In a move that will shock no one, Lionsgate announced today that they will release the third book in the Hunger Games trilogy in two-parts. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1 will be released on November 21, 2014 and Mockingjay Part 2 will arrive on November 20, 2015. With the first sequel, Catching Fire getting ready to start shooting this fall and set for release on November 22, 2013, it means that for the next three years we will get a new Hunger Games movie just in time for Thanksgiving. Hmm, I wonder if Lionsgate’s decision to make Novemeber the release date for all of the sequels has anything to do with cornucopias and Thanksgiving? I’ll let you ponder that one.

As for Hollywood’s new trend of splitting the final book in a series into two-parts (Harry Potter and Twilight and now Hunger Games) I’m not sure if I like it or not. Is it studios wanting to do the books justice or is just a cash-grab? I’d like to think it’s the studios trying to do the books and fans the justice they need/want/deserve, but I’m inclined to think of it as just another way for Hollywood to get fans to fork up more money. I guess as long as the two-part trend keeps making studios money and fans keep enjoying the final movies then we should just get used to it.

Hunger Games and Thanksgiving go hand in hand…because people are hungry! Get it?!

Update: Well we reported this almost a month ago and now it’s official. Variety is reporting that Lionsgate officially announced today that Phillip Seymour Hoffman is indeed joining the cast of The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. Thanks for reporting that Variety but we pretty much knew that a month ago!

Earlier today Variety’s Jeff Sneider tweeted  that Phillip Seymour Hoffman has been offered a role in the highly anticipated sequel to ‘The Hunger Games’. But what role would he be playing?

According to Wikipedia:

“In the 74th Hunger Games, he is the judge that falls into the punch bowl when Katniss shoots an arrow at the apple in the suckling pig’s mouth. In Catching Fire, he is the new Head Gamemaker following the execution of Seneca Crane. He is later shown to be the leader of the rebellion movement in the Districts, and is the mastermind behind the plan to break the tributes out of the arena in Catching Fire.”

‘The Hunger Games: Catching Fire’ is set to hit theaters November 22, 2013.

Castings news for The Hunger Games: Catching Fire has slowly been rolling in for sometime now (here and here) and now it looks as if we have some more to report. The Playlist is reporting that sources close to the movie have told them that Alice in Wonderland star Mia Wasikowska and  model/actress Zoe Aggeliki are names currently being discussed to play the role of Johanna Mason.

Johanna Mason is tribute from District 7, who is sarcastic and mean-spirited. She was also a previous winner of The Hunger Games.

Mia Wasikowska is most notably known for playing Alice in Tim Burton’s god aweful re-imagining/re-make or whatever the hell it was supposed to be. Zoe Aggeliki is a name I had never heard of until hearing the casting news. She will be seen alongside Ryan Reynolds and Jeff Bridges in R.I.P.D. as well as Percy Jackson: Sea Of Monsters.

Whether or not this “source’s” info proves to be true you can bet that we will find out sooner rather than later. Filming begins this fall with I am Legend director Francis Lawrence is set to direct. Stars Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, and Liam Hemsworth are set to reprise their roles.  The Quarter Quell begins in theaters  November 22, 2013.

 

Mia Wasikowska (top left) and Zoe Aggeliki (bottom right)

With filming set to begin this fall on the much anticipated sequel “The Hunger Games: Catching Fire,” speculation/rumor as to who will play the character of Finnick Odair are running rampant.

Last week saw the rumor that sparkly vampire Robert Pattison at been cast but those proved to be untrue, shocking, I know.

Well, this week we have more casting rumors to report. E! online is claiming that sources at Lionsgate are saying that the list of actors in contention is down to three. And those three actors are…. Armie Hammer, Taylor Kitsch, and Garret Hedlund.

Armie Hammer, most recognizable to audiences as the Winklevoss twins in “The Social Network,” will next be seen alongside Johnny Depp, where he will be playing “The Lone Ranger.” Taylor Kitsch, last seen in the bombs “John Carter” and “Battleship,” could use the work for sure, but his casting seems highly unlikely to me. Garret Hedlund, played the lead role in Disney’s “Tron Legacy” and was last seen in the film adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s “On The Road.”

While the source says the studio has narrowed it down to the three actors, yet another source claims that Lionsgate is also considering casting an unknown in the role. Who knows who will end up in the role, but it’s probably safe to assume that the role will be cast soon.

“The Hunger Games: Catching Fire” begins filming this fall. Stars Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, and Liam Hemsworth are set to reprise their roles. “I am Legend” director Francis Lawrence is slated to direct.  The Quarter Quell begins in 2013.

Who's it gonna be?

