What Went Wrong with THE HUNGER GAMES | Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes Explained

2023 ж. 28 Жел.
343 368 Рет қаралды

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Dystopian YA fiction is back with the Hunger Games prequel, The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - all about how Coriolanus Snow became President Snow... kinda
I watched the movie, I read the book, and now I will share with you (most) of my findings. Somehow totally forgot to talk about Shakespeare's Coriolanus and Volumnia
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Coryo and Lucy Gray
Lucy Gray Baird
Rachel Zegler
Tom Blythe
Hunter Schafer
Ballad of songbirds and snakes book
viola davis
Peter Dinklage
Jason Schwartzman
Jennifer Lawrence
Katniss Everdeen
district 12
the hunger games
mockingjay
catching fire
tigris snow
sejanus plinth
coriolanus and lucy gray
prequel
hunger games books
Suzanne Collins
the capitol
reaping day

Пікірлер
  • Sorry this is late I just had a pretty horrible respiratory infection and the antibiotics also kicked me down. So much I didn’t touch on, like the similarities in Volumnia and Coriolanus from Hunger Games to the Shakespeare characters, talking about ballads and their specific use in the story, how Lucy Gray gets her name from a ballad while also becoming one. Who Tigris becomes in the later movies... There's a lot to dive into! Let me know your thoughts

    @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • Clearly you needed to do what so many franchises do and split the video into two parts.

      @Anynom@Anynom4 ай бұрын
    • Feel better!

      @KathleenMcGinnis@KathleenMcGinnis4 ай бұрын
    • @@Anynom Look.. I considered it

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • Hope you're recovering well.

      @BELLA-mf6hb@BELLA-mf6hb4 ай бұрын
    • Have you been hanging around southerners with thick accents? I swear you have a slight southern twang in this video. Maybe respiratory infections cause this. Or maybe I'm crazy. Hope you feel better, friend.

      @GlueGunsRoses@GlueGunsRoses4 ай бұрын
  • my biggest issue with the movie is that a lot of people have walked away with the impression that losing lucy gray made snow into who he became. but the book’s internal monologue explicitly shows that he was steadily becoming that way and that’s what lost him lucy gray. the movie gives you the complete opposite impression.

    @walkingexistentaldread3079@walkingexistentaldread30794 ай бұрын
    • Interesting. In the movie she told him "trust before love" and her trust was clearly broken when he lied to her with the three deaths statement. So he clearly lost her because of his ways, and only realized that after the snake incident

      @KimNoAkasunaXJashin@KimNoAkasunaXJashin4 ай бұрын
    • @@KimNoAkasunaXJashin in the book, i don’t even think he fully realizes why she left. he never explicitly connects the dots between her leaving and him lying to her about the third person. he believes it’s because she knows she’s the loose end.

      @walkingexistentaldread3079@walkingexistentaldread30794 ай бұрын
    • I only watched the movie, but I thought it was laid out pretty clearly that he’s turning into a sneaky, conniving, opportunist. He didn’t love Lucy Gray. At all.

      @kim3295@kim32954 ай бұрын
    • @@walkingexistentaldread3079I think it’s both. She realizes that she can’t trust him, and she’s also worried about being the last loose end, especially after he showed he was perfectly willing to betray those he supposedly cared about for his own gain.

      @terminallumbago6465@terminallumbago64654 ай бұрын
    • Yes it honestly gave me whiplash. My friend read the book before we watched it but I didn’t and she said that the book did so much better showing the decline of Snow vs the movie

      @Adrian-gk5vs@Adrian-gk5vs4 ай бұрын
  • It's interesting that this prequel reveals that Lucy Gray wrote "The Hanging Tree", which makes it even more of a slap of a face to Snow when Katniss performs it.

    @trinaq@trinaq4 ай бұрын
    • I do comment on that!

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • It's an interesting commentary where the song's origins are so forgotten that Katniss sings it as a child without realizing it's significance, while those in authority instantly recognize the power...

      @paulsillanpaa8268@paulsillanpaa82684 ай бұрын
    • Also the fact that the song from all those years ago is sung by someone named katniss lol

      @Iamnoone989@Iamnoone9894 ай бұрын
    • Yessss

      @humanwithaplaylist@humanwithaplaylist4 ай бұрын
    • The origin of the song didn't exist when she sang it. It was made up when she wrote the book after.

      @Fire91ful@Fire91ful4 ай бұрын
  • I'm in a few fan groups and it's STAGGERING the amount of people that still see Snow as the victim of heartbreak and Lucy Gray as the awful awful meanie who betrayed him and broke his heart?!?! Like what??? I haven't read the book yet I only watched the movie and I feel like you can still see straight through him!! It's scary what people forgive for someone they find attractive

    @consuelomartinez2598@consuelomartinez25984 ай бұрын
    • you only have to look at how many Killgrave girlies there were after s1 of Jessica Jones to see just how far some people take that. It's truly horrifying

      @katharineeavan9705@katharineeavan97054 ай бұрын
    • ​@@katharineeavan9705 Uuugh the weird fandom around kilgrave and David Tennant at the time almost killed my love of Jessica Jones tbh, it was so effed

      @onions831@onions8314 ай бұрын
    • @@onions831 I wouldn't have minded so much if it was like "yeah, I know this is screwy and the character is irredeemable, I just have some pretty dark inclinations fantasy-wise", because you know what? Everyone has some effed up fantasies now and again. Personally I don't get it. Even though I think he's a very good looking man usually, Tennant is far too good of an actor and even looking at Killgrave made my skin crawl, but each to their own I guess. What really bothered me was that they didn't (want to) see the utter horror of what he did, they just saw a hot white guy with a tragic backstory and seemed to blame Jessica for what he did more than they blamed him, or at the very least saw her as less sympathetic and seemed to think she could have 'saved him' or something. And you can't even say it was framing or anything - the show did everything it could to avoid showing him in any kind of a positive light. People just straight up decided to champion the explicitly sadistic ab*ser because he's pretty.

      @katharineeavan9705@katharineeavan97054 ай бұрын
    • I knew that was going to happen and one of the big reasons why I didn't care to see the movie. I also just don't care about Snow. I don't care WHY he is the way he is. He's a disgusting narcissist, that's honestly all we need to know. But I knew once I saw the previews for the movie people were going to somehow forgive him or say "Well now I understand...."

      @KristySki@KristySki4 ай бұрын
    • @@KristySki It's seems to be kind of inevitable when it comes to these kind of "villain origin" stories though doesn't it? People will always try to find something to hang onto cuz well you can't walk a mile in a person's shoes or in this case movie and not have some degree of empathy.

      @sammiemm9397@sammiemm93974 ай бұрын
  • In the original trilogy, one of the defining traits of Katniss and Snow’s relationship is this understanding that it’s pointless for them to lie to each other because the other could see right through it. I love how that contrasts Snow’s relationships in this book, where they’re all pretty much built on lies and facades.

    @bejo2551@bejo25514 ай бұрын
    • My theory is that he sees Katniss's relationship with him as a reflection of his relationship with Dr. Gual. Although we see her as his mentor, Snow refers to her as "his greatest enemy" and "dangerous" She hurt Snow in awful, terrisble ways causing significant phycological damage (remember, she sent him to 12 for "a vaccination" to teach in a lesson and he almost committed suicide), but she ultimately helped his place in the world. Think what Snow says to Katniss "I want us to be friends, if not friends then allies" remember, he's not lying. By Catching Fire, similarties between Snow and Karniss are evident. They come from nothing in a broken home with a family to take care of, they both take part in a controversial Hunger Games that could incident rebellion, but it ultimately changes their social and financial situation. Snow in Catching Fire is trying to fix Katniss's game like Dr. Gual fixed his. Meanwhile, he pushes her to be the Capital's pet, grooming her to be an intsterment to "preserve humanity by keeping thebpeace" just like Gual did for him. And remember Gual had a thing for not lieing. Snow lied to her, and she almost killed his friend. Snow's mistake however was thinking Katniss was like him. Once he realised this mistake, he decided to get rid of her, hence the Quarter Quell.

      @Elizabeth-hc3mi@Elizabeth-hc3mi4 ай бұрын
    • @@Elizabeth-hc3mi Vacation or vaccination xD

      @Teemo6544@Teemo65444 ай бұрын
    • @@Elizabeth-hc3mi Snow reminds me of that person who had an abusive parent and so he resolves to be a better parent to his child not realizing that he basically does the same thing or is just abusive in a different way. He feels so righteous telling himself that, at least he is not like his parent, and you should be grateful for that, but really he is just as bad.

      @kellharris2491@kellharris24914 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Elizabeth-hc3mi I agree with everything, except the last part. She was, in fact, too simillar to Snow's younger self, which he realized quite early, and he, better than anyone, knew how problematic that could, and eventually would turn out to be. While Quarter Quell was partially about punishing Katniss, it was mostly about re-establishing dominance over the districts, which was honestly doomed idea from the start, but that is a topic for another discussion.

