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Tag: The Hunger Games

  • Maybe don’t spoil that big ‘Hunger Games’ plot point already! | The Mary Sue

    Spoilers are everywhere. I wish they weren’t, and I wish they hadn’t gotten to the point of losing their meaning in the decades since that word was first coined. At this point, spoiler culture has gotten to the point of ruining twists before audiences can even properly experience them: which is now, unfortunately, the case for the forthcoming Hunger Games prequel, Sunrise on the Reaping.

    On Wednesday night, The Hollywood Reporter and other trade publications reported on a major piece of casting surrounding the upcoming movie. I am not going to link to it here, but I can assure you that you’ve probably stumbled on it already, or are going to in the near future. The reactions to said news have ranged wildly: confusion from those who haven’t read Sunrise on the Reaping when it was released earlier this spring, and frustration from those who have already read it.

    The casting in question concerns something towards the end of the book (and, presumably, the movie). It’s something that people probably could have guessed, and something that book readers have expected to be a foregone conclusion at this point. But the fact of the matter remains: it didn’t need to be reported on on such a wide scale already.

    Why?!

    Sunrise on the Reaping, for those who have yet to be familiar, follows the story of a young Haymitch Abernathy (Joseph Zada), set decades prior to Woody Harrelson’s beloved portrayal of him in the main Hunger Games movies. As someone who voraciously read the book in the first days after it was released, one of the biggest thrills was getting to discover the younger versions of other characters who weave into Haymitch’s story, and what purpose they already serve.

    A part of me has been hopeful that that experience will be preserved for the wider audience of the Sunrise on the Reaping movie. The rollout of flashy, Internet-breaking casting updates definitely complicated that a little bit… but it was still easy to forget that information and move on with your day. And when the film’s first teaser trailer was released last month, it did a pretty commendable job of showing things and people that book readers might recognize, but general audiences might not yet.

    This particular casting announcement is not one of those instances… and it’s something that a lot of people will probably have in the back of their minds in the year before Sunrise on the Reaping actually releases in theaters. That could not only pivot their enjoyment of the movie to just waiting for these characters to show up, but it could just simply take the fun out of the surprise.

    Sure, an argument can be made that if people really wanted to know, they would have probably finished reading the book by now. An argument can also be made that a good chunk of people might not even see or remember this casting news, at least by next November. But the fact still remains that some of the choice of when and how to learn that information was just taken away from the audience.

    This could end up being the last story told in the Hunger Games franchise, unless author Suzanne Collins decides to use it to go off about the state of the world once again. If one of the saga’s last blockbuster moments gets the wind sucked out of its sails this early… that honestly sucks.

    (featured image: Lionsgate)

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    Jenna Anderson

    Jenna Anderson is the host of the Go Read Some Comics YouTube channel, as well as one of the hosts of the Phase Hero podcast. She has been writing professionally since 2017, but has been loving pop culture (and especially superhero comics) for her entire life. You can usually find her drinking a large iced coffee from Dunkin and talking about comics, female characters, and Taylor Swift at any given opportunity.

    Jenna Anderson

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  • Your First Look At The Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping: The Cast, The Trailer, Exclusive Photos, & More!

    Let the 50th Hunger Games begin! These games are going to be different.

    Enter the latest addition to The Hunger Games series, The Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping. Considering the cast list for the new movie was only announced earlier this year, we were shocked when we woke up this morning to the official teaser trailer for The Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping. However, every moment was perfection. We got chills up and down our spines from just how hauntingly beautiful every frame was. There’s so much to talk about! But first, let’s dive into the cast, the story, and some exclusive photos.

    Image Source: Courtesy of Lionsgate

    The Cast & The Story

    If you haven’t been keeping up with The Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping cast list announcements throughout this year, we’ve got you covered with the full cast list here. Did you know a handful of these actors and actresses were fan-cast? So many iconic names, both experienced and new!

    • Haymitch Abernathy – played by Joseph Zada
    • Maysilee Donner – played by McKenna Grace
    • Effie Trinket – played by Elle Fanning
    • Lenore Dove Baird – played by Whitney Peak
    • Wiress – played by Maya Hawke
    • President Snow – played by Ralph Fiennes
    • Plutarch Heavensbee – played by Jesse Plemons
    • Wyatt Callow – played by Ben Wang
    • Drusilla Sickle – Glenn Close
    • Caesar Flickerman – played by Kieran Culkin 
    • Lou Lou – played by Iona Bell
    • Mr. McCoy – played by Jefferson White
    • Vitus – played by Edvin Ryding
    • Beetee – played by Kelvin Harrison Jr.
    • Magno Stift – played by Billy Porter
    • Louella McCoy – played by Molly McCann
    • Proserpine – played by Iris Apatow
    • Mags – played by Lili Taylor
    • Asterid March – played by Grace Ackray

    If you haven’t read The Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping, we promise not to give away too many details of the story. For our new Hunger Games honeybees – remember Haymitch Abernathy from the first movie? Well, this new film is all about him. That’s all we’ll say for now. Go read the series and catch up on the movies. You have a full year to do so, after all.

    The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping will revisit the world of Panem twenty-four years before the events of The Hunger Games, starting on the morning of the reaping of the Fiftieth Hunger Games, also known as the Second Quarter Quell.

    As stated in a press release about the film

    The Trailer

    The first teaser trailer is absolutely perfect! It runs at just over 2 minutes – way longer than we thought we’d ever get so soon. In this trailer, we’re briefly introduced to a few key characters, including Drusilla Sickle, Haymitch, Lenore, Maysilee, Effie Trinket, President Snow, and Plutarch Heavensbee. There are still so many other characters we haven’t seen yet! And yes, we will be rewatching this trailer all week.

    Exclusive Photos

    The Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping releases on November 20, 2026. That might seem like a long way away (it is), but to keep us fans satisfied until then, we’re locking in on these exclusive photos of our favorite characters. As the months go on and we ring in the new year, we’re hoping a few more photos and a handful of new trailers get released. We have no patience!

    Have you watched the new trailer for The Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping? Which character are you most excited to see more of on the big screen next year? Let us know down in the comments or buzz with us by tweeting @TheHoneyPOP! We are also on FacebookInstagram, and TikTok!

    Find out what other movies we’re buzzing about in the hive!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE HUNGER GAMES: SUNRISE ON THE REAPING:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER

    Alana

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  • Hot Damn, People Watched That ‘Sunrise on the Reaping’ Trailer

    Earlier this week, Lionsgate released the first trailer for Sunrise on the Reaping, the next Hunger Games prequel after 2023’s Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes. In a year of big trailers, this was a pretty big one for the studio, and it’s got the numbers to prove it.

    Deadline reports that within its first day, racked up 109 million views. Compared to trailers for other big movies this year—like Fantastic Four or Toy Story 5—it’s well behind those, but for Lionsgate, it was the second-biggest trailer launch in the studio’s 27-year history. The first-biggest is Michael, which dropped earlier in November and made it to 116 million in the same 24-hour period.

    Based on the Suzanne Collins novel that released earlier in 2025, Sunrise on the Reaping stars Joseph Zada as the young version of Haymitch Abernathy, a winner of the titular bloodsport who eventually grows up to mentor Katniss Everdeen in the main movies. The big novelty of this year’s Hunger Games are that each district has to offer up four child tributes instead of two, resulting in even more bloodshed than usual and Haymitch has to watch more of his friends die. Lionsgate snapped up the book’s movie rights before it was even out and released the trailer a full year before it actually hits theaters, declaring Sunrise its big event movie of the holiday season.

    Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping comes out November 20, 2026, and you can see said trailer on the big screen ahead of Wicked: For Good.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Justin Carter

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  • Josh Hutcherson on Why a ‘Hunger Games’ Return ‘Wouldn’t Take Any Convincing’ and How ‘I Love L.A.’ and ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s 2’ Got Him Out of a Major Slump

    Josh Hutcherson was trying get the hell out of Los Angeles. For the better part of a decade, the “Hunger Games” star and his girlfriend, Spanish actor Claudia Traisac, had split their time between L.A. and Madrid, but the eight-hour time difference between the cities had grown wearying. So Hutcherson leased an apartment in Brooklyn, and in April of this year, the couple flew into New York City from Spain, eager to launch their new East Coast life — until, in the car from JFK, Hutcherson got a call from his agent.

    “‘How do you feel about going back to the airport right now?’” Hutcherson recalls his agent asking. “I was like, ‘I don’t fucking feel good about it, not at all! Why?’”

    The agent explained that Rachel Sennott, the buzzy star of indie hits “Bottoms” and “Shiva Baby,” was launching her first comedy series with HBO, and she wanted Hutcherson to play her character’s boyfriend. But it was going to start shooting in roughly two weeks, and the show’s eventual title doubled as its location: “I Love L.A.”

