never been as fired up to take down their dictator. Katniss goes on a mission
to assassinate President Snow, risking losing her friends and loved ones along
the way. As victory comes closer to their grasp, the war becomes more personal
for Katniss, and ultimately her actions decide what will become of the future
of Panem.
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2
Unlike
its colorful and eye-popping predecessors, the concluding film of the Hunger
Games franchise had a grim and darker tone. We no longer see the dazzle and
spectacle of the once quirky Capitol but instead, we are set against the dreary
background where the first film left off. The film zoomed-in on the struggle of
the rebellion, with several of the main characters dying gruesome deaths as
they engage in what is essentially a Capitol-wide Hunger Games. Katniss is also
torn in a personal struggle between morality and winning the war, always
confronted with the question of whether the end justifies the means. What was once a
carnival of propos, eloquence, and PR nightmares, the war has now become more treacherous, showing its
true face splattered with bloodshed and carnage.
Mockingjay
Part 2 was tolerable in spite of having an overstretched storyline given that
this is essentially where the franchise’ climax happens. True, it has been
extended to two hours with a lot of talking and exposition, but the occasional
jump scares (we got the Capitol’s pods aka traps to thank for that), and the action
sequences was enough to make you hold on to your seats for a while. The love
triangle on the side also works, as evidenced by more than a few giggles from
the fan girls with me in the cinema.
In
spite of being a film about revolution, the political allegory and social
relevance that we saw in the first installments of Hunger Games wasn’t as
emphasized anymore in this last film. This time it was more of a “Men in a
Mission” movie, with our band of rebels setting out to kill the big boss of the
bad guys.
If
you ask me, we need more films that can shake up and wake up the different
social classes who have become too comfortable with the illusion of free will
and comfort. Let us stop becoming citizens of the Capitol who have been blinded
by our middle-class lifestyle, that we no longer see the Districts who suffer
from the cruelty of the government. The Hunger Games films may not be aggressive
enough, but I hope that these somehow make us realize that the world we live
in right now, isn’t really that different from Panem.
Credits to the images and videos used in this post go to "The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2" and/or to their respective owners. I do not own these materials. No copyright infringement intended.
I hope it's good... my friend and I get to watch it together since we did very well in our exams... I hope it's good!!!!!!!! By the way, when does it release in India?
ReplyDelete