      @vukkicos5688@vukkicos56884 ай бұрын
    • @@Elizabeth-hc3mi I totally get this. I think Snow recognizes that Katniss’ brain works in the same way as his does. He doesn’t need to put on a facade for her because he knows she will just get what he says. He can come to her unmasked. He also knows that many people don’t understand the way his brain works. Makes me believe both of them are INFJs. When INFJs experience trauma it is the way they handle it defines them. In that way we see Snow become someone like Hitler & Katniss become someone like Martin Luther King. You allow your circumstance to destroy you or propel you to positive change. INFJs will happily live in their head until they need to solve their problems in the real world. Katniss solves her problems by hunting & building up her resilience to trials. Snow solves his problems by control, however he is not actually looking at the facts & evidence presented to him. He refuses to do so & either puts on a performance (in his shadow functions) or remains in his head to confirm his own beliefs because sharing them would only cause people to see him with disgust & when you disgust people, they don’t trust you & you cannot gain power or control. Snow genuinely believes Katniss will do what he did. However, Katniss was raised with empathy, while the only symbol of empathy Snow has is Tigress who he sees as weak & unable to gain control for herself.

      @storytimewithyaz@storytimewithyaz3 ай бұрын
  • The best way to emulate Snow's internal narcissism is to have a monologue same as Patrick Bateman in American Psycho. It'll be weird though not sure if it will work. Probably not

    @j0hncarp@j0hncarp4 ай бұрын
    • This is also what they do with Joe in the show You.

      @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
    • wish they had done that

      @alexdavis360@alexdavis3604 ай бұрын
    • "I live in the Capitol. My name is Coriolanus Snow."

      @absolutelynotellen@absolutelynotellen4 ай бұрын
    • Hollywood seems allergic to internal monologue, though.

      @farkasmactavish@farkasmactavish4 ай бұрын
    • I think it could have worked if they didn’t over do it. I think they do a good job with it on You

      @mariaskabardonis8353@mariaskabardonis83534 ай бұрын
  • I think there should have been more focus on Snow and Tigris' relationship. Like how they come from the same background and basically wanted similar things but how their actions completely change them.

    @ashercharleston482@ashercharleston4824 ай бұрын
    • Yes!!!! I would have liked to see his reaction to realizing Tigress had to turn to sex work to help them survive.

      @LadyScaper@LadyScaper4 ай бұрын
    • Yes! Her character was so intriguing. And, she actually appears in the other movies.

      @laurakoby806@laurakoby8064 ай бұрын
    • How did her face become like that 60+ years later? Just extensive plastic surgery?

      @deviantmoore9744@deviantmoore97443 ай бұрын
    • @@deviantmoore9744 yes Body modifications are a huge thing in Capitol. I think she got addicted to it and went extreme.

      @ashercharleston482@ashercharleston4823 ай бұрын
    • @@deviantmoore9744 I'm pretty sure that's what it is. Capitol Fashion got more and more extreme so she pushed it to the limit with what she did. There's different theories as to why. Some people guessed that she did it to make herself less attractive to kind of repel predators or as a reaction to her existing trauma. Other people said she did it to kind of push away the other Capitol people, hoping they would find her repulsive so she had an excuse to back away from their activities without putting a target on her back. Or the whole thing could be her feeling constrained so she's expressing herself the only way she has. It seems like a sensible character arc.

      @laurakoby806@laurakoby8063 ай бұрын
  • I’ll tell you what was wrong with it: it didn’t have enough cowbell during Rachel Zegler’s singing scenes.

    @bigguy4x418@bigguy4x4184 ай бұрын
    • And not enough Hunter serving fashion

      @yaritzamiranda921@yaritzamiranda9214 ай бұрын
    • I'm about to cow your bell for that one honestlay

      @nailinthefashion@nailinthefashion4 ай бұрын
    • Truer words have never been spoken.

      @BeyondSafewords@BeyondSafewords4 ай бұрын
    • She... It had... WHAT?!?

      @BillyWitchDoctorDotCom@BillyWitchDoctorDotCom4 ай бұрын
    • I got a fever… and the only prescription is more cowbell

      @darbymichelle@darbymichelle4 ай бұрын
  • District 12 being in Appalachia, and having such a deep relationship with music is one of my favourite through lines in the Hunger Games. Appalachian folk musics is sort of proto-country music, but also one of the places where old english/scots/irish folk ballads were preserved. The way that the Covey's songs are preserved from before the Capitol and Districts, and Katniss's father passes her The Hanging Tree, in turn preserving pieces of Lucy Gray.

    @ScarlettAstor@ScarlettAstor4 ай бұрын
    • I agree

      @RomaniScientist@RomaniScientist4 ай бұрын
    • And this is my favourite aspects of European culture - their folky, funky music! Wish more people would connect with that than racist supremacy..

      @JC_Cali@JC_Cali4 ай бұрын
    • @JC_Cali I mean us Romani & Traveller ethnicities that came to Appalachia still keep a lot of traditions going. But we're also some of the world's most hated ethnicities

      @RomaniScientist@RomaniScientist4 ай бұрын
    • As an Appalachian girl, I genuinely loved seeing the accent and music style in a major film.

      @mikankitsune0440@mikankitsune044024 күн бұрын
  • My issue is that you get Snow's decent in the book because you're in his jealous narcissistic head the whole time. So when he's hunting Lucy Grey at the end it makes sense. Here you can tell he's conflicted but you never get the same cruel selfish vibe that you get from him in the book. So I think it worked best because I had read the book and knew the context. I can't imagine what people who read the book were thinking. Also Tom Blythe, god bless him, is just too hot to fully hate. 😂

    @timpage9424@timpage94244 ай бұрын
    • I didn't read before viewing and I was knew he's a selfish beep so I was just glad Lucy caught on. When she said wasn't made of sugar he should have realized and opened up but the insecurity jumped out

      @nailinthefashion@nailinthefashion4 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I had never read the book and I read a ton of comments about how “oh I read the book so I knew snows character the entire time. If you didn’t read the book that’s your bad” which like no? It shouldn’t be a requirement to read the source material for an adaptation. If a key part of the story is missed out on then the adaptation has failed at that part. It was obvious that snow was kind of conflicted, but it seemed conflicted between good and evil not just straight up lying. And there’s several parts of the film which just don’t make sense for snow as a lying manipulator. If you get the internal monologue making that conflict evident I could 100% see the story working but without it the film basically just feels inconsistent in how it wants snow to be presented.

      @barbedwire9975@barbedwire99754 ай бұрын
    • I haven’t read the books. I thought that when he was looking for her he was first trying to find her and lure her back to him, but once he realized it was too late and that she didn’t trust him anymore, his goal shifted from trying to find her to trying to hunt her, because she had now become a loose end.

      @jonarysrodriguez287@jonarysrodriguez2874 ай бұрын
    • I never saw Snow as decent in the book.

      @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
    • nah his okay on the looks department.

      @dragonslastfyl2203@dragonslastfyl22034 ай бұрын
  • I think a snow narration would help some parts of the movie to really see what goes on in his mind. I know the whole "show don't tell" but it feels like we lack so much of his twisted narcissistic inner monologue. Like whispers you hear of his mind racing and the disconnect between his actions and intent behind them. Like calling Sejanus his brother, that's purely for selfish reasons

    @caesar98@caesar984 ай бұрын
    • You can show through narration. The fact that some directors need to be told this is concerning. Just like how a first person POV novel shows the information (usually) or finds an interesting way to deliver exposition, film also have the same ability and more. It’s not one or the other, it’s both. You can have a narrator over your film saying certain discreet things and the viewer will read/listen between the lines to get what is really being said.

      @rexibhazoboa7097@rexibhazoboa70974 ай бұрын
    • yeah, the way that he thinks tigris "invited abuse" just by her appearance, how he hated his grandmother's singing, it's missing. i didn't get that from his performance at all, so all his insanity is not shown well.

      @pasaniusventris4113@pasaniusventris41134 ай бұрын
    • @@pasaniusventris4113 oh I hated that part, how he could be so cruel and heartless towards Tigris the sweetest most pure hearted person in the book. I hated him from then on in the book, he just reminded me too much of a certain narcissist I've encountered in my life and I really felt Dean Highbottom's "you survived him" line

      @caesar98@caesar984 ай бұрын
    • I mean while I agree we miss a big part of snow’s character I kind of love that the people that only watch the movie see only what snow puts as a front and as we have seen by a lot of people’s reactions he somewhat successful tricks them until the end.

      @masonguthrie1257@masonguthrie12574 ай бұрын
  • on a real note, I’m legally obligated to demand amanda’s retrospective analysis of the original series

    @wompwomp1015@wompwomp10154 ай бұрын
    • Some day I’m sure! I’ve been going back through the books after doing the movies this past month

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • I support this stance

      @grizzlygoldman@grizzlygoldman4 ай бұрын
    • Oh please! the books hit so hard of the o.g trilogy. They had no business being that good for "teen" fiction.

      @Lonewolf-wm7pe@Lonewolf-wm7pe4 ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@AmandaTheJedi I’d like to vote for this retrospective analysis too. Especially since I think that you’re giving the first movie too much credit. I think without Katniss’ inner monologue a lot of viewers were confused by her actions. I’ve heard it said that a lot of people just saw a typical romance playing out, not realizing Katniss was playing a survival game. Makes for interesting analysis and cool comparisons with the prequel. These actors are wonderful

      @chloedubisch7861@chloedubisch7861Ай бұрын
    • oooh, yes!