 

The sci-fi genre (including science fiction, fantasy, and horror) has a long history of unofficial equal rights advocacy. As far back as the 18th and 19th century, sci-fi stories like Gulliver’s Travels and The Time Machine subtly touched on topics of racial intolerance and class disparity. The 1950s brought us The Twilight Zone, an anthology of morality plays, many of which dealt with racial injustice. In the 1960s, Star Trek repeatedly championed the civil rights movement, airing television’s first multiracial kiss and producing episodes like “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield”, a deft allegory of the consequences of racism. In the late 60s and 70s, George A. Romero put strong black characters in leading roles in his socially conscious zombie films.

A member of the noble race of aliens from "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield", seen here next to one of the dirty, inferior race.

So how is it that after two centuries of progressive, forward-thinking literature, racism has begun to pervade sci-fi? Since the turn of the millennium, there have been a few prominent examples of bald racism in the sci-fi world. These may be isolated incidents, but they do have one glaring common aspect: they were all defended by fans. Rather than a public consensus shaming the offenders into apology, which has become the protocol in these situations (see: Michael Richards), in each of these cases fans mounted a counter-argument denying any existence of racism. These have not been good arguments, but they have, like creation “science”, been enough to muddy the waters for those who don’t want to see the truth.

POD RACE WARS

In 1999, the lifetime of anticipation millions of Star Wars fans had built up waiting for Episode I finally ended. And it ended the way every lifetime does: with death. The pristene sense of wonder and joy that was born out of seeing Star Wars for the first time died that day. And out of its ashes grew a bitter cynicism from which society will not recover until the only ones left are the kids who saw the prequels first, carefree and ignorant without a frame of reference for what should have been.

I believe the children are our future. At least, I used to...

On a laundry list of complaints about The Phantom Menace, the use of racism as a storytelling device certainly takes priority. At least three different alien races in the film, in voice, dress, and manner, are indistinguishable from specific racial stereotypes. The Neimoidians, leaders of the Trade Federation, with their large-sleeved robes, bowing, and thick Asian “r” and “l” switching accents are clear corollaries for the Japanese. Watto, a hairy, big-nosed, money-obsessed junk dealer is an overt Semitic caricature. And then there’s Jar Jar Binks and the Gungans, with their definitive Porgy and Bess accents are obviously stand-ins for native Caribbeans. All of these characters are depictions of racial stereotypes, and all of them are bad. The Trade Federation are in league with the Sith, Watto is an unscrupulous slave owner, and Jar Jar is a rude, lazy fool.

"Meesa ashamed of reinforcing negative racial preconceptions."

Some fans refuse to believe these characters are the product of racism. These fans contend that the alien races are original compilations of traits, and racially sensitive people pick out specific traits they associate with races and extrapolate racism that isn’t there. But it isn’t just one trait; it’s the whole package. There’s a reason the Anti-Defamation League hasn’t ever voiced serious concerns about the anti-Semitic undertones of gold-hoarding dragons. Because that is extrapolating association from a single trait. That’s not what they do. No one came to Star Wars looking for racism. They saw it because it smacked them in the face.

There were several offensive characters in Phantom Menace, but this one wins by a nose.

Another common defense is simply to ask why Lucas would put in racist stereotypes. In other words, these fans are demanding the prosecution show motive. Well, the motive is simple and sad: lazy writing. A thoughtful, creative writer will spend time developing characters, but a lazy writer can import easily recognized stereotypes in place of unique characters. Essentially it’s like stealing a stock character from another work of fiction, only this time the fiction is the magical world that racists live in.

Compare the races of Episode I with those of the Lord of the Rings series. J.R.R. Tolkien practically invented what we think of as elves and dwarves not by recontextualizing pre-existing stereotypes but by creating a world and considering how that world’s history and landscape would affect how societies developed. Each race has a specific set of culturally inherent traits, but even if they share any history with or bear any resemblance to real peoples, they don’t stick out as identical with persistent stereotypes. And Tolkien was part of the tradition of promoting racial unity as Gimli the dwarf found friendship with elf Legolas. Of course their common ground was the hunting and killing of a third race, but hey, Orcs are jerks. Even Dr. King said we could judge people by the content of their character.

The ACLU isn't goin' anywhere near this one.

You don’t even have to leave the Star Wars universe to find an example of well-done race introduction. A New Hope‘s Mos Eisley Cantina is full of many different alien races, all distinct and imaginative variations on basic animal features. Their manner and clothing tell us immediately that these creatures are sentient despite reminding no one in any way of any human race or even the human race.

Scum? Sure. Villainy? You bet. Stereotypes? No.

The “shorthand” of racial stereotypes is unnecessary to convey an individual’s personality or even the cultural identity of a recently introduced alien race; good storytellers are able to give us this information through good writing. Lucas clearly used to be a good storyteller, but he got old, tired, and lazy.