    It was the phone call that Hutcherson had spent years waiting to get. He’d been acting since he was 9; he’d landed his first starring role at 13, in “Zathura: A Space Adventure”; he had a key supporting role in 2010 best picture nominee “The Kids Are All Right” at 16; and when he was 18, he was catapulted into global superstardom when he was cast as Peeta Mellark in “The Hunger Games.” But as Hutcherson drifted toward 30, the roles started to dry up.

    “I went through a few years where it was kind of slim pickings, and I wasn’t doing much,” he says quietly, swirling his coffee cup outside a bistro in L.A.’s Echo Park neighborhood. “A lot of young actors don’t make the transition, or the industry kicks them out. I was kind of like, is this the time where I’m over it and done?”

    Instead, at 33, Hutcherson is entering a new career peak. On Dec. 5, he’ll star in Blumhouse’s “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2,” adapted from the feverishly popular video game franchise — the first “Freddy’s” movie was an unexpected hit in 2023, grossing $292 million worldwide. And after scrambling to get out of his NYC lease, he did indeed join the cast of “I Love L.A.,” an experience that “reignited such a love and appreciation for this job in me,” he says. “I’ve always wanted to do an HBO comedy on Sunday night. That, to me, is a dream come true.”

    Rachel Sennott and Josh Hutcherson in “I Love L.A.”

    Kenny Laubbacher/HBO

    On “I Love L.A.” — which premiered on Nov. 2, runs through Dec. 21 and was just renewed for a second season — Hutcherson plays Dylan, a schoolteacher who loves his live-in girlfriend Maia (Sennott), despite the chaos that her ambition to become a talent manager brings into his life.

    “I grew up watching him in ‘Bridge to Terabithia’ and ‘The Hunger Games,’ and there’s something about him, how warm and lovely he is,” Sennott told Variety in October. “I was so impressed by his comedic and improv chops. But also, for audiences, I think you see him and you feel like he’s your boyfriend a little.”

    Hutcherson smiles when I tell him Sennott’s reasoning for casting him. “I am known as the good-hearted golden boy, which I’m not mad about,” he says. He has tried to break free of that perception, most recently by playing the toxic tech bro villain in the 2024 Jason Statham action film “The Beekeeper.” But with “I Love L.A.,” Hutcherson says he was “happy to lean into” his Good Guy persona. “If it got me on set and shooting this with Rachel — it’s meant to be.”

    Part of the appeal were the days during the eight-week shoot when Hutcherson literally walked to work. “The first script mentioned Erewhon and Tenants of the Trees and the reservoir,” he says, ticking off landmarks of L.A.’s Eastside. “That’s my circuit. That’s where I’ve been haunting for years.”

    He also felt at home as the only character on the show who isn’t obsessed with breaking into show business. “Even though I’ve been doing this since I was 9, and I’m so wildly in this industry, I don’t feel like I am in so many ways,” he says. “I don’t go to events unless I need to be there. I’m not active on social media unless the studio is like, we need you to be. I’ve always been one foot in, one foot out. When I started, I didn’t have a hunger for becoming famous; I just wanted to make movies and TV shows. I feel like that aligns with Dylan. He just wants to exist and do something he cares about.”

    The chance to play an everyday adult living in the world as it exists in 2025 is rare for any actor right now, and Hutcherson does not take it for granted. “I’ve grown up working with tennis balls and green screens,” he says. “I don’t have to try to convince the audience that we’re, like, X amount of years in the future in a dystopic society or that these animatronics are possessed by ghost children.”

    Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

    He’s referring, of course, to the “Freddy’s” movies, which revolve around a creepy, long-shuttered pizzeria joint à la Chuck E. Cheese and its homicidal robot animal mascots that are embodied by the spirits of murdered kids. The elaborate animatronic costumes created by Jim Henson’s Creature Shop can be worn by the performers only for 30 minutes at a time before the weight and heat become overwhelming. And when they do have the costumes on, there’s no guarantee they’re going to work right.

    “The stunt actor has to turn and look to the right, but then three people with remote controls have to make the eyes time with the blink,” Hutcherson says. “You’ll do 10 takes, because the animatronic movement isn’t quite working. That one take that the animatronic is perfect, you better be perfect too, because that’s the one that’s going in the movie.”

    The sequel, Hutcherson estimates, has “more than double” the creatures from the first film, one of which, the character called Mangle, requires “a team of 10 or 12 people to operate.”

    “And the animatronics might find a way to leave the pizzeria,” he adds, “which is a big deal.”

    But wait, I say, didn’t the titular Freddy exit the pizzeria in the first movie?

    “Yes, but there’s, like, certain rules of the game that —” he says, his voice slowing down and raising in pitch with each successive word. “It’s murky. And I don’t fully get it, but I know it’s a big deal that the animatronics that leave, leave. It’s a whole thing.”

    When Hutcherson signed on to the first “Freddy’s,” he didn’t really grasp the size of the “absolutely rabid fan base” for the mid-2010s video games that inspired the films “until after the movie came out.” But as he talks about shooting the sequel — directed once again by Emma Tammi, and written by the game’s creator, Scott Cawthon — I get the feeling that Hutcherson is still simply along for the ride.

    Josh Hutcherson and director Emma Tammi on the set of “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2”

    Ryan Green / Universal Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection

    “The main focus is making something that the FNAF fandom will go crazy for,” he says, pronouncing the acronym as the fans do: “fuh-naff.” “Sometimes I’m like, ‘This doesn’t make any sense! How can I possibly do this?’ And they’re like, ‘It’s from the game.’” He starts laughing as he puts up his hands in surrender. “‘All right, all right, all right, I’m on board, I’m on board.’ But it’s crazy.”

    Satisfying the exacting expectations of a vocal fanbase is certainly familiar territory for Hutcherson, after spending half a decade with Jennifer Lawrence and Liam Hemsworth inside the “Hunger Games” maelstrom. As his time with that franchise was coming to an end with 2015’s “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2,” Hutcherson says he went through a phase where he wanted absolutely nothing to do with it. “I was like, ‘Fuck that,’” he says matter-of-factly. “I got thrust into a place of notoriety that I never dreamed of, never wanted. It took privacy from me.”

    To this day, Hutcherson avoids crowded public places, including in Madrid, and strangers yelling “Peeta” at him is a daily occurrence. But he’s grown to appreciate everything that “The Hunger Games” has provided him, so much so that his face lights up when I bring up the prospect of making another film with the core team, including director Francis Lawrence and co-star Woody Harrelson. “I would love to be back on set with Francis, with Jen, with Liam, with Woody,” he says. “It would not take any convincing at all. I’d be there in a heartbeat.”

    There’s a chance that could happen sooner than one may expect. Francis Lawrence is in production on an adaptation of Suzanne Collins’ prequel novel “Sunrise on the Reaping,” which chronicles the Hunger Games experience from the perspective of Harrelson’s character Haymitch Abernathy when he was 16 — and ends with an epilogue set after the events of “Mockingjay,” featuring Haymitch, Peeta and series heroine Katniss Everdeen.

    Hutcherson learned of that coda only as the book hit shelves in March. So, I ask, is he in the new movie?

    He breaks into a massive grin. “That would be a dream come true,” he says, holding my gaze.

    I’m not quite sure what you’re trying to communicate to me, I say.

    “It would be a dream come true,” he repeats. “Do dreams come true? Sometimes. Sometimes not. Sometimes, yeah.”

    Selome Hailu contributed to this story.

    Adam B. Vary

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  • 10 Movies and TV Shows Like ‘The Hunger Games’

    10 Movies and TV Shows Like ‘The Hunger Games’

    While fans of The Hunger Games await the new new Hunger Games film from Lionsgate and Suzanne Collins’ forthcoming fifth novel in the saga (titled The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping), there are a myriad of movies and TV shows that volunteer as tribute to fill the void.

    Whether seeking stories about similar dystopian worlds, young protagonists trying to survive amid hardships or action-packed adventures with a little bit of romance à la Katniss, Peeta and Gale, audiences can find satisfaction in films and TV shows that have similarities to The Hunger Games franchise.

    From movies based on best-selling books like Divergent and The Maze Runner to international hit Squid Game, exploring a new kind of deadly arena and a viewing guilty pleasure, The Hunger Games fans may find that the odds are in their favor of finding something that resembles the four-film franchise.

    Below, The Hollywood Reporter takes a look at 10 films and TV shows that offer similarities to The Hunger Games. THR also put together a definitive ranking of the films, including The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes prequel.

    Lexy Perez

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Olivia Rodrigo (‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes’)

    ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Olivia Rodrigo (‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes’)

    Olivia Rodrigo, the guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, is a tremendously gifted singer-songwriter who is, at just 20, arguably the biggest pop star in the world.