      @dwdillydally@dwdillydally18 күн бұрын
  • So much of the book was the horror of not only knowing who Snow truly is because we've seen his future from the original trilogy, but also the fact that we're seeing him constantly have insight into other people and scenarios but draw the absolute wrong conclusions from them, watching him continuously be misunderstood by people around him like characters in a horror movie: you can scream at them all you want not to go into that creepy basement, but they can't hear you.

    @KaiInMotion@KaiInMotion4 ай бұрын
  • The single biggest flaw in the movie was it's inability to truly portray Snow as the narcissist he was. They tried to make him sympathetic instead of leaning into the flawed main character, just like they did with Artemis Fowl. Like Snow never was nice for niceness's sake. He was nice to get something in return. He did not love Lucy; he "loved" her. His inner dialogues never once made you believe he ever truly cared for Lucy; he always saw her as property that he was owed because he's a Snow, and Snows deserve whatever they want.

    @annienunyabiz6627@annienunyabiz66274 ай бұрын
  • A really interesting thing I saw someone being up was how the prequel gives a lot of Snow’s actions in the trilogy more context. Snow feeling that Katniss deceived Peeta in the first games the way Lucy Gray deceived him. The way he taunts Katniss about kissing Gale, the boy from home, because he was jealous of Billy Taupe - also the boy from home. And in Mockingjay, Snow believes he is helping Peeta see how destructive and untrustworthy Katniss is when he brainwashes him, because Snow too was unable to trust Lucy Gray.

    @atp8108@atp81084 ай бұрын
    • The irony is that when Katniss finally would come out of her stoic shell, Snow break Peeta, actually what he say to her wasn't a lie, but Katniss was in her shell never actually displaying any kind of emotion or letting her guard down, and when she finally come out from it, Peeta believes that all was a lie, well, it was a lie in the first movie and book, now watching the movies again, this is not a "love triangle" per se, there is no melodrama, in the first movie Katniss was in her shell and stoic, in the second is when she finally take a decision, and the third is confirming that decision, sadly for her, Snow break Peeta mind, something that he never recover entirely, something worse than his abusive childhood, I never understand how Peeta could be so emotional having an abusive childhood, that would have made him more a recluse than Katniss was.

      @TheKeyser94@TheKeyser944 ай бұрын
    • Damn I never thought about it like this I love this take.

      @mumbledmeatballs5629@mumbledmeatballs56294 ай бұрын
    • Never thought of it, that's so damn interesting. I saw Snow being similar to Katniss (both start of as being morally gray, coming of as judgemental and cynical at times) - with the main difference between them being that Katniss cares about everyone other than herself and wants to survive to keep others safe; Snow is more self-centered. But also that Snow and Peeta had similarities - they're both highly charismatic and know what to say; they also lie very easily, with Peeta of course being more honest actually (there was a post about it). Also both are entranced by the singing of the girl they fall for - Peeta loves Katniss since early childhood, Snow falls for Lucy almost at the reaping. Also the nice thing is that Snow is annoyed by his grandma's singing at the beginning, tries to think he likes music - and does not. Katniss is brought up singing with her dad and sister, comes to a point when singing isn't really on her mind and it starts creeping back with Rue & Prim and the revolution.

      @z2yn@z2yn4 ай бұрын
    • @@TheKeyser94 Yes. But I think Peeta is different from Katniss in that he is an extravert vs Katniss the loner. Peeta's childhood made him want to connect with others particularly Katniss. But Katniss's pain made her turn inward instead. This is just a difference in personality. The both love and feel deeply but express that differently. She keeps her thoughts to herself and her feelings to herself. Often it's so deep that she doesn't even know what she is feeling. Peeta is almost the exact opposite wearing his heart on his sleeve and very open about his feelings. Especially for Katniss. I still remember in the first book Peeta is crying while saying goodbye to his family and Katniss is trying so hard to keep everything in for fear people will think she is weak. And she is genuinely surprised that Peeta is showing such emotion. Peeta is also so very good with people he was even able to get in with the careers for awhile. He is a people person. That's his personality. But I think those moments were Katniss does show her emotions and feelings are so powerful just because of how rare it is.

      @kellharris2491@kellharris24914 ай бұрын
    • @@kellharris2491 My issue is that most abusive children are introvert, they not want to everyone else see their wounds or show their feelings for the same reason as Katniss because they think is a sign of weakness, they always come out for a excuse for their abuser, so Peeta being overly emotional make no sense, he would be way more introvert than Katniss and be a little rough around the edges, he being a good speaker is self explanatory, children and teenager that suffer abuse then to end being a little manipulative, to hide their wound, is surprising that with all the strength that Peeta have he is not overly violent, he could throw Gale if he wanted to, but he never did, having compassion with teenager that suffer abuse is rare, most of them want to escape that situation somehow or end being as violent as their aggressors, it would make more sense that Peeta go out to the woods offend in his free time to be alone and escape of his house for a while, but then again, Peeta have brothers, he must have been feeling protective towards them before they die and take all the abuse to protect them.

      @TheKeyser94@TheKeyser944 ай бұрын
  • In the book shows more that Snow had a chance to become better, and having Snow explaining the songs in the Audible of the book actually shows how he doesn't like music

    @AloneDoggKilla@AloneDoggKilla4 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I love when he hits a point and realizes that he might not actually like music that much aha

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
  • While the movie isn’t perfect, it does have a degree of re-watchability that I can’t quite pinpoint… coming from someone who read the book before watching the movie, I think the directors and screenwriters did a great job of condensing the source material to only what was absolutely necessary. Though the movie was good, it seems everyone agrees it could’ve been better with a longer screen time. My personal theory is that given the mixed reactions to the premise and the downfall of YA in general, the studio didn’t want to risk it.

    @minnies-verse@minnies-verse4 ай бұрын
    • I assume that's why as well. It's not QUITE enough material for two really solid movies, so making one was definitely the right call it just felt lacking after first watch but I agree, it is something I've enjoyed having on again while working on this

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • ​@AmandaTheJedi I do think tho, that a three part limited series would've been the right way to go 😅

      @jankreft6753@jankreft67534 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jankreft6753a mini series like Stephen King used to make in the 90s woulda been perfect

      @benamisai-kham5892@benamisai-kham58924 ай бұрын
    • Devils advocate, where would splitting it have made sense. The first 2/3rds are what’s loaded with all of the cool characters, franchise iconography and the actual games. I think a movie just about Snow and Lucy Gray in District 12 would have been a lot harder to sell to an audience since like I said, everything exciting and familiar is in that first half.

      @tatehildyard5332@tatehildyard53324 ай бұрын
    • @tatehildyard5332 the book is already organised in three parts. Euch with it's own dramatic structure and climax (somewhat at least). So a split in three episodes for a TV show would've workt rather well, with each part being like 50 to 60 minutes long.

      @jankreft6753@jankreft67534 ай бұрын
  • 40:47 In Snow’s mind I’m sure he believes he loved Lucy Gray more than anyone and that she nearly destroyed him, but I think the thing he loved most was himself, and in the end that is what destroys him. In this story his ambition and sense of entitlement destroyed any potential for good he had left. And throughout the trilogy his tendency towards becoming obsessed with something-as described in the opening pages of TBOSAS-which in this case was Katniss, caused him to lose sight of the bigger picture and allowed Plutarch and Coin to beat him.

    @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
    • Thats what i thought too! I havent read the book yet but the movie stayed in my mind SO LONG after it ended and i feel like.. Coryo definitely did not love lucy, maybe just liked her a little bit, but he definitely THOUGHT he loved her or something… like, i like her now so i should be doing this… while at the same time really only doing things that favoured his own ambition. Like he acted according to his own priorities all along, while trying to convince himself and others he’s doing the right thing on the surface… purely on the surface. honestly getting this much from the movie itself made me think the movie was really good and i cant wait to read it bc i keep hearing its SO much better

      @violett5418@violett54184 ай бұрын
    • He loved what she brought or could bring to his table.

      @Egan-pop@Egan-pop4 ай бұрын
    • I think Coryo genuinely did love Lucy, at least a little bit. But I think he loved the control and power he had over her during the games more than loved her, and he wasn’t necessarily able to see the distinction between the two. He convinced himself he loved her, he believed it.

      @mariannestrgzr9374@mariannestrgzr93744 ай бұрын
  • I was SOOO sad when they cut out clemensia. Clemensia is so important to snow in the book, shes his one real genuine friend, and what he sees happen to her and the state she returns him scars him for the entire book, and its what he reflects on the most when he thinks about what will happen to his family if he gets caught defecting with Sejanus and that entire nuance is lost completley

    @faye4930@faye49304 ай бұрын
    • THEY CUT OUT CLEMENSIA?? (I haven’t seen the movie lol- only read the book) I thought she played into the theme that the capitol didn’t actually care about their children either really well.

      @lolli_popples@lolli_popples4 ай бұрын
    • @@lolli_popples she never gets mentioned again after getting bit, pretty hinted at she dies and is yeah just never brought up again

      @faye4930@faye49304 ай бұрын
    • @@faye4930 That’s so sad! I loved her during the games.

