shadowkat: (warrior emma)
[personal profile] shadowkat
Finished watching Catching Fire, which was a whole lot better than both the book and the first film The Hunger Games. It was tighter.

It also reminded me why the other YA dystopian novels don't work for me. They miss the point of Suzanne Collins series. Collins' series focuses on the effect of violence on children and innocence. Her series is in some respects an allegory on the horror of war and violence on society and humanity. Also how a society that gets off on watching violence and lives off of the deaths of others...will eventually collaspe in on itself, until it just repeats the same pattern again and again.

The other YA dystopian series seem to lose track of that - as far as I can tell. Her story is steeped in metaphorical allegory - most of which are about the horror of violence and torture. And it does not end happily. Katniss and Peeta, and all the others are forever damaged by it.

In addition - Collins series parodies the societal obsession with celebrity, while depicting how the celebrity culture lives an absurd life of luxury and excess, while millions starve.
The emptiness of a culture that worships money, fame, and physical beauty...and craves stories of star-crossed lovers, even if they aren't true. To fill that empty pit.

Its those aspects that set Collins novel apart from all the rest. What the others have in common is the fascist society and the political upheaval, and the lone rebel kid who fights against the horde. Or the poor kid who fights against the privileged. What they appear to be lacking is the theme of anti-violence, and the critique of the societal worship of celebrity and fascination with series such as Fear Factor, Survivor, or other reality series - where people are pitted against one another.

Reminds me a little of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and how it distinguished itself from the series and novels that followed. Buffy was about a young woman confronting demons, bullying, authority, and in a way girl-power or equality of gender. The series that follow it, Vampire Diaries, Twilight, Vampire Academy, etc ...seem to lose track of that aspect, and focus on the star-crossed romance or the male vampires. It's why that show stands out.

It's hard to articulate. And it's late, so I'm not sure I did it well. But watching this movie reminded me of why The Hunger Games series interested me, while I have not been able to read any of the others. Mileage probably varies on this.

Date: 2014-03-11 03:39 am (UTC)
liliaeth: (Default)
From: [personal profile] liliaeth
Except that the epilogue is perfect exactly because it shows Harry getting the one thing he's wanted. Not a big love story, or a career, but a family.
And showing the themes of acceptance, of Harry growing up and teaching his son that he wouldn't judge him, regardless of what house he ended up in and that Slytherin was nothing to fear

Date: 2014-03-11 02:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sophist.livejournal.com
I think Harry can still get there, just not without a serious struggle. He, Hermione, Ginny, Neville, and Luna all suffered pretty significantly (as did some others like Andromeda Tonks). Harry may get to that point, but not without a lot of healing. I don't object to the message of the end point so much as the fact that Rowling elided the process of getting there.

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