    The New York Times has called her “Pop’s brightest new hope,” “a modern and somewhat signature pop star,” “the promising new voice of her generation” and “the most important new pop starlet of the last few years.” USA Today has described her as “a hero among Gen Z listeners.” Rolling Stone has labeled her “One of pop’s biggest, brightest, most fascinating and most brilliant stars,” “an artist with her own voice… who is definitely here to stay” and has “managed to put together a one-of-a-kind catalog already… both of her albums sound like other artists’ greatest-hits collections.”

    With her 2021 breakout single “Driver’s License,” Rodrigo became the youngest artist to debut with a single that hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and two subsequent singles, “Deja Vu” and “Good 4 U,” also went to No. 1, staying there for eight weeks, two weeks and one week, respectively. Both of her first two studio albums, 2021’s Sour and 2023’s Guts, went to No. 1 on the Billboard 200. In 2023, she became just the 16th artist to simultaneously hold the No. 1 spot on Billboard’s three most important charts, the Hot 100, the 200 and the Artist 100.

    She is also a Grammy darling. In 2022, she was nominated for best new artist, album of the year and best pop vocal album for Sour; record of the year, song of the year and best pop solo performance for “Driver’s License”; and best music video for “Good 4 U.” She ultimately won best new artist, best pop vocal for Sour and best pop solo performance for “Driver’s License.” Ahead of the Grammys ceremony that will take place on Feb. 4, 2024, she is nominated for record of the year, song of the year and best pop solo performance for “Vampire”; album of the year and best pop vocal album for Guts; and best rock song for “Ballad of a Homeschooled Girl.”

    Plus, on Jan. 23, 2024, she may also pick up a best original song Oscar nomination, as well, for the first tune that she has ever written for a film, “Can’t Catch Me Now” for The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes.

    Over the course of an interview at the Los Angeles offices of The Hollywood Reporter, Rodrigo reflected on her path to performing, and how acting gigs on Disney Channel TV shows ultimately led to a record deal and “Driver’s License.” She also opened up about what it was like creating and releasing her first album in the middle of a global pandemic and her second in the immediate aftermath of mega-fame; how she approaches songwriting generally; and how writing a song for a movie is different than writing one for herself; plus much more.

    You can listen to the conversation (above) or read a lightly edited version of it (below)!

    * * *

    Olivia, thank you so much for making the time to do this. I really appreciate it.

    Oh, thanks for having me.

    Absolutely. Let’s go back to the very beginning: where were you born and raised, and what did your folks do for a living?

    I was born in Temecula, California, which is about two hours out of L.A. My mom is an elementary school teacher, and my dad is a therapist, so I was very nurtured growing up. My mom was a teacher at the school that I went to, and I was a child actor when I was young. I was very driven and really wanted to succeed in this acting world, so my parents would drive me to L.A. and back three times a week. That was sort of my interesting upbringing, but yeah, my parents are wonderful.

    Your dad is Filipino-American, your mom is white. Was being biracial something that you were conscious of — or that other people made you conscious of — when you were a kid?

    It’s funny, I actually don’t think I was particularly conscious of it until I made my way into the industry. The schools that I grew up going to were always very diverse, and I had a lot of Filipino friends growing up. But yeah, it wasn’t until I sort of started making music and being more front-facing that girls would be like, “Oh, wow, it’s so nice to see Asian representation in music!” And I was like, “Oh, yeah, that’s cool. Yeah, I’m that.”

    Was music a big part of your life growing up? Were your parents into it? What were you listening to?

    Music was a huge part of my life growing up. I can’t ever remember a time when I wasn’t obsessed with it or where I didn’t write songs even. I was writing songs since I was 5 years old. My mom has old home videos of me just babbling. There’s this video that I watched recently where I was writing a song about being lost in the grocery store, which is a very 5-year-old issue to have! And I did musical theater in school and was in the choir. My parents listened to a lot of alternative rock, and I remember falling in love with that when I was maybe 12 or 13, and that’s definitely a big influence on me, as well as just female singer-songwriters. I remember I got a record player for Christmas one year — my grandma gave it to me — and so my mom and I would go to the thrift store, and we’d find little records to put on my record player. One of the records — she was like, “Oh, you’d really love this” — was Tapestry by Carole King. I remember hearing that record, and life just kind of changed after that. So I’ve always really revered female singer-songwriters.

    I think I read that ’90s stuff was particularly big for you — Alanis Morissette and people like that?

    Yeah, Alanis Morissette, No Doubt, The White Stripes, the Smashing Pumpkins, bands like that, I just was so obsessed with in my teenage-hood and still am now.

    I try to read everything that’s out there about my guest before an interview, and I recognize that sometimes things are inaccurate, but I was wondering, is it true that you lost some of your hearing? If so, that makes it even more amazing that you’re so gifted at music…

    Yeah, it’s kind of unusual. I am half-deaf in my left ear. I never knew until kindergarten or so when they’re doing the tests on all the kids, and they were like, “Oh, you’re a little hard of hearing.” It’s interesting. One of my friends is this great photographer, Petra Collins, and she has really bad vision, and so we always joke that I make music because I have bad hearing, and she takes photos because she has bad vision.

    What came first, the desire to make music or the desire to act?

    I always loved music so much. Funny enough, the reason that I got into acting was I had this singing teacher who was really lovely, and I would sing all these songs with such passion and fervor, and my singing teacher was like, “Oh, you should maybe do acting lessons. You really love expressing yourself while you sing.” So, the singing kind of always came first. I was on set when I was 14 or 15, and I just remember being so excited to go home so I could sit at my piano and write songs. It’s always been my first love. I love acting too, for totally different reasons. But yeah, writing music has always been first in my heart.

    In singing, you’re pouring out your own heart. In acting, you’re inhabiting someone else’s heart. With the exception of writing a song for a movie, it’s just a totally different ballgame, right?

    Yeah, it totally is. In some ways, I feel like my experience acting growing up has really helped me in my career now. I mean, for starters, I think when you’re working on a set that young, you really are taught professionalism and work ethic — it’s just ingrained in you — and I’m so grateful for those lessons. And I think it taught me to never be ashamed of feeling big emotions. I’ve never felt like I needed to make myself smaller or censor myself because I just grew up where it was an environment that fostered that sort of emotion. So I think that that sort of helps me be brave in my songwriting maybe.

    I think you do bring a performative element to your singing, putting an additional sugar on top with a little extra snarl or something when you’re singing. I guess the skills bleed into each other.

    Yeah. What’s so funny is my producer, Dan [Nigro], who I made my last two records with, if he’s not getting a vocal take that he really likes, he’ll turn on his camera on his iPhone and film me, and suddenly I’ll do a take that’s super emotional and perfect. I think it’s just, I don’t know, in my bones — the actor girl in me just has to have the camera on.

    I particularly feel that with “Can’t Catch Me Now,” your song from The Hunger Games film — you sing it like someone who’s being mischievous.

    Writing that song for The Hunger Games was such a cool experience. I got to put myself in another character’s position while writing the song, so it is sort of acting — it’s character-work for sure. I write lots of my songs from a very diaristic place, and when you sit down to start an album that’s full of diaristic songs, it’s sort of like the world is your oyster, there’s just so much that you can do, and sometimes it’s a little overwhelming. But having these parameters to work in as an artist are sometimes really inspiring — it’s nice to not have every color on the palette and as big of a canvas as you want. Sometimes it makes your brain work differently to have restrictions. So it was a really awesome experience. I’m lucky that I got to do it.

    In terms of your acting career, it seems like it almost didn’t happen because, from what I was reading, your early auditions were not quite panning out. Did you have a conversation with your parents about potentially stopping?

    Yes. It’s so crazy. It was so long ago. My parents are so not stage parents whatsoever. It was always me being like, “I need to go to these auditions! I really want to book this role!” They were so hands-off and so zero-pressure, which is nice. But I remember one September or something, my mom being like, “Okay, well, we should just try until Christmas, and if nothing happens ’til Christmas, then we’ll do something else and you can just do school. You love school, it’ll be fine.” I was like, “Okay, fine.” And lo and behold, as the story always works, you get something on December 24th or something like that!

    And, for you, that was the lead in an American Girl movie?

    Yeah. I did an American Girl movie when I was 12 years old.

    Only a year later, you got your first Disney Channel show, Bizaardvark, which was a big part of your life from 2016 through 2019. It was for that that your family moved to L.A.?

    Yeah. We took the two-hour drive up and moved here, and I learned guitar actually for the show. My character had to play guitar, so that turned out to be very fruitful as well. It’s a skill I use all the time now. But yeah, that was kind of the start of my working girl era.

    Your parents and you picking up and moving to L.A. — that must have been a big change for all of you, no?

    My parents were really supportive and I thank them to this day for making that sacrifice for me. But yeah, I mean, everything changed then, even beyond moving to a new place. I got out of school and started being homeschooled and just spent my time around a lot of people that were a lot older than me all the time, and that certainly affected me in my life. And I think it made me feel comfortable being alone, and I think that probably was good for my creativity.