      @lolli_popples@lolli_popples4 ай бұрын
    • I'm at the third part now. Had to smoke a butt. I'm so disappointed that Clemensia didn't show up again. I was looking forward to that specifically, among other things they cut. Will be unpausing shortly.

      @beetlebob4675@beetlebob46754 ай бұрын
  • I want to add that we do actually "read" about Lucy Gray in the Hunger Games. Katniss mentions that District 12 has had 2 victors but we only ever meet Haymitch. I caught this on my reread of both Songbirds and the original trilogy.

    @MissBotz@MissBotz4 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I just meant by name directly

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
  • I feel bad for the fictional woman that Snow ended up marrying and his fictional kid(s) so he could get a granddaughter. I cant imagine how abusive he probably was. It just kinda dawned on me that he probably wasn't a good husband/father

    @scottietrademark@scottietrademark4 ай бұрын
    • In the book after Lucy flees he thinks how his wife shall be an airhead, someone who wouldn't question him. Something like that.

      @Aurem15@Aurem154 ай бұрын
    • The book said he'd marry that one girl who disliked him as much as he did. So essentially, she only got on board for the power and didn't care about him. We don't know much about their kids and grandkids, the movie makes Snows granddaughter out to be an absolute sweetheart.

      @z2yn@z2yn4 ай бұрын
    • The fact that his granddaughter did her hair just like Katniss must have been a slap in the face towards his participation in the showman aspect of the games, and just how successful his applications were. Lol

      @beetlebob4675@beetlebob46754 ай бұрын
  • Love the character study in the book and thought the movie was a fine translation, though I did miss seeing more of Tigris and Coryo's relationship. Should have been made into two movies or a mini series imo, but didn't expect that with how the book was received.

    @amara560@amara5604 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I don't genuinely think a split movie would be the full solution - it just needs a litttllleee bit more than what's here for something that already feels long at times and a bit more work to get us in Coryo's head. But yes, DEFINITELY could have used more Tigris. Hunter brought her to life so perfectly.

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
  • I think it loses a lot of Snow's blatent manipulative nature. A lot of his cheating in the book is very subtle and it very much demonstrates that Snow has no values beyond that of his own immediate success. I think in the movie his cheating is too obvious and it loses a lot of his subtlety. And the whole "Snow changes his mind" at the climax of the movie, they miss it entirely. They make it that its a reaction to her betrayal rather than a reveal that he doesnt actually trust or love her as a person but as an ideal and a pocession

    @hannahhannah7002@hannahhannah70024 ай бұрын
  • It also doesn’t help that whenever Snow did “good” things he was punished but whenever he did evil things he was consistently rewarded. From his point of view why bother being good when being cruel gets you the life you want in the end

    @charmainen8475@charmainen84754 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, Gaul really does just push him further and further into his own worse traits and beliefs, because they're the same as her own. As Amanda points out, if Highbottom had mentored Snow instead of hating him for having his father's traits, well... Snow probably wouldn't have become a GOOD person, but maybe a slightly better one.

      @laffyraffy407@laffyraffy4074 ай бұрын
  • What I liked most about the books, is that through Snow it shows how easily people can be radicalized through propaganda into standing by and enabling horrors and violence. Snow isn’t humanized but you understand his anger, his pride, and his obsession with gaining power and how it leaves him susceptible to the pro-Hunger Games/Capital rhetoric. There are moments in the book where I was like, “omigod, you are so *close* to understanding why the Hunger Games and the subjugation of the districts is bad”, only for him to steer right down the path towards Dr. Gaul…and then you realize, no he’s *always* been this way. Lucy Gray was a distraction, a way for Snow to justify his later actions, however, he was always going to go down that path. You see his clear cognitive dissonance, the mental gymnastics he does to tell himself that he’s doing the right thing. An example being, him trying to make a case that the Covey is neither District or Capital, so therefore he can be with Lucy Gray and she can come to the Capital to become rich and famous. He’s not trying to save LG or the Covey, he just wants to have her and keep his status. But also, he continues to dehumanize the citizens of the district, saying they deserve to be punished by the hunger games. In one breath he’ll praise Tigress, but then will look down on her when the possibility that she’ll need to turn to sex work for them to survive. Instead of being angry at the Capital who has done nothing but perpetuate the violence and villainize the districts who are powerless and suffering, he falls in line with their teachings. Even if he escaped with LG to 13, his paranoia and need for control would likely have him claiming power in 13, where he will still do terrible things. He’s kinda written like the protag in Catcher in the Rye, Snow is charismatic and engaging that you the reader can easily be lead by his lies/twisted ideas, that you want to give him a pass, only to realize at the end that, no, Snow is a narcissistic monster who successfully and brutally took power. And that’s the sad thing about the movie, you don’t get that nuance of what the author is trying to tell you about how easily it is for “civilized people” to justify abject cruelty. If you haven’t read the book, I highly recommend listening to the audio book. It really adds to the immersion of the reader standing by as Snow did to allow the Hunger Games and the violence to be packaged as a spectacle instead of the horror that it is.

    @martidodger7106@martidodger71064 ай бұрын
  • I'm crazy interested to see Snow's inner thoughts strictly towards Peeta. He's pretty outward in his thoughts for Katniss but he's gotta be just screaming in his head at Peeta like, "YOU IDIOT. THERE WILL BE OTHER GIRLS. DON'T EAT THE BERRIES. I'LL TEACH YOU EVERYTHING I KNOW"

    @ImTMZ@ImTMZ4 ай бұрын
  • Rachel Zieglers song performance really surprised me throughout the movie. I saw a video that they did live takes during filming and you can definitely tell. I had a hard time picturing how the songs would sound when reading the books and I think they were absolutely perfect !

    @money1137@money11374 ай бұрын
    • I listened to Maiah on KZhead who created her own interpretations of all the songs in the novel. Those fit so perfectly that I found myself unconsciously comparing the movie’s version to hers. I think her name is Maiah Twaine or something similar.

      @rexibhazoboa7097@rexibhazoboa70974 ай бұрын
    • @@rexibhazoboa7097 oh awesome I’ll take a watch !!

      @money1137@money11374 ай бұрын
    • I couldn't stand her affected pseudo-twang...

      @TheSimpleMan454@TheSimpleMan4544 ай бұрын
    • her acting feels more like Disney plus teen show, so cringe. Also the obvious fake accent was such a turn off

      @farahwashindroy6346@farahwashindroy63464 ай бұрын
    • @@TheSimpleMan454saaame! It felt like she was trying too hard

      @lunarae2266@lunarae22664 ай бұрын
  • The fact that he knew what tigris had to do for them, and then forced that on the victors knowing they would do the same for their loved one is horrifying....😢

    @giuliac9735@giuliac97354 ай бұрын
  • this is a small pet peeve of mine but thank u for calling her lucy gray & not just lucy

    @a.songb1rd@a.songb1rd4 ай бұрын
    • I might have a slip up at some point but I did really try to make sure because that is her whole first name aha

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • That was the one piece of Missouri heritage my grandma kept, she hated being called Mary and constantly corrected people about it actually being Mary Ruth

      @hockeygrrlmuse@hockeygrrlmuse4 ай бұрын
  • Wow, I think it's really fitting that Snow's ideas are somewhat based on Rousseau. Rousseau didn't really care about the lives of children either. He put all of his own children into orphanages, which meant almost certain death back then. And then he wrote a book about how you are supposed to raise and educate children. In that book, he writes about how he would raise the perfect son, hypothetically of course.

    @winterblume8000@winterblume80004 ай бұрын
    • wait, what, fr? so rousseau put his own children in orphanages? and everybody just let him, or what? where did you hear this, I have to know more, that's batshit.

      @kaamn1829@kaamn18294 ай бұрын
    • It's a lot like how single unmarried, angry women/men try to write self-help books to be the perfect person on the market for someone. :)@@kaamn1829

      @BrokensoulRider@BrokensoulRider4 ай бұрын
    • ​@kaamn1829 It's on his Wikipedia page, actually. Dude's life was WILD. Basically the gist of it is that he hooks up with Therese, who gives birth to 4-5 of his kids. Therese was a seamstress who supported her large and lazy family (siblings and mom). He and Therese's mom persuade her to give up all their kids to a foundling hospital/home. Therese's mom doesn't want the kids to get the resources she was sponging off them. Rousseau claims he's too poor for kids (despite actually being rich), but he tells someone later the real reason he made his gf (yes, he only married her 23 years into their relationship in a fake ceremony!) give all their kids up was because he didn't want her and her poorly-educated family to raise his kids to be equally stupid or badly behaved, so sending them to a foundling hospital meant they'd have a better upbringing. Even more insanely, we know this because he told on himself by writing about it in his autobiography (btw he only went to the hospital to ask about his son 10 years later, and they had no info). In conclusion, Rousseau was a condescending MFer who was somehow charming yet made enemies everywhere he went.

      @MarieLehleitner@MarieLehleitner4 ай бұрын
    • @@kaamn1829many kids in orphanages still had living parents, so it wasn't out of the ordinary to send your children there

      @mppi@mppi4 ай бұрын
    • @@MarieLehleitner wth that's so wild, I agree with his theories, but I don't think I can take him seriously anymore, lol. thanks!

