Posts tagged hunger games

jayrockin:

doodlenauts:

confringo-:


so much love

holy-

I went through literally all of these before realising what the hell I was looking at

Very nice!

(via silyx)

7,726 notes

#hunger games

-redux:

bluefootedbooby:

-redux:

I am the mockingjay; the symbol of the rebellion.

  #the symbol yes #the dreams and hopes and fears and humanity and godhood projected onto a traumatized teenager #forced into a role she was never suited for - a role that forces her to become something that is not herself #that takes control of her identity and destiny in a manner more subtle but no less brutal than the control of the Capitol #If the Mockingjay speaks it speaks with the voice and conscience and nuance of Peeta Mellark #the fire and righteousness of Gale Hawthorne #and the stone cold determination and raw humanity of Katniss Everdeen #the tripartite Mockingjay that should have been #project: fix Mockingjay #Katniss Everdeen #happy hunger games  

 #SYMBOLOGY #the mockingjay is an external construction #it is built off the idealized image of katniss everdeen#and that image incorporates both herself and the two men she loves #or loves however katniss can love which is the more appropriate way of phrasing it #oh man i can’t believe i didn’t think about that i wish to expire #add that to the list of ways mockingjay is a failure #ot3 or tragedy or bust #they are inextricably linked they build her legend together katniss is built of the people she loves #it’s reflected in the myths about her #because she takes what these men have taught her about survival and incorporates it into her way of being #it may or may not be a permanent condition but it’s the way she will be remembered after she’s dead #because katniss everdeen will exist as that legend and as nothing else #it’s simultaneously her victory and her tragedy #victory because she’ll be remembered; tragedy because she’ll be remembered by niceties instead of truths #and katniss doesn’t care about being remembered but she’s a symbol she doesn’t get to make that choice #her life belongs to history now #and she moves back to 12 and hides away in her own trauma and continues to let other people define her because she’s just too tired#katniss everdeen is a tragedy #the girl on fire burns out #that is this story #there are no happy endings #may the odds be ever in your favor #the girl on fire

-redux:

bluefootedbooby:

-redux:

I am the mockingjay; the symbol of the rebellion.

#the symbol yes #the dreams and hopes and fears and humanity and godhood projected onto a traumatized teenager #forced into a role she was never suited for - a role that forces her to become something that is not herself #that takes control of her identity and destiny in a manner more subtle but no less brutal than the control of the Capitol #If the Mockingjay speaks it speaks with the voice and conscience and nuance of Peeta Mellark #the fire and righteousness of Gale Hawthorne #and the stone cold determination and raw humanity of Katniss Everdeen #the tripartite Mockingjay that should have been #project: fix Mockingjay #Katniss Everdeen #happy hunger games

 #SYMBOLOGY #the mockingjay is an external construction #it is built off the idealized image of katniss everdeen#and that image incorporates both herself and the two men she loves #or loves however katniss can love which is the more appropriate way of phrasing it #oh man i can’t believe i didn’t think about that i wish to expire #add that to the list of ways mockingjay is a failure #ot3 or tragedy or bust #they are inextricably linked they build her legend together katniss is built of the people she loves #it’s reflected in the myths about her #because she takes what these men have taught her about survival and incorporates it into her way of being #it may or may not be a permanent condition but it’s the way she will be remembered after she’s dead #because katniss everdeen will exist as that legend and as nothing else #it’s simultaneously her victory and her tragedy #victory because she’ll be remembered; tragedy because she’ll be remembered by niceties instead of truths #and katniss doesn’t care about being remembered but she’s a symbol she doesn’t get to make that choice #her life belongs to history now #and she moves back to 12 and hides away in her own trauma and continues to let other people define her because she’s just too tired#katniss everdeen is a tragedy #the girl on fire burns out #that is this story #there are no happy endings #may the odds be ever in your favor #the girl on fire

(via silyx)

7,781 notes

#hunger games

#katniss everdeen


“Peeta bakes. I hunt. Haymitch drinks until the liquor runs out.”

“Peeta bakes. I hunt. Haymitch drinks until the liquor runs out.”

(via freetobeyouandme)

2,818 notes

#hunger games

hungergamestweets:

Ladies and Gentlemen… George Takei, for the win.

hungergamestweets:

Ladies and Gentlemen… George Takei, for the win.

3,948 notes

#hunger games

#george takei

The New Yorker: White Until Proven Black ›

hungergamestweets:

Anna Holmes offers an insightful review of the racial controversy surrounding The Hunger Games and it’s parallels with what we see happening in our society.

(P.S. Unlike the other reviews/articles you’ve read, I was actually interviewed for this one. )

165 notes

#hunger games

#people are racist and can't read

therealfoxxcub:

stackedcrooked:


I want to do something, right here, right now, to shame them, to make them accountable, to show the Capitol that whatever they do or force us to do there is a part of every tribute they can’t own. That Rue was more than a piece in their Games. And so am I. A few steps into the woods grows a bank of wildflowers. Perhaps they are really weeds of some sort, but they have blossoms in beautiful shades of violet and yellow and white. I gather up an armful and come back to Rue’s side. Slowly, one stem at a time, I decorate her body in the flowers. Covering the ugly wound. Wreathing her face. Weaving her hair in bright colors. They’ll have to show it. Or, even if they choose to turn the cameras elsewhere at this moment, they’ll have to bring them back when they collect the bodies and everyone will see her then and know I did it. I step back and take one last look at Rue. She could really be asleep in that meadow after all. “Bye, Rue,” I whisper. I press the three middle fingers of my left hand against my lips and hold them out in her direction. Then I walk away without looking back.

