Every time I reread the Hunger Games trilogy I become more furious about the movie representation.
These books were about an indigenous woman (with a brain injury in book 3) living in poverty overthrowing a corrupt white government.
She was demisexual, had stomach hair, was not even remotely romantically driven (and canonically didn’t even find romance until after she had finished a revolution.)
And Peeta was disabled and physically abused as a child and they both suffered from mental health problems and the parallel between the Capitol and the ruling rich was so very transparent.
And I’m seeing fun coloured makeup in stores labeled “Capitol colours from the Hunger Games”!
These books were about the revolution of the most oppressed taking over the extravagance and elitism and decadence of the ruling class while citizens starved.
These books were a parallel to our current social dynamics, they were a call to arms. They were a battle cry for the impeding ruin of the rich white ruling class.
And the movies portrayed them as a fantasy, a romance story, a cute little tale. When the real story in the books was one of strength and upheaval and shifting paradigms and revolutions.
And like…… the death of a young Black child sparked the rebellion.
When Katniss thinks about running away in the second book it is the memory of Rue that makes her decide to stay and “cause all kinds of trouble.”
That is an indigenous woman deciding that the death of a Black child is so horrific and unacceptable that she needs to start an entire uprising about it. That is WOC solidarity.
Then again, when Katniss is talking with Peeta about not leaving he literally, canonically and verbally SAYS it’s because of Rue.
The movies did not lend enough weight to the injustice and violence that Black women face; they didn’t waste any time in deciding the rebellion came from their White Katniss’s determination to overthrow the Capitol.
The movies purposely and aggressively erased all of the racial oppression and power and dynamics that were so apparent in the books.
They made Katniss white, they made Gale white, they erased Peeta’s amputation, they seriously diminished the PTSD both of them faced (which was actually one of the more accuract accounts of PTSD I had ever read in the books), they drastically lessened the weight and importance of Rue’s death.
Anyway, fuck the movies. The books are miraculous. Right down to the respect of survival sex workers. Right down to the power imbalances of society being set in the hands of a violent old white man who has surgery to appear younger.
The author said these books was based on her interpretation of kids’ experiences in war torn Vietnam and Iraq. None of these kids were supposed to be white.
I’m SO glad I read these comments, because the movies discoureged me from reading the books. Fuck the movies, I’m so going to read the books now and see the real deal, and not find just another “white teenage romatic novel”
“In the first trilogy, the hardest thing Luke could be told in that moment was that Vader was his father. That turns everything on its head for Luke. It takes away all the easy answers and makes him face the hardest thing—which is that, ‘I no longer have just a bad guy I can hate. Suddenly that thing that I thought was the bad guy is actually a part of me.’ For Rey, I think it’s the exact opposite; if she were told that she’s related to this person, or Luke is her this, or whatever, that’d be the easiest thing she could hear. That’s everything she wants. That would instantly define what her place is in this universe. So, to me, the equivalent of ‘I am your father’ is‘No, you’ve got to stand on your two feet, there are not going to be those easy answers here for you’” —Rian Johnson in the Balance of the Force featurette for TLJ
This is still one of my fav things that Rian said. It makes perfect sense and it’s a very deep and thoughtful explanation of why rey isn’t related to any “big names”, and yet Rian, as usual, has this ability to speak in such clear and simple words, it’s truly amazing and I can’t quite understand how people can’t get it.
An act. He knew about carnal pleasures, observed them, played off them as manipulation. He could have had sex in the time he grew his hair out but I think he was focused on other plans.
So our Daddy Michael could actually be Virgin Daddy Michael all the time we watched the show 🤔
I always imagined him a virgin even post Apocalypse, mainly because I headcanon him a demisexual (also mainly because I am too). He has always wanted/needed emotional connections, be it platonic or romantic, he needs love. That scene when Robo Meade died, he was heartbroken. He runs on love and support of another, even if it is one person.
Everything is an act, not just for everyone, but for himself most of all, because if he doesn’t convince himself that he is above all others, he would continue to believe he is that monster of a boy long ago.
You know what could have been a great ending? Mallory still time traveling to that exact moment but instead of running over a confused and terrified Michael she could have offered him help and could have taken him to the Robichaux’s Academy where Cordelia and all the witches would help him control his impulses and redirect them towards something good. To give us the typical AHS twist where there’s never a happily ever after ending they still could have ended the episode showing Antichrist 2.0. to show that even though Michael was saved from the darkness there will always be evil in this world.