      @kaamn1829@kaamn18294 ай бұрын
  • It’s really interesting that this book tells us Tigress is the cousin of Snow, because this is the same woman who helped the rebels when they stormed the capital, giving Katniss and the others sanctuary. In the end, his own family betrayed him.

    @bloodfiremoon@bloodfiremoon4 ай бұрын
  • I think that through his facial expression, Tom Blyth did a fantastic job at conveying the emotions that you could read in Coryo's thoughts though. Like his possessiveness over Lucy Gray, when they're at the Hob and he sees her for the first time since the games. You see him happy that she's there, within reach, that she can be his again when she looks at him and he catches her. But the second the crowd starts cheering, the smile fades from his face as if he just realized that in here, she's not *just* his. (And the way he seemed ready to beat Billy Taupe to death, if no one had stopped him, when he tried to touch Lucy Gray .) I also felt that the scene in the forest, when he holds the scarf and smells it, it might be me reading too much into it but I felt like I was seeing Coryo trying to find something to hold on to. His mother's scent that comforted him. But then that wasn't there anymore. Lucy Gray's scent maybe. Wasn't there anymore. All that was left was the mud, the one thing he cherished literally run through the dirt. And it felt like he just realized that the people who cared for him and whom he loved (or cared for at least) abandoned him in a way. And that he couldn't control that, people leaving. And that's one thing that pushed him over the edge.

    @marie-pierrobillard9554@marie-pierrobillard95544 ай бұрын
    • Yeah they found a fantastic character actor to portray Snow, shame some people don't see it because he is "too pretty". Kinda fits the message of the books tho

      @evgeniyaseminenko8594@evgeniyaseminenko85944 ай бұрын
    • @@evgeniyaseminenko8594 I could never understand how people place the looks of a person over their actions like were not paying attention to anything actually happening in the movie? Like a lot of people overlooked the emotions and expressions Blyth showed throughout the movie and just criticized Snow for looking "too pretty."

      @camelliaharpdarkthrope6462@camelliaharpdarkthrope64624 ай бұрын
    • also people making it sound like old Snow is ugly. By god, Donald Sutherland looks well for his age and it made love Snow even more. I frankly enjoy good villains and Snow is an excellent one.

      @z2yn@z2yn4 ай бұрын
  • I like to imagine Francis Lawrence still having intense flashbacks of the reception of Mockingjay and REFUSING to split this movie in 2

    @Idontexisthihi001@Idontexisthihi0014 ай бұрын
  • I love the novels ability to remind you what an irredeemable asshole Snow is the moment you start to feel bad for him. I also want to share that I found it hilarious that one of Snow’s friends in the capital who was more on the anti-games side is named Lysistrata. That’s the name of an Ancient Greek play where the title character leads the women of Greece in a sex strike to end a war.

    @JackoDaGreat@JackoDaGreat4 ай бұрын
  • I’m curious if anyone else has thoughts on Tigris’s life between the movies. Before this book I assumed that Tigris had come to realize the brutality of the capitol through working with tributes as a designer for years leading to her joining the rebellion, which I liked more than what mockingjay kind of implied by having her justification be that snow fired her and called her ugly. I wonder what drove her to taking a role in the games, if she was pressured by coryo or decided to take a cinna-like role in comforting people in their last days.

    @mumbledmeatballs5629@mumbledmeatballs56294 ай бұрын
  • From a narrative stance, having Snow be from a disgraced Capitol legacy bankrupted by the war perfectly encapsulates the theme of Facism/The Capitol telling everyone to *look down* when placing blame for their problems instead of *looking up* . Sejanus being a District kid who became a New Money Capitol family provides him not only the opposite trajectory but the firsthand knowledge that the only way you can go *up* is to destroy those *below* you for the benefit of those at the *top* . The Snow family was pretty *high up* until those at *the bottom* demanded better/change from *the top* and considering history is written by the victorious, he came to blame those who demanded basic rights and decency instead of those who would rather *KILL* and *DIE* than give their people those rights. The Capitol told Snow all his problems were the fault of District citizens and when Lucy, the epitome of freedom and wildness, the *mockingjay* herself chose to fly away from him because *he* wanted to trap her in a cage just as much as the Capitol did he took that as a personal bias confirmation that the person who is so rebellious of everything the Capitol she is a nomad represents every single District and their defiance to the Capitol. The moment Lucy Gray *VERY RIGHTFULLY* left Coriolanus and denied every fiber of his bootlicking existence, President Snow was born

    @amandamoore7512@amandamoore75124 ай бұрын
  • I'm glad I'm not the only one who liked it but wasn't 100% on the movie. Rachel's voice is STUNNING but her southern accent was boarding on a joke and I wanted so much more from Snow and Tigris! Such interesting and deep backgrounds that didn't get enough love. I wish this movie had been a 4 or 5 episode show with 1hr per ep. I think we could have gotten a lot more from it like we did with Squid Game. Still enjoyed the movie! I just wish there was more for each character!

    @raicrush@raicrush4 ай бұрын
    • I think this COULD be done in like, 3.25 to 3.5 hours really well with a bit of reworking to get us in his head more. It's definitely in an awkward in between where the material is a bit too much for a standard movie unless we start cutting more on the top half, and a bit too little for a proper mini series unless you start adding things. An extended cut would be cool

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • @@AmandaTheJedi That would work as well! I don't know how many people would have gone to see a 3.5hr Hunger Games movie (tbh I would being a feral fan of the OGs). An extended cut would be amazing to get more of what was left out

      @raicrush@raicrush4 ай бұрын
    • She wasn’t doing a southern accent but an appalachian accent. I found her accent pretty accurate to one.

      @genericwhiteguy2910@genericwhiteguy29104 ай бұрын
    • @@genericwhiteguy2910 Same

      @bluebay1031@bluebay10314 ай бұрын
    • @@raicrushthey did have a 3.5 hour cut of the film but the test audience who saw the movie early said the movie was too long and they didn’t like it being so long and so they had to cut it to 2.5 hrs so the general audience wouldn’t Be too upset.

      @Icycold21@Icycold214 ай бұрын
  • 12:57 Katniss is a fighter forced to perform, Lucy Grey is a performer forced to fight, and Snow is a Fighter Choosing to perform

    @rayabear460@rayabear4604 ай бұрын
  • I think Sejenus remembers a very different life in the districts because he was so young… he idolizes his version of district 2 before the war when the rules were less strict. I also don’t think she set the snake trap and it was purely accidental, also when she was “shot” it was her reaping dress so it’s pretty obviously a hallucination.

    @hannahedmond4388@hannahedmond43884 ай бұрын
    • I don't know if he idealizes it so much as he feels bad that they didn't help other people. District 2 is already one of the better off districts but I think it's more guilt from him to have gotten out. I did go back and check though, she's not wearing the reaping day dress when he thinks he shot her through the trees, just something with polka dots - I think he hits the tree then something hits her by the look of it

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • There’s two things that come to mind for me with Sejenus, 1) like Amanda already replied, he feels his family should’ve helped others more, and I think 2) the Capitol has always had a way of putting on airs and being all about the way you present yourself to the world that seems pretty unique to the Capitol, though we haven’t gotten a good look into the richer districts. I think he dislikes that and maybe longs for a sense of community without the pretense that may have existed in 2. In the book his district rejected him because his family essentially sold out so there might have been a closer knit atmosphere there during/before the war when he was a child.

      @shouldbewritig@shouldbewritig4 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, if she was gonna set a snake trap you’d think she’d use a venomous one. In the book it was even more clearly a coincidence, since Snow just finds a scrap of the scarf on a bush, and when he reaches for it a snake jumps out at him from the bush.

      @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
    • you are wrong. go back and scrub through it :)

      @XmunkeypieX@XmunkeypieX4 ай бұрын
    • @@JNDReacts I feel like I should have said he assumed she set a snake trap in that movie. I feel the movie leaves it more ambiguous and in the book he's just completely losing his mind at this perceived betrayal that didn't happen.

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
  • Lucky flicker man was a hero in this. He added a level of humour that was perfectly distracting and impossible not to laugh at when you’re watching people slaughter each other and you as a viewer laughing realise how easy it is to dehumanise and compartmentalise the game. Underrated impact and truely brilliant performance

    @paigetaylor704@paigetaylor7044 ай бұрын
  • How is it that I got home from the theater seeing this movie only to see this. If I had a nickel for every time Amanda put out a video about a movie WHILE I WAS SEEING IT, I'd have two nickels, which isn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened twice (the first time was Black Widow).

    @spongecakes1986@spongecakes19864 ай бұрын
  • I had a hard time seeing how Snow went from the guy at the end of this movie to the dictator he becomes, maybe I'll have to check out the book

    @sarahellis6703@sarahellis67034 ай бұрын
    • That was my biggest issue with the movie and I think the book adds SO much just from being in his head and knowing he's already so much in that mindset

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • I think showing Lucy catching on was enough of a reminder that this isn't a love story and he's not a good person but the film could have ended on the next hunger games and him being heinous and I wouldn't have minded

      @nailinthefashion@nailinthefashion4 ай бұрын
    • It's hard to get a young actor to make us believe that one day he'll be Donald Sutherland.