Most powerful scene of the movie for me, I loved getting to see District 11’s reaction and the ensuing rebellion.

if you didn’t ugly cry here (ESPECIALLY if you’ve read the books), you are dead inside.

therealfoxxcub:

stackedcrooked:

I want to do something, right here, right now, to shame them, to make them accountable, to show the Capitol that whatever they do or force us to do there is a part of every tribute they can’t own. That Rue was more than a piece in their Games. And so am I. A few steps into the woods grows a bank of wildflowers. Perhaps they are really weeds of some sort, but they have blossoms in beautiful shades of violet and yellow and white. I gather up an armful and come back to Rue’s side. Slowly, one stem at a time, I decorate her body in the flowers. Covering the ugly wound. Wreathing her face. Weaving her hair in bright colors. They’ll have to show it. Or, even if they choose to turn the cameras elsewhere at this moment, they’ll have to bring them back when they collect the bodies and everyone will see her then and know I did it. I step back and take one last look at Rue. She could really be asleep in that meadow after all. “Bye, Rue,” I whisper. I press the three middle fingers of my left hand against my lips and hold them out in her direction. Then I walk away without looking back.

Most powerful scene of the movie for me, I loved getting to see District 11’s reaction and the ensuing rebellion.

if you didn’t ugly cry here (ESPECIALLY if you’ve read the books), you are dead inside.

38,417 notes

#hunger games

helens78:

priihfrasnelli:

Happy Hunger Games…

I know some of this is the gorgeous design of those shirts (gorgeous in the sense that they make absolutely everyone look good, well done), but alsjdflakjsf broad shoulders tapering to a narrow waist YOU WILL ALWAYS BE MY KINK INDEPENDENT OF GENDER

helens78:

priihfrasnelli:

Happy Hunger Games…

I know some of this is the gorgeous design of those shirts (gorgeous in the sense that they make absolutely everyone look good, well done), but alsjdflakjsf broad shoulders tapering to a narrow waist YOU WILL ALWAYS BE MY KINK INDEPENDENT OF GENDER

26 notes

#hunger games

Josh Hutcherson & Jennifer Lawrence | Hollywood Reporter Shoot

(via mockingfire)

4,327 notes

#hunger games

#jennifer lawrence

#josh hutcherson

thehungergamestriology:

Hunger Games inspired Die-t plan (parody)

51 notes

#hunger games

#parody

I Saw The Hunger Games Last Night

fishingboatproceeds:

I’m late, but in my defense I was on planes much of the last five days.

So a quick prefatory comment: I’m quoted on the back of The Hunger Games for nice things I said about the first book in the New York Times Book Review when it came out, so obviously I like the book. Back then, I remember thinking that if a movie adaptation ever happened (it seemed unlikely to me; I didn’t yet know it would have a huge audience), it would make me sad, because so much of what the novel expertly examines is the fraught relationship between viewers and the viewed in a world dominated by screens. But in fact I thought the movie did a really good job of this, largely because Jennifer Lawrence’s performance was to my mind so intricate and complex and nuanced and just good.

In the years since I wrote that initial review, my opinion of the book has risen steadily. (This is also true for another book I reviewed in the NYTBRThe Book Thief.) Like, if i could go back and review The Hunger Games now, I would probably be even more breathless and enthusiastic than I originally was about the book, because in retrospect it was smarter and more interesting than I noticed in my first couple readings.

What I find most interesting about both book and movie is not whatever lame/obvious things THG has to say about reality television or the exploitative relationship between producers and consumers of everything from coal to entertainment.

What is very, very interesting to me is the ways in which the plot of both book and movie explore the extremely complicated and ethically fraught relationship between observer and observed—the way resource-laden Person X paying attention to the plight of resource-deprived Person Y shapes both the lives of Person X and Person Y. (The most interesting moment in the movie to me is when Katniss gets the salve from a sponsor that allows her to survive: Lawrence’s complicated thank you in that moment is maybe even more evocative than in the book. Katniss is benefiting from the generosity of the rich, but she only needs this generosity because the social order that created the wealth is also the social order that put her in the games.)

Like, what Collins explores with real brilliance is that most social orders are more or less designed to be unjust because they are less concerned with justice than they are with stability.

And when you yourself are the victim of this injustice, you’re aware in a heightened way of what gets sacrificed in the name of stability. But the vast majority of people benefit from stability, or at least feel that it is better than taking a chance at instability. (And in this respect, we’re not entirely wrong. Like, it’s still unclear whether the radically unjust but relatively stable rule of a Hosni Mubarak, for instance, will be replaced by something better.)

On this front, I thought Jennifer Lawrence brought a lot of complexity and ambiguity to Katniss: As viewers of the movie, we are never quite sure of the extent to which her love for Peeta is shaped by the morally fraught relationship between observer and observed. I thought this couldn’t work on screen, but in the end it does, because even more than in the book, we as viewers are aware that we are participants in the observer:observed relationship.

It’s not only the people of Panem who are watching The Hunger Games.

(via mynightmaresareaboutlosingyou)

3,555 notes

#hunger games

distractingfinn1ck:

katspetrova:

Dear everyone complaining about Rue being black in the movie, 

“And most hauntingly, a twelve-year-old girl from District 11. She has dark brown skin and eyes, but other than that, she’s very like Prim in size and demeanor.”

Sincerely, 

Everyone who actually read the book and isn’t fucking racist.

(via freetobeyouandme)

3,121 notes

#seriously

#THIS

#hunger games

#rue

capitolcitizens:

The hunger games is the Third Biggest Opening Weekend of all time

capitolcitizens:

The hunger games is the Third Biggest Opening Weekend of all time

607 notes

#hunger games

#wee! <3

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