REVENGE OF THE APPALLIN’

About a decade after Episode I, sci-fi race relations suffered a very similar setback with episode 2 of the Transformers franchise. We’ll just call Jazz’s breakdancing in the first Transformers a misguided homage. But he was replaced in the second film by the duo of Mudflap and Skids, robots that used rap slang and sounded “street”- one of them even had a gold tooth (I’m not sure which one- the movie Transformers all look alike to me). Once again, we’re talking about lazy writers using offensive stereotypes in place of original characters, but this goes even further. These obvious black analogues are rude, gross, craven, and even, despite presumably having advanced alien CPUs for brains, illiterate. And even this was not universally acknowledged as racism.

Robo-jangles of Cybertron

The defense here was similar to that of The Phantom Menace. Fans who jumped to the film’s defense said, “They’re not black men, they’re robots! They’re not even black robots! How can it be racist?” But racism is more than meets the eye. It doesn’t have to be a black man to be a depiction of a black man. Amos ‘N’ Andy were two white guys in minstrel makeup. The caricature already exists in our culture and can be depicted via cartoon bird, CG robot, cave etching- it’s still making fun of black people.

Note: THIS is blackface. That Billy Crystal Oscars thing was simply using makeup to enhance an unfunny, outdated impersonation. Completely different thing.

FAN BLACKLASH

So are fans racist? Well, yes and no. Obviously there’s nothing inherently racist in sci-fi to promote extra intolerance, but that doesn’t mean that there aren’t some fans who bring their racism with them. You might think sci-fi’s myriad fables against discrimination would discourage ethnocentrists’ interest, but even in their religions people hear what they want to hear. Sci-fi’s biggest deterrent to racism is its innate intelligence; the often complex rules and sophisticated storylines of new universes tend to naturally repel those of lower intelligence, whom studies have shown are more likely to hold racist beliefs. So sci-fi fandom probably has a slightly lower proportion of racists than the rest of society, but they are there.

Unfortunately, in the Venn diagram of society, the circles of racial intolerance and genre enthusiasm do have some overlap. Two recent examples made me ashamed of my people. The first is the rejection of a black Spider-man. When Sony announced in 2010 that it would reboot the Spidey franchise with a new Peter Parker, a sharp-eyed fan suggested writer/actor Donald Glover for the role. Glover is a smart, funny young actor with a slim, muscular build; he would have been a strong choice for the iconic character. As an excited fan himself, Glover retweeted the idea, causing a flurry of Internet excitement. But not all of the buzz was positive. Hundreds of fans denounced the idea, saying they would never see a movie with a black Spider-man.

Fear of a Black Daily Planet. What? It's Bugle? Crap. That was such a good joke. OK, how about "Parker Brother"?

Some argue that this was not a racially motivated disgust. They argue that die hard fans’ ire is notoriously easy to provoke by adaptations straying from the source material, and that’s a fair point. Fans were also annoyed that John Constantine was played by a brunette American instead of a blond Brit. However, those that tweeted death threats and epithets at Glover were not pre-occupied with comic accuracy, but were clearly a different kind of purist altogether.

The more recent example is also in casting, but this one isn’t merely hypothetical. The Hunger Games movie adaptation broke box office records, but a vocal minority soured the occasion. These readers apparently missed the indication to beloved character Rue’s dark skin in the book and were shocked and disgusted by the decision to cast a young black actress. Naturally, these fans vehemently denied that their outcry was in any way racist. All they said was that they couldn’t see a little black girl as innocent or be upset when a little black girl’s life was in peril, because she’s black. Nothing racist about that.

Where's Kanga, am I right? But no, in all seriousness, this totally made me cry like a baby.

For the most part, I don’t think all that many sci-fi fans out there are racist. The Hunger Games and Spider-man franchises have much larger audiences than most genre works, and a bigger crowd always means a bigger, louder fringe. I don’t even think those who denied the racist elements of Star Wars Episode I and Transformers 2 are themselves racist. I just think they’re in denial. they’re choosing to believe that the things they love so much could not possibly be so flawed. They’re like abused housewives attacking the cops who are trying to protect them. The reality is just too hard to face.

But we have to face it if we are going to move forward. Sweeping this under the rug is not acceptable. The only way we will ever remove racism from sci-fi in specific and society in general is to stop denying that it exists. The first step in recovery is admitting that you have a problem. And right now we do.

Variety is reporting that “I Am Legend” director Francis Lawrence has been offered the directing job for “Catching Fire.” As millions of geeks already know, “Catching Fire” is the second book in “The Hunger Games” trilogy and continues the story of Katniss Everdeen following her victory during ‘The Hunger Games.”

