The Harry Potter franchise is, of course, a cultural institution. It
was the formative literary experience for a generation of young people
and a monstrously successful film franchise. Unfortunately, it also
popularized splitting a climactic book in to two movies; a practice that
has since gone rampant leading to the division of the very thin Breaking Dawn into two films to cap off the Twilight series, the ludicrous extension of The Hobbit in to three endlessly bogged down movies, and now The Hunger Games is left to limp across the finish line with Mockingjay Part 2, a film that struggles to justify its existence and ends up feeling bloated and insubstantial.
It serves the narrative but there’s so little of what I enjoyed about the Hunger Games
movies up until this point. There’s very little Haymitch so there’s no
opportunity to enjoy Woody Harrelson one more time. Effie Trinket gets a
role I believe was absent in the books so we can get a fleeting glance
at Elizabeth Banks. There are similarly small parts for Donald
Sutherland, Jeffrey Wright and Stanley Tucci. Basically any incidental
character that helped shape this film series is pushed to the side so we
can get more of the love triangle between Katniss, Peeta, and Gale, and
those characters as presented in these films are far and away the least
interesting choices— and while Jennifer Lawrence is trying her damndest
to make this material sing, Josh Hutcherson doesn’t get enough room to
sell a very complicated character arc, and Liam Hemsworth is just far
too bland.
Francis Lawrence’s direction continues to be the best part of this
franchise. There are two superb action sequences in this installment: a
sewer chase with a bunch of vaguely lizard-like zombie-esque monsters
and a stunning battle sequence late in the film. The chase through the
sewer and the fight sequences it contains is the best this series has
ever seen, we finally get beyond the moral dilemmas and have every
prominent character just let loose in a furious violent crescendo. By
contrast, the battle scene late in the movie shows how small and
insignificant the principal characters are, as they just sort of amble
onward as the explosions and gunfire destroy everything around them and,
at the end, they aren’t really a part of this war. It’s a wonderfully
shot sequence with the camera fixed on Katniss as the action happens
seemingly incidental to the framing of the shot. The chaos builds and
builds and the audience can feel the frenetic disarray. These bits are
arresting cinema and redeem so much of the little problems this movie
has.
I’m going to get in to spoilers from here so consider yourself warned.
One big problem is that the story in both Mockingjay films
is weaker than the ones that came before them. The idea that invading a
city is really just like another Hunger Games is a silly conceit, but
it’s one the movie inherits from the books. The way the film deals with
the death of Prim is somewhat less excusable. Prim is killed suddenly,
out of nowhere and the moment is given no air with which to breathe, to
affect the audience. The movie barrels forward from that moment to the
end credits with an inexplicable momentum considering how long we’ve
lingered on so many more trivial moments. It’s hard to accept the big
choices that come after if we don’t have a proper lens to see how this
has affected Katniss. If this was the only way to get the scene with
Katniss and Snow in the greenhouse I suppose I can accept it, it’s one
of the best films in the series, but I bet I could have cut five minutes
somewhere else to give this gigantic moment a little more space to
resonate.
I’ve grown to appreciate The Hunger Games quite a bit since I
grudgingly enjoyed the first film three and a half years ago. The first
film was an admirable adaptation of a tricky book and the second film
was an honest-to-goodness triumph of the genre, easily the best of the
young adult book adaptation films, and a genuinely excellent movie. It’s
unfortunate that we’ve had to watch the wheels fall off from there a
little bit. Taking the weakest book, the one least-liked by fans, and
turning it in to two films has been an artistically questionable
decision but it’s even taken a financial toll on these last two
installments. Mockingjay Part 2 had a weaker opening than Part 1, which was weaker than Catching Fire.
While we aren’t quite in the realm of failure here, it’s a bump in
prestige to watch this franchise lazily bounce after soaring to such
great heights. I hope this doesn’t tarnish a set of films that could
have been an enduring cultural touchstone— but I’m not sure the odds are
in its favor.
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