    How did you get that first — but not last — show for the Disney Channel? Was it through a regular audition, or did they see you in American Girl or something else?

    Oh man, I can’t remember too specifically. I think it was just a regular old audition. I just walked in with my little sides and did my thing, and fate had its way.

    As you mentioned earlier, it was while you were working on that show that you started writing songs for the first time. Do you remember what inspired you to do that?

    That’s a good question. I don’t know. I think I really started taking it seriously around 14 or 15. I was sort of alone on these sets, and at 14 or 15 you have big emotions — there’s lots of angst going on — and I think I needed some place to put that. I needed to have some medium that helped me feel understood. It sounds so cliche, but it’s so true — especially when you’re that young, it’s like you’re talking to a friend. I was so dramatic. I remember sitting on my piano in my room and just crying. I needed to get it out.

    One of my favorite quotes of yours that I came across prepping for this was, “I literally wrote breakup songs before I’d ever held a boy’s hand or even remotely dated someone.” So you had your genre from the beginning?

    Oh my God, yeah. It’s so funny how that’s so innate in us sometimes. I was writing these devastating heartbreak songs — never had my first kiss. I remember the first song that I wrote on a piano — I was probably like nine years old — and it was this feminist song about how I don’t need a man. I’m now like, “What kind of sexism were you enduring at nine years old?!” I don’t know.

    So you go from Bizaardvark almost directly into — I’m going to just take a big breath before I say this — High School Musical: The Musical: The Series.

    It’s a hard name. It’s a hard title.

    Was that another audition?

    Yeah, it was another audition. I remember going in and doing chemistry reads, and I remember singing for the audition — it’s a big singing music show, obviously, I mean, it’s in the name — and I remember that being really exciting for me at the time.

    The guy who cast you, Tim Federle, has said that he didn’t know that you were as passionate about or talented at singing at the outset. But you wound up writing a song for the first season’s fourth episode, “All I Want,” which made it all the way to the Billboard Hot 100 back in 2020. Do you remember how that came about?

    Yeah. I am very grateful for Tim. He’s given me so many amazing opportunities. I don’t think I’d be where I am right now without that, but yeah, that’s so true. When I got onto High School Musical, I was writing all these songs, but I was so shy and I’d just keep them to myself. I think going on that show and having music be such a big part of it kind of emboldened me to be more open with it. I remember I posted a song on my Instagram — I forget what the song even was or how it went — and Tim really liked it. They were doing pitch sessions, trying to write a song for this episode, and I guess they referenced the song that I put on my Instagram, so Tim was like, “Well, why don’t we just have Olivia write it? If we’re trying to make a song that sounds like Olivia wrote it, let’s just do it.” And for the life of me, I don’t know why he took a chance on a super green 16-year-old like that. But I wrote that song “All I Want” and it did really well. I think TikTok had just started becoming a thing when that song came out, so it was one of the first songs to get traction on TikTok. We were like, “Music on TikTok? Wow!” Now that’s our whole world. But yeah, that’s how I got my record deal, and everything sort of happened off of that one song, so I’m very grateful for it.

    Is it possible that the song that he saw you put up on your Instagram was an early version of “Happier”?

    Oh, that might be right. I think there were a few, actually. The version of “Happier” that’s on my Instagram is how I found my producer Dan. Dan actually saw that video and was like, “Oh, I really like her,” and sent me a DM.

    So which came first: the record deal that you signed shortly after “All I Want” or Dan? I wondered if it was the record label that suggested you and Dan work together, but you’re saying that he reached out after you already had a deal in place?

    I think that I had a deal set up. But I met him on this very fateful day — it was the last day before the world shut down for COVID, and I remember I went into Interscope and met everyone. I think I knew I was going to sign there. And then right after that I went to Dan’s studio and played him all of my demos on a little guitar. And so that was one of the most important days of my career. It’s just so funny where a little Instagram DM can take you.

    You probably get a lot of random DMs. What made you say about Dan, “This guy is somebody I would like to explore the possibility of working with”? I know he has his own background in music, but was that something you knew? What did you know about him?

    I didn’t know much. I knew that he made my friend Conan Gray’s album, and I really liked that album — I was obsessed with it at the time, as I am still, so I was a fan of him for that. I think I was following him because I was just a fan of his work. But yeah, he’s really incredible — he was in an emo band growing up, so I think our tastes are very similar in certain types of music, and he’ll definitely send me so many references that I really resonate with. It’s a good match.

    Now, many people have come out of the Disney Channel and had some degree of a music career, certainly not many at the level that yours has gone to, but almost all of them first signed with the Disney label, Hollywood Records, and as a result, were very managed. Let’s just say “fame-fucker” would not have been possible.

    Yeah, that’s for sure.

    You seem to have figured out, in the aftermath of “All I Want,” that there’s an alternative to just going through the Disney pipeline. And the other thing, which is even more amazing, is that you knew to fight to keep your masters, which is not something that too many people do or get. What went into those decisions?

    I just think I’ve been so incredibly lucky. I’ve really had the privilege of having people work with me who are really actually looking out for my best interests. So I could sign to whatever label I wanted to — I had that carved out of my Disney deal — and getting my master’s. In every aspect of the business, I’ve just always wanted to forge a path for myself that will never infringe upon any of my creative decisions. I’ve always wanted to make every business decision that will allow me to do whatever the hell I want with my music. That’s always been my main prerogative besides money or any of that stuff. I feel very fortunate that people around me have been so accepting and have let me do what I want to do for so long.

    You mentioned that you signed your record deal and started working with Dan just before the world went into chaos. So how did that work? Because you essentially made “Driver’s License” and then Sour, which really introduced you to the world, during lockdown, right?

    When lockdown started, I made a promise to myself that I would try to write a song every single day. I was like, “Well, I’m not going to set anymore. I got to have something to do.” So I wrote a song every day for six months or so, and it was such a good exercise for me as a songwriter. I think I was really starting to find my pace as a writer, and Dan and I were both like, “Hey, I’m not going anywhere” — Dan’s like, “I’m just hanging out with my wife,” and I’m like, “I’m just hanging out with my parents. So I feel like it’s safe for us to come and work in the studio.” So those were really magical days. I think I found out so much about myself and about the music that I liked writing through those studio days with him.

    I hope I can tee up some questions about specific songs because I think it gives a little window into your creative process. The first one obviously has to be “Driver’s License,” which is the first one that anyone heard beyond “All I Want.” It came out on Jan. 8, 2021. Billboard called it, “A brilliantly detailed tear-jerker.” The New York Times called it, “Razor sharp, damningly intimate songwriting” and “one of the great singles of the 2020s.” It debuted at number one on the Billboard Hot 100, partly thanks to TikTok, and so you, at 17 years and 338 days old, became the youngest solo artist ever to debut at number one on the Hot 100. The song spent eight weeks at number one and set a new record for Spotify streams for a debut single by a female artist. Just unbelievable stuff. What first gave you the idea to do that song, and did you ever imagine that it could take off even a fraction as much as it did?

    Yeah, absolutely not, is the short answer. It’s insane thinking about it. I mean, I was just so heartbroken at the time. I was 17 going through my first heartbreak and I was literally just writing songs to survive and feel better. I wrote that song one morning after driving around through my neighborhood — after literally just getting my driver’s license. I remember feeling like it was really special, though. Sometimes when you write a song, it feels like it’s just coming through you. It doesn’t happen very often — it’s very rare — but when it happens, you get super excited. It’s really special. And I remember that being one of those moments, and I was really excited. I remember I walked into Dan’s studio a few days later and I said, “Dan, I think I just wrote the best song I’ve ever written.” He’s like, “Okay.” So I played it for him and we wrote the bridge together and kind of fixed things up and yeah — it’s insane, you reading all those statistics, it’s so strange. I was 17 and I just remember all of that happening and I was doing my statistic finals in my house.

    That’s where I want to go next. From the moment it first went out to the public, let’s say, can you just give me a little idea of how your life changed in the next week?

    I think I didn’t fully realize how much my life was going to change after that song. I was just like, “Wow, people really like it!” I’m like, “Billboard charts? What’s the Billboard charts?” I was kind of just learning about all of this stuff, and I was taking my finals. I was a senior in high school. The only thing that changed is that people started sending me flowers and stuff. I was like, “Oh, that’s nice.” It was lockdown, so you couldn’t really go out into the real world and see it. I couldn’t play a show. I couldn’t go meet people who were listening to the song. So it was very insular in a way that I think was actually really beneficial for my mental health. I think that’d been really overwhelming if I got the full brunt of it.

    And you were smart enough to know to get off of social media, right?

    I just deleted my TikTok and Instagram, and other people posted for me, or I’d redownload it to post and then get back off. I think I knew myself and I knew that I would get in my head. I was finishing up making Sour at the time, and if I was on social media and could see everyone’s opinions of me all the time, I think I would’ve made a record that was pandering to them or something like that. Not exactly what I wanted to make. But yeah, I’m proud of my little 17-year-old self for doing that. It’s a tough thing.

