Have you ever heard the game that you need to fight for life? The game is called Hunger Games, from every districts one male and female from the age 12-18, they get picked by draw lots and you can also volunteers for somebody. After you get picked up, you go to the Capitol and fighting for life and everyone is watching you until the one survivor left. On the game, there is going to be 24 tributes from 12 districts, so this is the hunger games and the story will start.…
There are many differences between the movie and the book. First the positive points: This film attaches faces to Scout, Jem, Miss Maudie, and Dill, since no description of their faces is given in the book. Also, the film has some genuinely hilarious moments, particularly the scene where Scout is dressed as a ham and walking through the forest. Another good point is that the acting was superb and a treat to watch. Gregory Peck, who played Atticus, was captivating. The film is cast very well. The novel does not give physical descriptions of Scout, Jem, Miss Maudie, and Dill, but the film characters were believable. The actors look like what we would expect them to look like.…
The Big difference is the idea of rebellion, While later the book of the Hunger Games address the topic of the rebellion in the district, it really doesn’t address the rebellion in the book of the Hunger Games. In the movie: however, outright rebellion is shown in the districts. In the movie the Hunger Games…
There are 7.2 billion people on Earth and no one is the same. Even though babies are born with no knowledge about their surroundings, they learn and adapt to it as they grow up. Their character keeps changing because of the influence from the outside world. Such major influences are social and political issues. Authors and filmmakers are trying to portray the social/political issues that people from a particular country faces to everyone through their films and novels. Poverty and freedom are the most common issues faced by people in almost every country. The film Hunger Games and McLaughlin’s novel Scored best illustrate these…
Through viewing the text All Summer In A Day and the film The Hunger Games, it is evident that both Ray Bradbury and Gary Ross used themes to convey a fictional world that criticises the world we live in. A variety of literary techniques were performed to portray this. Setting can be seen through the fictional worlds that both All Summer In A Day and The Hunger Games have illustrated to the audience. Characterisation is used to emphasise the correlation between the protagonists and the people within the world we live in. Imagery is used in the form of rain, where both author and director have cleverly used to criticise the world we live in. Ray Bradbury and Gary Ross have criticised the world we live in through these literary techniques.…
In my opinion, I agree with the author that The Hunger Games is an acceptable, if not beneficial, book to read for our generation. This is because the book highlights important social, gender, and political issues that are happening in the world right now.…
In Francis Lawrence’s Hunger Games ; Mocking jay part 2; which opened last year for a brief Oscar qualifying run , a group of people whom are split up into 12 districts, each year, every district is forced to randomly choose two tributes-one girl and one boy- to fight in the annual Hunger Games. A fight to the death on live television. The film is mainly concentrated on Jennifer Lawrence, portraying a girl named Katniss Everdeen, who is in many ways audience point of entry.…
If I lived in the world of The Hunger Games, also known as Panem, I wouldn't do very well. But let's not start there.…
The Maze Runner is a book to movie adaption of the James Dashner book that goes by the same title. The movie was first released in Mexico on September 11, 2014 and made its debut in the United States eight days later on the nineteenth. The movie was very different from the book but show some components that were wonderfully used.…
The movie itself is very much different from the book. The story was also changed with some of the plot. The movie and the book are both still following the same story line. Along with the same ending. This is what I have noticed between the movie and the book.…
The Hunger Games, Divergent, and Maze Runner are the most popular teen fantasy post-apocalyptic book series of the last decade. They all also happen to be accurate, albeit extreme, representations of modern-day North Korea. In the beginning of each of these…
Dystopian literature is when the world is focused on making the perfect world. They often have a small percent of people making the perfect race or often known as the “favorites”, and the rest of the population, often a majority of people, are left to survive by themselves, on the bottom of the barrel. In The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins and the movie Gattaca are both dystopian media. In tough times both the rich and poor come together to fight through what the government set out to say wouldn’t happen, in both medias. In both dystopian medias Hunger Games and Gattaca want a perfect world. They are both similar; both types of governments want to disclude the non-perfect race. People from Panam and Gattaca are nice, for example Cinna in Hunger Games and The Doctor in Gattaca; therefore, The Hunger Games and Gattaca are similar dystopian medias.…
“It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent. It is the one that is most adaptable to change.” (Charles Darwin) This quote relates not only to books written in 1954 but also movies in 2012. The book Lord of the Flies by William Golding follows a group of English boys that survived a plane crash, landing on a deserted island. They are fighting for survival, living through many challenges such as hunting for their food, finding shelter, and signaling for help. Lord of the Flies is similar to the movie The Hunger Games, this movie follows Katniss Everdeen who took her sister's place in the Hunger Games. She quickly adapted to the training that followed the reaping of tributes but struggled with being social,…
John Steinbeck presents the less powerful characters as abused, mistreated outcasts who struggle to fit in with those par their own.…
The two stories 1984 and The Hunger Games both have characters that show briefly, but affect the actions of the main character. These characters have many similarities and differences, although they are in different stories. An example character that appears briefly in 1984 is Julia. Similarly, in The Hunger Games, an example would be Prim.…