      @katherinealvarez9216@katherinealvarez92164 ай бұрын
    • I imagined a lot of people felt that way when I left the theatre, I also read the book and feel some parts were so confusing for people who hadn’t read it

      @money1137@money11374 ай бұрын
    • He didn't change at all, that's the thing. The movie just can't explain it properly. His desperation to be on top, to not be thought down on, and to he successful. Like it's all consuming in the book, even if he is thinking of Lucy gray, a part of his narrative always centers around how she can help him.

      @eroe2742@eroe27424 ай бұрын
  • It really made me mad that district 12's mayor deliberately sent Lucy Gray to her death because his daughter was jealous of her. What a horrible family! I wasn't upset at all about Mayfair's death. At least the Capitol did one thing right in the following Hunger Games by sending reps to select the tributes.

    @petrosinella@petrosinella4 ай бұрын
  • I lowkey expected to hear the magic phrase more "Snow Lands on Top"

    @phoebelam5761@phoebelam57614 ай бұрын
  • 17:07 I’m glad a fellow queer woman is finally reviewing this story so I can share my current crack!ship with someone who might appreciate it: Lucy Gray and Tigris. A while back I was on the Hunger Games subreddit and came across a comment that pointed out how everything kind that Coriolanus did for Lucy Gray came from Tigris’s suggestions. Granted it’s not much to go on, it’s really just Tigris being sympathetic towards the districts and both her and Lucy Gray wanting to believe people are inherently good, hence why I called it a crack!ship.

    @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
    • I can see that! I love the fic communities

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • @@AmandaTheJedi Alas, there doesn’t seem to be any fanfic shipping these two (yet)!

      @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
  • They should release the extended edition. It’s 3 hours and 37 minutes long - someone on Twitter has watched it, the tweet blew up so I’m sure many people know who it is but I’m not going to say their user because they’ve already faced harassment from people. They got to watch the extended because they have a friend in the film industry who is a screener, it is currently not out to the public. Here are some things that were in the extended: 1) Snow and Lucy gray kiss before going into the games (probably in the arena) - they also kiss at the lake (in and out of it) the one in the meadow which was in the theatrical is also there so that means they cut out a few of their kisses. 2) The forest scene is much longer, he spends a lot longer hunting for her. They cut it down in the theatrical. He said it goes on for quite a long time. 3) There is more sejanus and Coriolanus scenes in general. We see them training together briefly I believe. Although not for long according to the guy who has watched it. 4) None of the songs sung by Lucy gray are cut down they’re all full length. 5) There is a scene between Coriolanus and the parents of Sejanus. They interact. - Unfortunately no more Clemensia, I was hoping in the extended she might have more scenes since she became Dr Gauls experiment but they just cut that all out which is disappointing. She doesn’t appear again like in the theatrical. There’s probably more, but the guy can’t rewatch it again and he said he hasn’t seen the theatrical. if there was more information I would include more but this is all that I know for now. He also said that it’s fully edited every single scene is rendered and finished so I’m really hoping Lionsgate will release it.

    @retrocinemass@retrocinemass4 ай бұрын
  • "We are just missing so much from not being inside Coriolanus' head" is NOT the phrase i expected to hear - but you (and Collins to begin with) won me over, honestly.

    @anomaliecosmos@anomaliecosmos4 ай бұрын
  • I just want to see how Tigris became a Tigress.

    @EmeraldRich@EmeraldRich4 ай бұрын
  • I literally just finished watching it The odds were indeed in my favour

    @fofosyrie3798@fofosyrie37984 ай бұрын
    • Same here!!

      @abbeymoulton3345@abbeymoulton33454 ай бұрын
    • @@abbeymoulton3345 I like watching a review after the movie to see what I missed while everything is still fresh in my brain

      @fofosyrie3798@fofosyrie37984 ай бұрын
  • overall with book adaptations I think film makers struggle to find a way to show the lead's inner thoughts. And in a story that's character driven it's quite vital, hence why in a movie adaptation it feels like something is missing. With that being said, the movie was still entertaining despite being very rushed. I still highly recommend the book though

    @nyxldx@nyxldx4 ай бұрын
    • Yes

      @katherinealvarez9216@katherinealvarez92164 ай бұрын
  • My favorite thing about this prequel, both the book and the movie, is getting more world-building and lore for this series. And while some people don’t like the Maude Ivory theory, I personally love it! I love how it would explain all of the things that Katniss’s father knew, which was instrumental in her surviving both games. And how no one else in 12 seemed to know about the cabin and the lake.

    @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
  • I heard a theory that Dr Gaul set the bombs in the arena to both make it more interesting and rile the capitol up in support of the games. OR highbottom did it in an attempt to stop the games And I think both of those make more sense than rebels actually getting into the capitol again, especially with how easily Marcus was found it feels unlikely they got in and managed to plant a bomb that coincidentally went off when capitol kids were in there. I don’t know if there’s enough text evidence to support it, esp since it’s claimed to be rebels anyway, but I like that explanation more 😅

    @lauramichelle6976@lauramichelle69764 ай бұрын
    • Ohhh Dr Gaul would make a lot of sense! She was a very big fan of killing every single tribute with her snakes after all to leave no survivors and punish the districts, maybe the show runners would have been in on that and that's why it took so long for Lucy Gray to be declared the winner!

      @Azayth103@Azayth1034 ай бұрын
    • just read the book and to me it’s was pretty obvious that it’s the capitol that set the bombs. like glaringly obvious, i didn’t realise there was any doubt that it was them😂. it’s clear that sejanus was allowed to sneak into the arena to bury marcus’ body

      @jamiemorgan6490@jamiemorgan64903 ай бұрын
  • They could have had him use a journal that the audience could have experienced his “ head voice”

    @jasminewilliams1673@jasminewilliams16734 ай бұрын
  • Honestly, after reading the book, I was glad that Snow got torn apart by the mob

    @katherinealvarez9216@katherinealvarez92164 ай бұрын
  • The way they shot the Lucy/Snow sceen where she "betrays" him was not clear at all. My whole family was confused because none of us read the book. We were like, what just happened? This was such a great video to explain that. Thank you.

    @eccentricbooknerd@eccentricbooknerd4 ай бұрын
  • Actually, in the end, the book and movie are unclear on if Lucy really set a snake trap, or if Corio just found a random snake, got bit, and assumed. The turn is just as wild in the book though, I went back a few times trying to figure out his thought process. I liked that the movie played her as possibly a threat, in the book that feels like pure delusion, but it's more dramatic this way. I never felt like she betrayed him, so much as she figured it out quick and got out of danger, as she'd been doing all book long. The tragedy is that if he'd just gone with her and chosen love, all that history might have been different. So I think it's very impprtant that she bears no actual blame for his evil turn. Also The Hanging Tree (that Katniss knows) was about the events earlier when he arrives in 12. We see the actual hanging but don't know its importance until later.

    @fusionspace175@fusionspace1754 ай бұрын
    • His disdain of nature and a simple life made it clear that he wouldn't have lasted though. And not even their love would have prevented him from either bailing on her or things going haywire.

      @z2yn@z2yn4 ай бұрын
  • I read about a 1/4 of the book before seeing the movie and I have to say I enjoyed the parts of the movie I hadn’t read more than the ones I had. I was mostly disappointed with how much of before the games they removed, like when they have Brandy’s dead body hanging above the tributes at Arachne’s funeral. That was hard to read in the books, seeing it in the movie i think would’ve helped further the narrative about how harsh the Capitol was to the districts.

    @crystalpritchard5065@crystalpritchard50654 ай бұрын
    • YES, I was anticipating that scene so much it was a little disappointed they didn't add it. Also how they made Clemencia less of a friend to Snow and didn't show what the snake bites caused and how Lucy weaponized them

      @Aurem15@Aurem154 ай бұрын
    • @@Aurem15 I also can’t decide if Gaul was more menacing in the book for not telling Clemensia that the snakes would bite her until after her hand was already in the container, or in the movie when she told her beforehand and almost dared Clemensia to still retrieve the page.

      @crystalpritchard5065@crystalpritchard50654 ай бұрын
  • idk why or if this is right but I vividly remember a line in Catching Fire about there being a previous female champion from district 12 who died only a few years previously? during the explanation for why Katniss was going to the 75th games no matter what? it's implied the previous champ was from the somewhere around the 10th games and lived to an old age so... I'm just going to choose to believe that was Lucy. She lived :3

    @MrBonsaiBones@MrBonsaiBones4 ай бұрын
    • I fact checked and Katniss just says there's three existing Victors, Two Men, One Female (herself). So it's just implied that the previous victor passed. They do mention there being a second winner in the first book but never specify, just say that Hamich is the only one still alive. I assume Lucy Gray never made her way back to District 12

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • @@AmandaTheJediI recently listened to the audiobooks read by Tatiana Maslaney (highly recommend) and in the first chapter of the first book Katniss thinks about how District 12 has only had two victors, and only one, Haymitch, was still alive. But there’s never any indication that she knows anything more about the other victor, which I think makes sense considering Gaul had that season destroyed, and how most people in 12 didn’t even watch the 10th games because their TVs barely worked and it wasn’t mandatory viewing back then. Also the victors weren’t treated like celebrities, they were just sent back to their regular lives.