    Now, a week later, I believe, you went back to work on High School Musical: The Musical: The Series, only now as the biggest thing in music. Was that weird? Did they treat you differently?

    People were really wonderful. I mean, to me, I didn’t feel different, and no one really treated me different. I think that I didn’t fully realize the breadth of that song. I was just like, “It’s just another day. It’s just a song that I really love. Wow, cool. People like it.” I don’t know. It sounds funny to say now, but at the time I just didn’t really grasp it all, I don’t think.

    The other two singles that came out before the full album were “Deja Vu,” on April 1, 2021, and “Good 4 U,” on May 14, 2021. You became the first artist in history to have their first two and their first three singles in the top 10 of the Hot 100. Sour became the first debut album to score two number one singles on the Hot 100, “Driver’s License” and “Good 4 U.” So if anyone thought that “Driver’s License” was a fluke, that was quickly put to rest. Why was the album that they were ultimately all part of called Sour?

    I really love four-letter words — I mean, obviously I love explicit words too, but I think I was trying to write a song called Sour for a long time about, yeah, milk gone sour, a relationship or something like that, and it was just a bad song. But I was like, “‘Sour’ is good though.” And yeah, I don’t know, it just felt like angsty and brokenhearted, which is what I was feeling at the time.

    When you and Dan started putting that album together, did you sit down and say like, “Hey, this is going to be the theme of the album: it’s primarily going to be about heartbreak”? Or did you just write songs, which coincidentally turned out to have some things in common?

    At that point in my career, I was writing songs just to get through life. They were all to personally help me. I didn’t think that they were even going to come out, which I think is maybe sort of the beauty of some of those songs. There’s an innocence to them. But yeah, I remember not being happy that it was a breakup album, though — I was really dead-set like, “We have to put a love song on there, Dan. Let’s put a love song on!” But I was just nowhere even close to being in love. So that obviously didn’t work out.

    I think it’s hilarious that people are like, “Why do you write so many breakup songs or heartbreak songs?” And you were like, “What do you want me to write about, income taxes?”

    I know! I’m like, “Why are you listening to all heartbreak songs?”

    The other thing that many of these songs have in common, as you and others have noted, is that they are dealing with emotions that many times it’s sort of frowned upon for a girl to express — anger, jealousy, spite, sadness, etc.

    I think on a personal level, I’ve always felt more comfortable showing sides of my personality in my songwriting, sides of myself like guilt and shame and jealousy and anger and all of these feelings that I talk about a lot in my music that I try not to express in my daily day-to-day life, maybe for good reason. It’d be bad if I was just ashamed all the time in my regular life. But I think that’s sort of the beauty of songwriting, is that it can help you access those sort of hard to articulate emotions and give them somewhere to go, as a songwriter and also as a listener.

    You said about “Good 4 U,” at one point, that you probably wouldn’t say those words to someone’s face, but it felt nice to be able to get them out in another way.

    Completely. Writing songs is just getting stuff off your chest. That’s all it is.

    “Deja Vu” was one of the first times that people noted how specific your songwriting is — with references like Billy Joel and “Uptown Girl,” etc. — while still feeling universal.

    Thanks. Yeah, I try. I mean, I love specificity in songwriting. I think all of my heroes are really good at using specifics to get their message across. And so yeah, it’s always been something that I’ve really tried to achieve, so thank you for saying that.

    Sour spent 52 non-consecutive weeks in the top 10 of the Billboard 200. It was Spotify’s most streamed album of 2021. It went four times platinum. And then came the Grammy nominations. You got seven nominations, one in each of the big four categories, which is something only 12 other people had ever done — album of the year, record of the year, song of the year and best new artist — and you end up winning three, including best new artist. Can you talk about the significance of the Grammys — not just being there, but the fact that they, as much as anything, are sort of an indication of the music business that you were entering essentially embracing you.

    That was one of the craziest days of my life. I had always followed the Grammys from a very young age. My mom and I would watch together. The Grammys usually happened in February, and I always said, “February’s my favorite month, first because of the Grammys, and second because of my birthday [on Feb. 20].” But yeah, I loved it, and my mom and I would always make predictions of what we thought was going to win Song of the Year, so it was just so fun even just go as a fan of music.

    Had you ever gone before? Sometimes people buy tickets or whatever.

    No, I’d never gone, but I loved going to the Grammys Museum in downtown L.A. I would go all the time when I was a kid. I used to live near there, and my mom has a funny story of taking me there when I was 14 or 15 or something, and I told her, “Mom, one day I’m going to win a Grammy.” And she remembers saying to herself like, “Okay, that’s not going to happen.” But she was like, “Okay, I believe in you, Olivia!” So I maybe did her proud on that one.

    I don’t know for sure, but I imagine best new artist might have been the one that you wanted the most, and you got it.

    Yeah. I mean, it’s so exciting to even be in the running for something like that. It just is so cool to be included in that community of musicians. You sit in the Grammys and you look around and it’s like, “My God, Joni Mitchell’s over there, Brandi Carlile’s over there,” and all these people that you just grew up being so inspired by, it gives you chills.

    And now they all knew who you were, right?

    Overwhelming!

    You talked to Joni Mitchell, right?

    Oh my God, yeah. She said she liked my dress. I was like, “Thank you!!!”

    I recently had on the podcast somebody who I know you recently did our songwriter roundtable with, Dua Lipa. You and she were the two breakouts of lockdown. You both put out a great first album that everybody loved, and then faced the big question: what do you do with your second? Do you kind of double-down on what worked the first time? Or do you take this opportunity to show that you can do other things? But what if that doesn’t work out? Take me into your thought process.

    It was incredibly daunting to start out writing Guts. I had so many voices in my head and there was so much pressure. There were lots of days where I’d walk in the studio and — me and Dan, we jokingly called it, “the dread.” We’re like, “I can see the dread in your eyes, producing that song.” “I can see the dread, writing that verse.” “I can see the dread in your eyes.” So it was a really challenging experience for me as a songwriter to try to tune out all that noise and just try to make something that inspired me, because, at the core of all creativity, that’s where it should come from. It shouldn’t come from trying to make a song that you think is going to do well on the charts. That never actually does well on the charts, if you just try to make something like that, I think. But yeah, it was a lesson, I think, in discipline and perseverance for me, just showing up every day and sitting at the piano, even if you feel really overwhelmed and scared, just showing up and sharpening your skills as a musician or a songwriter.

    You went into the first album not unknown but at a very different level of being known. Going into the second one, you were very known, as you reference in “Vampire” and other songs on it. After releasing the first album but before writing the second, did you have time to go experience life? Even with people behaving very differently around you?

    Yeah, I definitely did experience a lot of life. I mean, the albums were two years apart, two fairly formative years for me. I made Sour when I was 17, 18, and I made Guts when I was 19, 20. I feel like I’m a completely different girl than I was back then. Lots of personal growth. I did talk about how my life has changed in regards to success or public attention. But I don’t know, I like to think that if you boil any of those songs down, they’re about betrayal or heartbreak or anger, all things that are very universal. And so I think if you just try to concentrate a feeling into the most essential parts, that’s sort of what I tried to achieve.

    With Guts, you leaned into rock much more. Is that just how the songs you were writing happened to turn out, or did you consciously set out to write an album that was more rock-heavy than the first one?

    I wanted to do something more rock. I’d always loved rock music, like we were talking about before, but I never quite knew how it fit it into my voice and my style and my style of songwriting. And I think we were just starting to figure that out towards the end of the Sour process — we added “Good 4 U” and “Brutal” last in the track listing. So I think I just wanted to expand upon it more on this record, and it was so much fun. I am really excited to play all those songs live. They feel very much like me.

    All 12 of the songs on Guts were very well-received but particularly “Vampire,” which debuted at number one on the Billboard Hot 100, fell out and then came back to number one, which doesn’t happen very often. That one seems to be about heartbreak, like songs on Sour, but also about being taken advantage of as a famous person, right?

    I think it’s about betrayal. It’s a very angry song to me. I think that it’s also about me taking responsibility for putting myself in those positions. I think that was a big theme on this record, is growing up and realizing that you’re not always the perfect victim in every situation. Sometimes you are, but most of the time not. I think it was just me maturing and realizing the part that I had in all of these situations that I was writing about.

    It’s a song that starts out quiet and then builds to a rock operetta — it really explodes. What came first, the words or the music?

    I wrote an early version of that song by myself on the piano, and I wrote [sings] “Blood sucker, fame fucker,” and that was the part that Dan was like, “Oh, yeah, that’s good!” So I wrote the verse in the chorus, and we kind of fixed it up together and wrote the song on piano to begin with. The production took so long. God bless Dan, he was the most patient man in the world. I would just go crazy. I really wanted a song like “Come On Eileen,” where it gets faster and then there’s like tempos all over the place. So if you listen to the song, it gets faster towards the end, but oh my God, we were stressed over half of a BPM and like, “Oh, this voicing of this chord isn’t right.” It was really a labor of love. So that one took a while, but I really love that it shows.