The announcement that Lionsgate has chosen Francis Lawrence comes less than two weeks since “The Hunger Games” director Gary Ross bowed out of directing the sequel which is set to start shooting in late summer for a Nov. 22, 2013 release date. Lawrence’s other films include “I Am Legend,” “Water for Elephants” and “Constantine.” So, geeks, what do you think of Lionsgate’s choice? Will Lawrence do more justice to this source material than he did with “Constantine”? Only time will tell.

The sequel to X-Men: First Class is now officially a go; although director Matthew Vaughn had already been asked to return, and a script was currently being written, nothing concrete was confirmed regarding when/if the new movie would start shooting, at least until now. According to The Hollywood ReporterFox  informed talent agencies Thursday that they plan to begin shooting the sequel to X-Men: First Class in January of 2013. That means Lionsgate could move forward with a Fall  start date for the Hunger Games sequel Catching Fire without a conflict for newly minted star Jennifer Lawrence, who is set to star in both films.

Not much else is known about First Class 2, except that it probably won’t be called First Class 2. If filming is set to begin next January, that means either a Christmas 2013 or Summer 2014 release date. Given that Jennifer Lawrence is now a big star (or at least the “it girl” of the moment) she’ll likely get a bigger part than last time. Rumors have the movie taking place anywhere from the mid 60’s to the 70’s, but right now is little more than fanboy speculation. Personally, I vote for the 70’s…because that increases the chances for an appearance by Dazzler, not to mention killer sideburns for Michael Fassbender’s Magneto.

You might notice a slight delay between the recording and releasing of this episode and you can blame that squarely on Stephen. Regardless, you still get to hear which movies coming out in the next couple of months Heidi and Stephen are looking forward to and looking to avoid in the Brave Nerd World Spring Movie Extravanganza!

Already out…
●John Carter
●21 Jump Street
●The Hunger Games
●Bully

●Mirror Mirror
●Wrath of the Titans
April 4th
●Titanic 3D
April 6th
●Comic Con Episode IV: A Fan’s Hope

April 13th (Friday)
●Cabin in the Woods

●The Three Stooges
April 20th
●The Raven
●The Five Year Engagement
●Pirates! Band of Misfits

May 4th
●Marvel’s The Avengers

May 11th
●Dark Shaddows

●The Dictator
May 18th
●Battleship
●What to Expect When You Are Expecting
May 25th
●Men in Black III

And so The Hunger Games movie adaptation is here at last; did the big-screen version of the best-selling novel by Suzanne Collins live up to all the hype? I’d say that for the most part, it did indeed, but that is not to say that it’s not without its flaws. For those of you not familiar with the plot; Katniss Everdeen is choosen as a Tribute from District 12 to take part in The Hunger Games. The games were created by the Capital as a reminder t0 the 12 Districts of Panem of their failed rebellion years ago. Each of the districts has a “Reaping” (lottory) and picks one male and one female between the ages of 12 and 18 to be “Tributes” (contestants) in the games where they will fight to the death until there is only one left alive.

First, let me start with what did work in the movie. Namely, the cast, it was top-notch and well acted from all involved. Jennifer Lawrence is cast perfectly as main character Katniss Everdeen and has the acting chops to prove it. The rest of the cast is made-up of equally talented actors, including Josh Hutcherson as fellow District 12 Tribute Peeta Mellark, Donald Sutherland as the creepy President Snow, a hilarious Stanley Tucci as the blue-haired host of the Hunger Games Ceasar Flickerman, Elizabeth Banks as Effie Trinket, and Woody Harrelson (who is greatly cast) as Haymicth Abernathy. They all help flesh out the characters, who could have easily been forgotten if performed by less-talented actors. Hell, even Lenny Kravitz gets in on the action as Cinna, Katniss’s stylist and isn’t too shabby of an actor. Making its film debut is the awesomely-weird beard of Seneca Crane played by Wes Bentley, the beard is just great and the world needs more beards such as his… just saying.

Director Gary Ross was a good choice to helm this flick, but is limited with what he is able to convey on the screen. I felt that the ‘was it or wasn’t it made-for-TV’ relationship between Katniss and Peeta, which was a major focus of the book, never quite has the same gravitas and attention that it had in the book and the movie suffers slightly due to that. The scene between the two characters in the cave is a perfect example of this, but despite that scene not working as well as I’d have hoped for there is room for their relationship to be further explored in the sequel ‘Catching Fire‘. The cinematography is nicely handled, despite the problems of the hand-held shot fight scenes which limit the scope of the action at times.

Despite the flaws that The Hunger Games has, it is still a great movie and fans of the book will be able to enjoy it as a companion piece to the book. Newcomers will also enjoy the movie but might miss a thing or two. I will leave you with the words of Effie Trinket, – “Happy Hunger Games, may the odds be ever in your favor!”