      @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
    • That victor most likely was not Lucy Gray because all mention of her was scrubbed from history as well

      @camelliaharpdarkthrope6462@camelliaharpdarkthrope64624 ай бұрын
    • @@camelliaharpdarkthrope6462 There could still be stories in 12 that they had a winner before Haymitch. Like the few people who knew that Lucy Gray had won would talk about it when the games started becoming more of a spectacle (and when the winning district started receiving more food, like “hey, we never got that when our district had a winner”). I think what most likely happened is that when Suzanne Collins sat down to write the prequel she remembered that she’d briefly mentioned a previous District 12 winner who wasn’t Haymitch, and whom she had given no other detail about, so she could do whatever she wanted with that character.

      @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
  • i have to disagree about the end. i think it was done brilliantly, and i immediately could tell just by the emotions and few questions that she realised he killed his friend, and he knew she knew, and she knew if she stayed, she'd soon be dead too. i have never read the book. i think tiktok and social media has done a lot of damage in regard to subtle story telling, or having to think about a potentially open ended piece of media.

    @shadycatz85@shadycatz854 ай бұрын
    • right!

      @y3y364@y3y3644 ай бұрын
    • I saw the movie and thought it was great--then I read the book and now, I do wish they'd done his character a bit more justice. It's still a good movie imo, but I see what others are disappointed by; his manipulative, possessive, single-minded nature is much more pronounced in the book. In the movie, he's just a bit softer, more sympathetic. I think it's still a good adaptation, but I wish they'd shown his claws more in the ending, which I think definitely did miss the impact and point of what we got from the book. I

      @grasshopperye3593@grasshopperye35934 ай бұрын
    • Read the book - and to be fair, I was fine with it. I see the books similar to the HP ones as their own versions. What I loved in the movie was that part with the Hanging Tree, when they played the recording. Sejanus could have thought that someone eavesdropped on their convo and was scared for Coriolanus - but he'd been to careful for that. So he knew that second that somehow, without him realizing, his supposed brother and best friend had betrayed him. It was so brutal.

      @z2yn@z2yn4 ай бұрын
  • I saw the movie before reading the book, which I think is actually the way to do it, because I loved the movie and then I read the book and loved that even more! Though there are some aspects from the movie that I liked better, such as Tigris’s final line, and the fact that we got to see what Lucy Gray was up to throughout the games.

    @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
    • I read the book first and finished it a few days before watching and agree. It actually ruined the movie for me because I just kept comparing notes the entire time

      @money1137@money11374 ай бұрын
  • If he was about 18 in the tenth game, in the original story which is in the 70s, isn't Snow about 80 years old? Man looks good for crippling old age

    @TheGreyKami@TheGreyKami4 ай бұрын
    • yeah shoulda been around 82 in the first movie apparently. Sutherland would have been in his mid 70s when filming I believe

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • 80 is so not crippling old age (unless you're in the districts. . .. ) plenty of people look really good and function really well into their 80s and even 90s. Harrison Ford, Ian McShane, Patrick Stewart, all in their 80s. james earl Jones is 92 and still looks fantastic. There are absolutely people who don't age well and look like they have one foot in the grave in their 50s, but these days being in your 80s is barely an inconvenience for a lot of people.

      @clownsoftheearth@clownsoftheearth4 ай бұрын
    • It also happens in the future, where the wealthiest have top notch medical aid, they probably physically get old slower

      @Boxofcare666@Boxofcare6664 ай бұрын
    • To add on to what other people have already said: In the OG trilogy, it's also implied that Snow has had cosmetic surgery.

      @laffyraffy407@laffyraffy4074 ай бұрын
  • Can you imagine Snow watching the rebel broadcast of Katniss singing The Hanging Tree? How he'd instantly be transported back to that moment in the woods - that moment of perceived betrayal? I can just see the loathing look of hatred on Donald Sutherland's face. If looks could kill...

    @oblivious93massacre@oblivious93massacre4 ай бұрын
  • Something I like about the book is how fast you get that he's a control freak. And you can see his desire and need for control only growing, to the point where even nature is disgusting in his eyes.

    @colorfulcaro@colorfulcaro4 ай бұрын
  • I’m not a hunger games connoisseur, but have seen all films , this felt like 2 frickin movies , thank you for that validation. I watched it bootleg alone tbh ,and I remember pausing it near what I thought was the end , and it was the half way mark ? I was shook

    @baby.nay.@baby.nay.4 ай бұрын
  • Gotta appreciate them doing a throwback to the Era of YA adaptations. Hopefully the Children of Blood and Bones movie will have the kind of legs this movie had.

    @Advent3546@Advent35464 ай бұрын
  • I think the biggest arguments for it being 2 movies/limited run series is that the movies completely overlooked Clemnsia and The Plinth parents relationship with Coryo. Plus of course Tigris. Though my biggest question is could they have done narration well? In what way?

    @JC_Cali@JC_Cali4 ай бұрын
  • Wish the book had done chapters from his point of view and chapters from hers because we never see how much she truly feels and how much is manipulation to survive.

    @shrikeofterven6006@shrikeofterven60064 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I get the impression that her performances extend to performing to people around her at times. Not in the same way as Coryo, but I think they have more similarities than people think, though Tigris does suggest that, but definitely meant it in a different way

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
  • I think that lucy gray looking like she was going to betray him in the final moment was one time that we really saw through snow's eyes. His paranoia made him think she was going to tell.

    @lindsey3600@lindsey36004 ай бұрын
  • I keep thinking of Hadestown’ song “Now That the Chips are Down” (that literally starts with Songbird Vs Rattlesnake) And how the Fates’ advise seems to mirror Snow’s assumptions and paranoia And that I’m pretty sure was from before the prequel was written

    @ForgottenCharacter@ForgottenCharacter4 ай бұрын
  • Maybe it was because I read the book right before seeing the movie, but I never felt the movie romanticized Snow. He is jealous and possessive of Lucy in the movie and spends the first half of the film mocking Sejanus. Also, we don’t see the same personality traits in Tigris because she KEPT so much of their suffering from him. She absolutely did resort to sex work during the war to fend for their family (and remember, she would have been 10 years old when the war ENDED). She is still working diligently during Game 10 to help Coriolanus - their family’s “future” (why isn’t she when she’s the older one and clearly on a path to becoming a Capitol designer) - maintain his appearance. It was their grandmother that made the deal that kept them fed throughout the war and Tigris was bringing in income from selling herself. And he didn’t know about any of it until years later, when his entitled personality was already formed. I have a LOT of Tigris feelings. One thing they avoided entirely in the movie is that Coriolanus recalls SA-Ing a girl in the Capitol, while goaded on by a classmate. It’s just a brief mention and he thinks of it as a “romance” but Collins clearly meant it to be assault.

    @MeredithHagan@MeredithHagan4 ай бұрын
  • I love the new cannon that Caesar Flickerman is a nepo baby 😂

    @Sarurah@Sarurah4 ай бұрын
  • Should have been a series. So much more room to deep dive on lore and side characters and just storytelling in general.

    @daniellewillis2767@daniellewillis27674 ай бұрын
  • Love this analysis! My friend was talking about the sweet innocent young Snow who became evil after he was betrayed by Lucy. I was like what are you talking about???

    @petiteange08@petiteange083 ай бұрын
  • Idk about anyone else but while many two parters feel like a cash grab, this one I think it would’ve made sense. The book splits the story into 3 major sections so splitting it up to take more time, especially at the first half of the movie, would’ve felt right.

    @shouldbewritig@shouldbewritig4 ай бұрын
    • I think a limited series would’ve been better, tbh.

      @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
    • Yeah. That and let’s be honest, no one really gives a crap about the District 12 part to just see that as it’s own movie. All the actual cool and intriguing stuff is just in the first 2 parts.

      @tatehildyard5332@tatehildyard53324 ай бұрын
  • I watched it without having watched the other movies. I think I empathized with Snow in regards to how fear and the trauma of poverty can lead people to do things that are morally grey and even bad at times. I felt his friend was a great juxtaposition in that his wealth and proximity to power shielded him so he was better able to try to do the morally correct thing (even if he was naive about it). I personally hated his friends ending but I do think it was realistic and made it more impactful. I also saw his relationship with Lucy Gray as offering an opening in him to grow and allow himself to care about something outside of escaping his life circumstances; however, whenever he starts thinking about bringing her to district two it was clear he hadn’t grown much of at all. It seemed pretty clear that the idea that she would want to follow was silly and indicative that he didn’t really see her as a full person outside of how she made him feel.

    @ericaa.1934@ericaa.19344 ай бұрын
    • You haven’t seen any of the movies? Didn’t read the book either, I assume? Your interpretation is very useful to show how this movie looks from a fresh perspective. Would you tell how much of the Hunger Games did you know before watching this movie?

