Katniss meets the new boss: The Tea
Party, the Bolsheviks and the “Hunger Games” finale
J-Law hasn't lost her mojo, but the
"Hunger Games" revolution lumbers through a murky, muddled final chapter
Andrew O'Hehir
(Credit: Lionsgate)
Any
time you get one of those Hollywood movies whose title involves an
incomprehensible sequence of words and too many punctuation marks –
“Master and Commander vs. Top Gun III: The Kingdom of the Harvest
Quickening – Part 3 of 3” – it arrives with a predictable set of
strengths and weaknesses. They don’t sink all that money into a
franchise-capping picture expected to dominate the global box office for
weeks without pursuing a certain degree of technical excellence, and
“The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2” is no exception. Director
Francis Lawrence’s concluding episode in the four-film series adapted
from Suzanne Collins’ young-adult bestsellers is a suitably handsome and
brooding wide-screen spectacle, with a modernist-industrial production
design that reflects the influence of various 20th-century art
movements.
But
it’s also true that toward the end of a big series the story eats the
stars, and everybody in this movie, even Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss
Everdeen, the Artemis-style revolutionary icon, is pretty much part of
the furniture. As the rebel alliance of the long-oppressed districts
closes in on the decadent Capital of Panem (basically the
post-apocalyptic United States), where the aging and tyrannical
President Snow (Donald Sutherland) makes his last stand, Katniss is sent
in behind the invading army – not to fight, but to make propaganda
films. Which is funny, right? Because, see, we’re actually watching her
in a movie! OK, you got that part. And “Mockingjay – Part 2” is itself a
kind of propaganda film. But propaganda for what? There, my friends, is
the rub.
We’ll
come back to that. As for the story Francis Lawrence tells (he is
Austrian and no relation to Jennifer Lawrence, but dude, that’s
confusing; change your name or something) – well, it’s way more
obviously about the Bolshevik Revolution, and/or Edmund Burke’s critique
of the French Revolution, than any of the “Hunger Games” narrative up
till now. No, wait, dammit — I said we were coming back to that.
What I meant to say is that this movie jams in almost every detail from
the second half of Collins’ final novel, which I guess is not surprising
since screenwriters Peter Craig and Danny Strong worked from an
adaptation by Collins herself. “Mockingjay – Part 2” drops us right into
the middle of the action and is often tense and exciting – there’s no
point seeing this if you don’t know the previous films or the books! –
but that overstuffed narrative eventually gives the film a dogged,
draggy feeling the director cannot entirely solve. At 137 minutes, this
is the second shortest of the “Hunger Games” films, but it plays longer
than either of the previous two entries.
I think the central
problem of the “Hunger Games” fictional universe is closely related to
the sheer ingenuity of its construction. First Collins and then the
filmmakers have dragged in every possible reference from apocalyptic
science-fiction and Y.A. fantasy and classic cinema, so that the end
result, however excitingly paced and capably delivered, feels boxed in
and overdetermined. I mean, take your pick: This movie is a little bit
“Star Wars” and a little bit “The Running Man,” or maybe it’s the love
child of a three-way between “The Giver,” “The Matrix” and “A Wrinkle in
Time.” When we turn to the real world and actual history, Collins’
inventiveness assumes an even more intriguing cast. As I have said in
previous reviews of this series, her particular brilliance lies in
writing books that already felt like movies, and also in her ambiguous
positioning of Katniss and her rebellion against the sadistic,
caste-divided regime of President Snow and the Hunger Games. It’s an
anti-elite revolution, but of what kind?
I’ve gotten impassioned
emails from Tea Partyers after every one of these movies, arguing that
Collins is on their side and that Katniss stands for individual freedom
and self-government, standing up against the effeminate, totalitarian
aesthetes of the Capital. Liberals or leftists are of course free to
view the “Hunger Games” universe as an Orwellian deep future ruled by
the Koch brothers (big supporters of the arts!), in which the arrogance
of the 1-percenters finally pushes the enslaved masses too far. I make
no argument about who’s right – in case you hadn’t noticed, this is
fiction, and everybody gets to be right. My point is that Collins
deliberately avoids picking sides or clarifying the picture until it’s
too late, and in the final chapter winds up ticking “All of the Above”
and delivering a series of highly familiar nostrums. Did you know that
power corrupts, and absolute power blah blah blah? Did you know that
violence begets violence, that revolutionary regimes often outdo the
savagery of the rulers they overthrow and that those who live by the
sword something something? Me neither.
As I implied earlier, the zealous and
monochromatic revolutionary movement led by insane ice-queen Alma Coin
(Julianne Moore), easily my favorite character in this series, here
acquires a distinctly Leninist or even Maoist flavor. Like Bolshevik
mastermind Leon Trotsky, Alma believes that true revolutionaries don’t
have the right not to kill people, and that any degree of mayhem and
terror is more than acceptable if it helps usher in the new era.
Katniss’ role as the star of “propos,” on the other hand, suggests the
heroic workers and soldiers hand-picked by Stalin to serve as symbols of
the people’s struggle in the Great Patriotic War (aka World War II). I
wouldn’t accuse Collins of going squishy on President Snow, exactly, but
in Sutherland’s masterful portrayal, Katniss’ great nemesis assumes
more human dimensions, an aging lion who is endlessly impressed by the
unquenchable Girl on Fire, and who knows his time is just about up.
Jennifer Lawrence hasn’t lost her
mojo as this series has dragged on, and remains a magnetic presence
every second she’s on-screen. But “Mockingjay – Part 2” doesn’t really
give her much to do. Katniss spends much of the film creeping through
the sewers of the capital, Jean Valjean-style, on a mission so secret
that everybody knows about it, including Snow, Coin and Plutarch
Heavensbee, the Machiavellian gamemaker turned revolutionary played by
Philip Seymour Hoffman. Hoffman’s role was largely completed before he
died, but for obvious reasons he’s not in the movie as much as he might
have been. Other characters arguably more interesting than Katniss and
her warring boyfriends, including Woody Harrelson’s Haymitch, Jena
Malone’s Johanna and Elizabeth Banks’ Effie Trinket, barely appear at
all. Several people we are supposed to care about get eaten by zombies. I
didn’t know there would be zombies.
As for Katniss’ love triangle
with childhood sweetheart Gale Hawthorne (Liam Hemsworth) and former
Hunger Games partner Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson), it’s more
perfunctory than ever, at least to my taste, despite the delirious level
of melodrama. (I will acknowledge that I am not in the key demographic
for this movie.) Peeta has been tortured by Snow, dosed with
tracker-jacker venom and turned into a psychotic killer, while Gale
becomes Alma Coin’s leading military strategist and pretty much a war
criminal. Smart women, foolish choices! In its last scenes “Mockingjay –
Part 2” fizzles out completely, but at least two different
dictatorships have been overthrown and replaced with – well, something
else. If history is any guide New Panem will have to fight a civil war
to figure out what that other thing is, and even that won’t settle
anything.