    “Teenage Dream,” which seems to be about your apprehension about following Sour, is a very different genre. I believe you regard it as one of your personal favorites. What is it about that one?

    That was the first song that we wrote that made it on the record. I wrote that song when I was in the studio and I was experiencing “the dreads.” I was 19 years old and I was like, “Wait, is all my best work behind me?!” Which is a crazy thing to think when you’re 19 years old — your whole life is ahead of you, like the song says. But I think it just succinctly captured not only my fear of making a sophomore record, but my fear of just growing up in general. The line that’s my favorite is, “They all say that it gets better the more you grow. But what if I don’t?” I remember writing that and being like, “Oh, that’s exactly how I feel.” It just always feels nice to have your anxieties and fears put into a song. It feels like more manageable when you can listen to it and be like, “That’s exactly how I feel.” It makes everything kind of feel smaller.

    The last of the songs from that album that I want to bring up, and I think you have said that this is your favorite, is “All-American Bitch,” with a title referencing Joni Mitchell’s The White Album. It starts out with you sounding angelic, and then it just goes nuts.

    Yeah, that one’s my favorite on the record. I really love it. I’ve always been fascinated with this sort of duality of being a woman and feeling all of this rage, but also feeling like you’re in this box and you have to be classy and gracious and never complain and all of this stuff. I feel like that was always a struggle that I was pushing against when I was younger. And so it’s just always been at the top of my mind, and I always wanted to write a song about it. And in this song, I feel like I kind of addressed that. It’s very dynamic. Like you said, the verses are really small and sweet, and the choruses are super enraged, and it’s just really fun. It just captured something that I’ve been feeling for a while, so that’s always a nice feeling as a songwriter.

    So this brings us to an undertaking that was different from anything you’d done before, as far as I know: being asked and agreeing to write a song for a movie, as we started to talk about earlier. How was the request presented to you? Was it, “We would love a song,” or “We would love a song for this specific moment in the movie,” or “We would love this specific kind of a song,” or “We’d be thrilled with anything you care to contribute”?

    Someone just asked me, “Do you like The Hunger Games?” And I’m like, “Of course, I like The Hunger Games! Duh.” So they’re like, “Oh, you should watch [the new one] and see if you’re inspired. They’d love a song for it.” And I was so honored to watch the movie, and really resonated with the main character, Lucy Gray. I think she’s a really interesting, fascinating, complex character. And so after watching that, I did a few iterations of the song that ended up coming out, but it was so much fun to kind of challenge myself as a songwriter to do something like that. It feels collaborative. Someone gives you the character and the plot, and you just kind of inject your own personal feeling into it and paint with your colors. It was so much fun, and I feel really honored that I got to do it.

    You have said that there’s a scene in the movie that sort of inspired the song you wrote for the film, “Can’t Catch Me Now.” Which scene was that?

    Well, if you haven’t watched The Hunger Games movie, don’t listen to what I’m about to say right now, turn off the podcast. But it’s the scene where Lucy finally leaves — she just disappears — and Coriolanus is looking into the sky and shooting, and there’s all these mockingjays around in her voice speaking words that she said, and it was just so fulfilling to watch her finally kind of disobey him and stray from the pack and break away. But there’s always still this mystery about her, which I think was reflected in the song.

    Once you agreed to do the song, how long did it kind of take to come together? Is it something that just poured out, or was it a real process?

    Dan and I wrote it. We wrote the chorus one day and then came back to it. We’re like, “Oh, that was pretty good,” and wrote the verses. It was just a real fun challenge, and it was so fun to sing from another person’s perspective. It’s not every day that I get to do that.

    Rachel Zegler, who stars in the film, is also a talented singer. Did you guys meet before the premiere?

    Yeah, we had actually. I randomly met her in the bathroom at the Grammys. It was like some dingy bathroom, and she was like, “Hey, I know you.” And I’m like, “I know you.”

    The film has proven to be a huge blockbuster. Do you have a theory about why particularly young people are so into the franchise, generaly, but especially this latest installment?

    I think that The Hunger Games is so great at portraying wonderful, complex female characters, and I think that that’s something that we all are craving. Just a great concept. Great books, great movies, great soundtracks. I love all the soundtracks.

    In our last minute or two, here are some sort of assorted, random, big-picture questions. Who are you listening to the most right now?

    Oh, OK! My Spotify Wrapped just came out. I think my number one artist was Chappell Roan. She just put out her first album, and Dan, my producer, produced it, and it’s amazing. So I’m listening to a lot of her. And I think number two was Simon and Garfunkel.

    You performed in some very intimate venues after Sour. Now, for Guts, you’re going to be performing in stadiums and arenas starting February 23, 2024. What are you most excited about or most curious about, as far as that level of a production?

    I’m so stoked. I think it’s going to be so much fun to play those kind of rock songs in an arena too. I’m so excited to feel that energy. I’m so excited to go places that I haven’t been before. I’m really excited to go to the Philippines — I’ve never been — so that’s going to be fun. And I love my band. I have an all-girl band and they’re so wonderful and such great musicians. It’s going to be fun.

    Do you know who’s opening for you? Does it change from place to place?

    Yeah, there’s a few. Chappell is opening, The Breeders are going to open for me, which is really cool. PinkPantheress is going to open for me. A few others. It’s going to be fun.

    What are you most excited for about the Grammys, which will happen just a few weeks before the tour, on Feb. 4, 2024? You’re going in with six nominations, including a bunch of big ones.

    Wow. I get butterflies in my stomach even just answering this question. It’s a very nervewracking night. I just think it’s so fun to get to see all the songs that get performed. It’s just like you get to see some of the greatest artists perform some of the greatest songs, and it’s just an honor to be in the audience and witness all of that. So very excited. Yes.

    I’m sure they’ve asked you to perform. Do you know if you will, and, if so, what you will be performing?

    I don’t know if I will yet. I haven’t had the conversation, but I mean, I would be honored.

    If you could do one of your songs, would it be “Vampire”?

    Yeah, probably. That’s a fun one to sing.

    Okay. Favorite line of a song that you’ve ever written?

    I’m going to say a crazy answer. It’s actually a bonus track that’s on Guts. There’s a song called “Scared of My Guitar.” If you buy a vinyl, it can be on the vinyl, but it kind of exists on TikTok, little snippets. There’s this line that says, “How could I ever trade something that’s good for what’s right?” And I think that was a big thesis for what I was going through in my life these past few years. Things were good and things were happening, and I had so many people around me, but lots of things just weren’t right for me and weren’t in alignment with who I was as a person. And so writing that line kind of made things clearer for me.

    I heard another favorite is a line from “The Grudge”?

    Oh, yeah. I mean, “It take strength to forgive, but I don’t feel strong.” Why couldn’t I think of the lyric? Yeah. “It takes strength to forgive, but I don’t feel strong.” I was listening to The Smiths on my way to the studio, and there’s a song, I forget which song, where he goes, “It takes strength to be gentle and kind.” And I remember being really angry listening to that song and being like, “What if I don’t want to be gentle and kind?!” And so I wrote, “It takes strength to forgive, but I don’t feel strong.”

    And then just one other potential contender, I think — was there something in “Enough for You”?

    Oh yeah. It’s such a sad song. I listened back to it and I was like, “Oh, you were so heartbroken.” I really loved writing the line, “Someday I’ll be everything to somebody else.”

    If the world was on fire and you could only save one of your songs, which song would it be?

    Oh my God, that’s so hard! Maybe “Driver’s License.” I really love “All-American Bitch” too. So one on each album.

    I heard that you took a class at USC.

    Oh, yeah.

    What inspired you to do that, and is that something you might do more of?

    I hope so. I had never really gone to a brick and mortar school — I mean, I stopped going to regular school when I was 12 years old — and I always had a desire to do it, and always had a desire to learn in a classroom about all these things that I was really interested in, in an environment that was a little more structured. So yeah, I went to USC for one class, and I took a poetry class, and it was wonderful. I had a great professor, and I wrote a bunch of poems and learned so much — and I actually turned one of the poems that I wrote in the class into the song “Lacy.” That’s on Guts.

    And were the kids cool?

    Yeah, kids were super cool in the class. They were so sweet. I actually — have you watched Legally Blonde?

    Of course.

    I had a very Legally Blonde first day there. I actually walked into the wrong classroom and sat there and was like, “Oh, I don’t remember this on the reading list. This is strange. Maybe they’re just all really advanced.” And then I walked into the right classroom and I realized that everyone had iPads, and I was like, “Oh, iPads. That’s what kids do these days.” I just had a little notepad and everyone was typing on their iPads and I was writing down little notes with my pen. But yeah, everyone was really sweet and welcoming.