      @LilacSreya@LilacSreyaАй бұрын
  • I greatly enjoyed the movie, but I never thought heartbreak is what turned him into the President Snow as we knew him in The Hunger Games series. In the movie, he never ever sympathized with the tributes or ever thought the concept of The Hunger Games was wrong. He fell for Lucy, in spite of his innate horribleness. He was always headed down that path, and once he realized he wanted Lucy Gray, he was hoping to change her to his side. Even when in District 12 he wasn’t shocked or surprised by the treatment of the people. He just noticed that the peacekeeper food was better and he wanted to go back to The Capitol. Even though he cried over Sejanus, he very quickly rationalized it. Due to your review, I now want to see the movie again and you convinced me to read the book. I think the reaction to a 2 part film would be pretty negative. I was fine with a really long film. While I would have gone to a part 2, I don’t think most people would. If the book was release in 2 parts, then a 2 part movie would have some credibility I think.

    @LadyScaper@LadyScaper4 ай бұрын
  • I absolutely love when you do movie reviews based off books! You have a great way of merging the two together while being funny with your commentary. I was honestly super confused when I watched the movie but now feel like I have a better grasp on everything. Thank you!

    @roxann6561@roxann65614 ай бұрын
  • I recently had The Hanging Tree stuck in my head for two whole business days

    @grizzlygoldman@grizzlygoldman4 ай бұрын
    • my life for the past week my family is getting uncomfortable

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
    • Oh it’s a vibe, my coworkers actively requested I stop singing it out loud

      @grizzlygoldman@grizzlygoldman4 ай бұрын
    • It was apparently a “massive bummer” like ok losers sure

      @grizzlygoldman@grizzlygoldman4 ай бұрын
    • @@grizzlygoldmanI’m sure if my pets understood the words they’d be very concerned, since I’ve been singing verses at random for over a month now.

      @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@JNDReactsplot twist they do and they are and they’re planning a barked/meowed/bird soundsed intervention (idk what pets you have)

      @grizzlygoldman@grizzlygoldman4 ай бұрын
  • That makes this movie so much more clear! I love how you put together some of the loose ends that were left out of the book.

    @notyournormalg1@notyournormalg14 ай бұрын
  • Seeing the perception of this movie shift in real time is so fascinating...I do remember when the movie first came out, I was one of the few people on twitter pointing out that the actor was way to teen idol looking to be acceptable as a villain. Those who hadn't read the novel seemed all too disappointed when Snow turned presuming he switched out of nowhere 😂. I also believe some people thought they were watching a love story lmao. But people seem to be coming to my side now so I'm gonna zag again, and ask: isn't that the point? There's a reason why a lot of religious iconography show the devil or Lucifer as attractive and not 'ugly'. I do accept the 3rd act was rushed though and more focus should've probably been given to the breakdown in coryo's mental state during his peacekeeping years. Alas. I do hear there might be a 4 hr cut though so in the end, we might see it one day.

    @LB-xz9ub@LB-xz9ub4 ай бұрын
    • I appreciate that the actor is hot, because it gets across the novel's premise that all the Snows have left is appearance. They have nothing of value left but what they can scrounge up through guile, luck and a remembered past glory.

      @mizknack5082@mizknack50824 ай бұрын
  • So did Snow start "selling" the Victor's (Finnick mentions it) after he saw the pain and humiliation Tigris endured?

    @Sate12@Sate124 ай бұрын
  • This made me pick up the kindle copy and i find it beyond hilarious that Coryo's father's middle name is Xanthos - greek, meaning golden, fair or yellow. His name is (and i cannot put enough stress on how much i adore the wordplay) CRASSUS YELLOW SNOW. Good job the Price family didn't get to his corpse huh

    @Tucker12456@Tucker124564 ай бұрын
    • I don’t get it. “Crassus Yellow Snow” what do you mean?

      @LilacSreya@LilacSreyaАй бұрын
    • @@LilacSreya Crassus just sounds like crass. Yellow snow... well, we know what not to do with that

      @Tucker12456@Tucker12456Ай бұрын
  • I would have digged the movies to be in 'You' Style, you know hearing the inner Monologe of Snow - that would have showed how messed up he is perfectly and totally fits the vibe😂

    @julianego.639@julianego.6394 ай бұрын
  • Thanks so much for this review. We didn't read the book before the movie and my and husband I had a disagreement about whether Lucy Grey's betrayal was the main reason Cori takes the path he does. I thought not but the quote about the things you love the most at the end seems to try and tell you it is all about Lucy Grey and not all the rest of the social circumstance +his natural outlook on life

    @Drieleven@Drieleven4 ай бұрын
  • Does anyone else hear Sejanus as Sir Janus Every single time she says it, it's all I hear

    @irelandmattocks@irelandmattocks4 ай бұрын
  • I think this has finally convinced me to actually read this book. I was just worried the book was gunna justify Snow and force us to feel bad for him

    @killermermaids18@killermermaids184 ай бұрын
    • Nope, the book actually lulls you into rooting for Snow momentarily, only for Snow's (internal) jealous narcissism to slap you out of it again and again.... and again. And it absolutely does not get tiring or repetitive. It is..... insidious just how clearly it's written out within the subtext that Snow was always gonna become the tyrant we knew from the Hunger Games trilogy

      @ghinanaeem5723@ghinanaeem57234 ай бұрын
    • I tend to empathize with just about every protagonist in a book. This was one of few that I couldn’t find any positive feelings for lol. His inner thoughts really highlight just how despicable of a person he is.

      @TassieM12@TassieM124 ай бұрын
    • ​@@TassieM12I had some empathy when they were starving, but his sense of entitlement does dampen that

      @barbara832001@barbara8320014 ай бұрын
    • That's what I loved about the book. He's a cold and uncaring guy, and he keeps on getting so close to being a better person and then he chooses to swerve away every single time because he refuses to live in a world where Snow doesn't land on top. He will not consider anyone as an equal to his family and ultimately himself.

      @mizknack5082@mizknack50824 ай бұрын
    • I’m sorry, I just don’t understand this weird moralism thing people have with fictional characters. Is reading with a critical lens and taking anything at any level other than face value just not a thing?

      @tatehildyard5332@tatehildyard53324 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for this video. You're a lifesaver. I just finished the novel.

    @FinestWinterCold@FinestWinterCold4 ай бұрын
  • Now that you called him Corio (is he called that in the book/movie?), I keep thinking of his name as choreography

    @lindseystein9676@lindseystein96764 ай бұрын
    • Aha yeah they call him Coryo a lot in the book if it’s someone close to him

      @AmandaTheJedi@AmandaTheJedi4 ай бұрын
  • 8:59 Huh, now there’s an idea I hadn’t considered but that would absolutely be in line with the Capitol. Well, I suppose Coriolanus can ask Crassus about it in hell.

    @JNDReacts@JNDReacts4 ай бұрын
  • Great video, as always! Your point about the truth behind his father's death was fascinating. I also liked how you touched on Corio's faux-adoption by the Plinths in the books, it was so much more insidious. I'd love to hear your thoughts on them dropping certain things, like the snakebite effects on Clemensia.

    @reagansmith9509@reagansmith95094 ай бұрын
  • I alwayss love to hear your ramblings and reflexions on books. It makes my day every time.

    @ultra-bloodbath4004@ultra-bloodbath40044 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much for making this video Amanda. I didn't read the book before watching the movie and i was so confused. This cleared up a lot of things for me!

    @nicolelussier6455@nicolelussier64554 ай бұрын
  • Great video!! Honestly this was a prequel I did not think I would be interested in and ended up entranced. The casting was amazing and the story answered alot of questions I had!!

    @filmfangirls9163@filmfangirls91634 ай бұрын
  • “It makes sense that everything in the capitol is legacy.” I saw it more as a subtler (in this case) element of dystopia, where everyone has a prescribed role.

    @dreamtheory5658@dreamtheory56584 ай бұрын
  • Her commentary skills never cease to amaze me. I absolutely adore Amanda’s videos!!

    @directedbylola@directedbylola4 ай бұрын
  • ahh thank you you’re the first person i’ve seen to comment on how jarring that first scene was and how much better it would have worked as a flashback or- imo, tho this would be a change, in a conversation which lets us get clues into what that memory continued to do to him even as a young adult. i think if they’re going to adapt a 1st person narrative of such a two-faced character, they have to make creative changes and additions to regain the context lost.

    @beezyqueen@beezyqueen4 ай бұрын
  • Great video Amanda! Happy New Year ☺

    @stellad7018@stellad70184 ай бұрын
  • Love a long Amanda video!

    @HydiestFaith@HydiestFaith4 ай бұрын
  • Seeing the Tom Blythe thirst makes me feel like he’d be great live action Astarion if that were ever a project to get off the ground(please god don’t ever let it).

    @songbird6414@songbird64144 ай бұрын
    • I'll have to check the movie after reading your comment, but from the trailers alone, I don't see it. Maybe because Neil's just too amazing as Astarion

      @lucianacarvalho3136@lucianacarvalho31364 ай бұрын
  • I was hoping you did this one! Can’t wait to watch. I also don’t think we really needed this story and felt that way after I finished reading the book and watching the movie lmao

    @money1137@money11374 ай бұрын
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