    Are you interested in continuing to act while making music, or is acting now in the past?

    I’m open for whatever. I think acting’s so fun. It’s so nice to be, I think, a part of a community that’s collaborative and creative like that. With music sometimes it’s very individualistic. I am writing my songs and making a lot of the decisions by myself, and that’s wonderful and so much fun. But sometimes it’s nice to kind of have some people to lean on.

    Are you open to doing other songs for films?

    Yeah, I think that’d be so fun. I had such a great time writing this Hunger Games one, and it’s just such a nice challenge as a songwriter. It really stretches you.

    And lastly, if you go to karaoke, what is your go-to karaoke song?

    Okay. Really hard one. If you want to be really advanced, you do “Wuthering Heights” by Kate Bush. “Bohemian Rhapsody” is always fun if you’re with a group of people because then you can each do the little part. But usually, without fail, it’s “Dancing Queen.”

    Scott Feinberg

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  • May This ‘Hunger Games’ Book Ranking Be Ever in Your Favor

    May This ‘Hunger Games’ Book Ranking Be Ever in Your Favor

    Although it has been several years since The Hunger Games book series concluded, the franchise is experiencing a resurgence with the release of The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. With the film adaptation of The Hunger Games prequel in theaters, now is a great time to revisit the book series.

    The Hunger Games is a dystopian young adult series written by Suzanne Collins. It contains four books, including a trilogy and a prequel novel. The original trilogy—comprised of The Hunger Games, Catching Fire, and Mockingjay—is set in the fictional country of Panem, which is divided into 13 districts controlled by the Capitol, where the nation’s most powerful and wealthy live. The Capitol dissuades the districts from rebelling against its oppressive rule by forcing them to participate in the annual Hunger Games: Each district must give up one teenage boy and one teenage girl to fight to the death in the gruesome games just so the Capitol can reinforce its power.

    10 years after the full trilogy was published, Collins released a prequel novel centered on Coriolanus Snow called The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. To this day, both the film and book series remain a hit among audiences of all ages, with the book trilogy having sold over 65 million copies in the United States. Readers are hooked by the compelling characters, an addictive premise, thrilling action, and intriguing sociological themes. Some books capture the series’ themes and quality better than others. Here is every book in The Hunger Games series, ranked from least to most compelling.

    4. Mockingjay

    Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
    (Scholastic)

    Mockingjay is the final book in The Hunger Games series. In it, the districts finally launch a rebellion against the Capitol. Katniss Everdeen has become the face of the rebellion, but is struggling to cope with the trauma she’s endured, her concerns about the rebels’ true motives, and what will replace the Capitol if and when it’s overthrown.

    Given the massive cliffhanger at the end of Catching Fire, Mockingjay was expected to be a huge book. In a lot of ways, it was. Readers finally see a true rebellion unfold after a satisfying buildup and discover new secrets about the Capitol and its relationship to the districts. However, it is one of the most emotionally draining books. It’s not necessarily wrong that the series doesn’t have a genuinely happy ending; it captures the true cost of freedom. Still, some of the character losses and changes in the book may feel unnecessary and jarring. Plus, readers don’t really get to see the world after the Capitol, so it almost feels like the book is cut short even though the emotion suggests it should give readers something a little more substantial in the end.

    Ultimately, Mockingjay drives home the series’ themes well, but there’s a slight feeling of the story being incomplete and some of the deaths being unnecessary and merely for shock factor.

    3. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes

    The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes by Suzanne Collins
    (Scholastic)

    The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes is a prequel novel that follows the early life of Snow before he became the Capitol’s president. It tracks his humble beginnings and how he first got mixed up in the games. In particular, we see how his time mentoring Lucy Gray Baird set him on the path to becoming the most powerful man in Panem.

    The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes is an intriguing book that will thrill those wishing to learn more about the Capitol’s history and what the earliest Hunger Games were like. Those who enjoyed Snow’s character will also be pleased that the novel plays out much like a character study. Additionally, it dives into themes of power, oppression, conformity, friendship, and betrayal in a way that will leave readers thinking long after they’ve finished the book.

    However, some readers may be disappointed by the premise, as Snow may not have been their first choice for a dedicated prequel. Collins also gets a bit carried away in trying to set up parallels between Lucy and Katniss that don’t really go anywhere. The story feels overly long and slow at times, and the ending isn’t as satisfying as the build-up suggests. If you’re looking for a character study to mull over and a small look into Panem’s history, The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes is an enjoyable but flawed read.

    2. The Hunger Games

    The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
    (Scholastic)

    The Hunger Games is the first book in the series. It follows Katniss Everdeen, a young woman from District 12 who is forced to participate in the Hunger Games after volunteering to go in place of her sister, Prim. However, Katniss may actually have a chance to win the Games, especially when viewers take an interest in her budding relationship with fellow District 12 tribute Peeta Mellark.

    The Hunger Games will likely be among the most addictive books you’ve ever read. After all, the Battle Royale premise is hard to look away from. Readers will be thrilled by the constant action, thrills, and twists as they root for Katniss’ survival. The whole concept of the Capitol’s immense power and the contrast between how its residents live and how the districts live is very jarring. With a unique premise, intriguing characters, and compelling action and suspense, The Hunger Games is almost impossible to put down.

    The only minor flaw is that it sometimes doesn’t seem to fully realize the power of its themes and premise. Collins occasionally gets carried away with simply making it an action thriller. This is part of why it’s so addictive and entertaining, but there’s also a feeling that The Hunger Games could’ve been even more.

    1. Catching Fire

    Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
    (Scholastic)

    Catching Fire is the second book in the trilogy and sees the Capitol retaliate for Katniss’ small act of rebellion in the previous book. Angered that Katniss and Peeta undermined its power, the Capitol decides to celebrate the Games’ 75th anniversary by selecting tributes from its pool of past victors. Since Katniss is the sole living female victor of District 12, she finds herself back in the arena just a year after escaping it.

    Catching Fire really doubles down on the series’ themes as it paints a startling picture of just how oppressive the Capitol is and how threatening the tiniest act of resistance can be to totalitarian systems. Meanwhile, the story is even more addictive this time, as there’s an added layer of complexity to each tribute, and getting all these experienced tributes into an arena again also ramps up the action. And the bombshell ending is truly jaw-dropping.

    Catching Fire doubles down on the series’ powerful premise, maintains the action, expands on the history of the Games, and proves to be riveting and unpredictable. It’s The Hunger Games series at its very best.

    (featured image: Scholastic)

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    Rachel Ulatowski

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  • Inside the Dystopian Appalachia Music of the ‘Hunger Games’ Prequel

    Inside the Dystopian Appalachia Music of the ‘Hunger Games’ Prequel

    “I don’t sing when I’m told. I sing when I’ve got something to say,” Rachel Zegler’s Lucy Gray Baird declares in The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. As the film’s title would suggest, music plays a central role in the new Hunger Games prequel, which is set roughly 60 years before the events of the original trilogy.

    When she’s selected to participate in the 10th annual Hunger Games, Lucy Gray’s act of defiance is to sing “Nothing You Can Take From Me.” When she—spoiler alert—returns from the arena, she croons a song called “Pure as the Driven Snow.” At another point, Lucy Gray offers the original version of “The Hanging Tree,” a folk song Jennifer Lawrence’s Katniss would eventually perform in 2014’s Mockingjay: Part 1.

    Readers of Suzanne Collins’s novels will recognize the lyrics to Lucy Gray’s songs, which are largely taken directly from the book. But their melodies were written by executive music producer Dave Cobb. “Luckily, they were crazy enough to hire me,” says Cobb, referring to director Francis Lawrence and producer Nina Jacobson. His songs work in tandem with a film score by James Newton Howard, as well as a soundtrack that features artists like Olivia Rodrigo and Molly Tuttle, who plays Lucy Gray’s guitar in the film.

    Though Cobb revisited the existing films, none of them have much in-universe music. He got more guidance through expansive conversations with the filmmakers and with Collins, who he says is “the most brilliant person I’ve ever talked to.”

    “When you talk to her, this isn’t in a book—this is a universe she’s created,” he explains. “When she’s telling you about each character in the series, she’s got a backstory behind a backstory, behind a backstory.” Collins told Cobb that her version of dystopian Appalachia was inspired by several sources, including the English Civil War and turn-of-the-century mountain music. “Suzanne is a historian. I’m a history buff,” Cobb continues. “If you talk about the history, I’m in. I can read for days about it. She definitely schooled me, and I went down a deep dive.”

    That excavation process also involved a dive into his own personal history. “My granddaddy was a bluegrass musician. I grew up Pentecostal…. My grandmother was a preacher, and she sang like Snow White.” It’s a funny reference, he knows, because Zegler herself plays the princess in Disney’s upcoming Snow White remake—“I think a lot of these songs all harken back to hymnals,” says Cobb, noting that Collins was also well-versed in this genre. “She was a country music DJ at one time, so she knew exactly what she was talking about.”

    Though he was guided by the folksy mountain music one would expect from Appalachia, Cobb wasn’t allergic to more unconventional influences as well. “There’s a lot of The Smiths in there,” he reveals. “I figure by the time we got to the future, [the characters] probably heard this stuff. It’s definitely a melting pot. We tried to stick to these very traditional roots, but there’s a lot of curveballs.”

    Savannah Walsh

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  • Watch ‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes’ Cast Quiz Each Other

    Watch ‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes’ Cast Quiz Each Other

    In The Hunger Games universe, tributes must face an arena’s worth of trials and terror in a battle to the death. The stars of The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, a prequel set about 60 years before Suzanne Collins’s original trilogy, were put to their own—admittedly far lower stakes—test by Vanity Fair. 

    Tom Blyth, who plays a younger version of President Snow in the film, quizzed costars Rachel Zegler and Josh Andrés Rivera, who competed to determine who knows Blyth best. The game starts off on an ironic note when Blyth reveals that his biggest childhood fear is actually in the film’s title. “I was afraid of snakes as a kid because I saw Indiana Jones a lot…and because he was afraid of snakes I think that fear transferred onto me,” he explains. 

    This phobia didn’t rear its ugly head on set, though, even when two live reptiles were brought in. “Tom, you never let on that you were afraid,” says Zegler, who plays the titular songbird Lucy Gray Baird. “I’m not anymore—I’ve done a lot of therapy with snakes,” Blyth jokingly replies.

    Playing fast and loose with their point allotments, Zegler and Rivera (who are a real-life couple) venture their best guess at the Justin Timberlake track Blyth considers his go-to karaoke song and bond over vino-filled dinner parties with their director, Francis Lawrence. “Francis turned Josh into a fake wino,” Blyth quips.

    As for the filmmaker: In a separate video Lawrence breaks down scenes from the four Hunger Games films he’s directed, including Snow’s would-be execution in Mockingjay—Part 2. He also explains why “we never actually pointed any real arrows at anybody, ever,” starting with his first film in the franchise, Catching Fire. 

    By quiz show’s end, Zegler and Rivera flip the script on Blyth to test how well he knows them both, asking about a surprising elementary school stage debut, the unexpected people Zegler called from last year’s Oscars, and who among them owned a physical copy of the Shrek original motion picture soundtrack.

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes hits theaters on November 17.

    Savannah Walsh

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  • How ‘Hunger Games: Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes’ Refers to Katniss

    How ‘Hunger Games: Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes’ Refers to Katniss

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes takes place more than 60 years before Katniss Everdeen enters the competition, but the movie still finds a way to give her a mention. (Spoilers ahead!)

    No, Jennifer Lawrence doesn’t have a cameo appearance. However, Lucy Gray Baird (Rachel Zegler) says her name in the new movie, which hit theaters on Friday, November 17.

    While in District 12 with a young Coriolanus Snow (Tom Blyth), Lucy takes him to a lake where they enjoy a swim and take in the sunshine. Lucy takes a look at a flower that has roots they can eat, noting that it’s not quite ripe enough to snack on yet. She reveals that some people call it “swamp potato,” but she prefers the prettier name: “Katniss.”

    Ultimately, the only characters who appear in The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes from the original trilogy are Snow — the dictator Katniss eventually fights to overthrow — and his cousin Tigris, the stylist with tiger-like body modifications who helps the rebels sneak into the Capitol.

    Related: Everything to Know About the ‘Hunger Games’ Prequel

    May the odds be ever in his favor. President Snow is the notorious villain that Hunger Games fans love to hate — and he’s about to get his own movie. Suzanne Collins, who created the hit Hunger Games franchise, penned a prequel novel all about the origins of President Snow (played by Donald Sutherland in the OG movies). The […]

    In prequel film, Tigris (Hunter Schafer) doesn’t have any tattoos and is just trying to take care of her and Snow’s grandmother. Meanwhile, Snow is trying to win prize money to pull their family out of poverty while mentoring Lucy in the 10th annual Hunger Games.

    It’s the first time mentors have been used, and Snow has plenty of other suggestions to bring in more viewers. However, he isn’t quite the villain that Donald Sutherland played in the original trilogy.

    “People think they know the character,” Blyth told Variety earlier this month. “What I hope is that, if not to empathize with him, they understand him a little bit more and understand what makes him tick. And understand what a character like him would have to go through to make him become so evil.”

    He continued, “For me, I kind of fell in love with him as a character. I was heartbroken when I had to let him fall off the deep end.”

    The Hunger Games Cast Where Are They Now

    Related: ‘The Hunger Games’ Cast: Where Are They Now?

    The odds were in their favor! While some stars fall flat after their big breaks, Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson and Liam Hemsworth have moved on from the Hunger Games franchise with success. Based on author Suzanne Collins’ young adult books of the same name, 2012’s The Hunger Games, 2013’s The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, 2014’s The Hunger Games: Mockingjay — […]

    At the end of the film, Snow completes his inevitable turn into the cold future president and as the title card is shown, the older Snow is not seen. However, the audience hears Sutherland’s voice deliver Snow’s most famous line to Katniss: “It’s the things we love the most that destroy us.”

    Blyth did not chat with Donald Sutherland about the role, as director Francis Lawrence requested he give a fresh take on the character. Zegler, meanwhile, met Jennifer Lawrence after filming.

    “Meeting her was like meeting a friend because we have so many mutual friends and I’ve heard so much about her,” Zegler told Access Hollywood on Tuesday, November 13. “Francis, our director, when I told him that we had finally met, he said, ‘Oh finally the two weirdest contacts I have in my phone have collaborated,’ and I take that as a badge of honor truly.”

    Nicole Massabrook

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  • Want To Feel Like It’s 2013? Watch These Movies

    Want To Feel Like It’s 2013? Watch These Movies

    Yes, I’m sorry, all these iconic flicks came out 10 years ago and you are old. I am, too. But consider an alternate take: These movies stood the test of time and you had the privilege of being around to see them in theaters. Personally I think 2013 was a super strong year for movies, to the extent that getting a list of just 15 was tricky. But here they are, ranked from “very good” to “very, very, very good.”

    15. The Purge

    Ethan Hawke in The Purge (Universal)
    (Universal)

    Sure, The Purge franchise has its detractors, but you can’t deny the impact it made. The dystopian premise is simple and stark: for one night every year, all crime is legal, including murder. What will the characters do? What would you do? In this first ever Purge film we follow Ethan Hawke’s James and Lena Headey’s Mary as they attempt to get their family to morning alive. That story and this movie spawned a impressive four more Purge movies (to date) plus a TV show!

    14. Fruitvale Station

    Michael B. Jordan and Ariana Neal in Fruitvale Station (The Weinstein Company)
    (The Weinstein Company)

    Fruitvale Station tells the incredibly important real-life story of Oscar Grant (here played by Michael B. Jordan), who was killed by police in 2009, sparking protests that are now considered a precursor to the Black Lives Matter movement. This was Ryan Coogler’s feature film debut and it deservedly won both the Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award for a drama film at Sundance. “Every single choice that I made was based off research, and off things people told me about Oscar,” Coogler told The Independent, “because I didn’t want to go out and invent this character out of thin air.”

    13. Gravity

    Sandra Bullock in Gravity (Warner Bros)
    (Warner Bros.)

    “Life in space is impossible” warns the opening of Gravity. No kidding. This masterpiece from Alfonso Cuarón follows Dr. Ryan Stone (Sanda Bullock) as she fights to survive in space after debris strikes her shuttle. The only other survivor is Matt Kowalski (George Clooney) and he’s determined to get her home. An absolute nail-biter of a movie, but it’s incredibly beautiful too.

    12. The World’s End

    Simon Pegg (holding up an Out of Order sign) in The World
    (Focus Features)

    The third film in the Simon Pegg/Nick Frost/Edgar Wright “Cornetto Trilogy.” This one is a little darker than the other two, as it’s really mostly about Pegg’s character’s alcoholism. Oh, and people are being replaced by robots, that’s also a thing that’s going on. Pegg puts in a truly great performance as the addicted, unhappy Gary King here.

    11. The Wolf of Wall Street

    Leonardo DiCaprio in The Wolf of Wall Street (Paramount)
    (Paramount)

    Martin Scorsese’s three-hour epic about very bad people doing very bad things. Sex, drugs, crime and live fish-eating are all covered in this movie, which won Leonardo DiCaprio a very well deserved fourth Academy Award nomination. Although he carries the movie, all the cast — which includes Jonah Hill, Matthew McConaughey, and Margot Robbie in her breakout role — are excellent.

    10. The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug

    Martin Freeman as Bilbo Baggins in The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (Warner Bros.)
    (Warner Bros.)

    I know, I know, I’ve heard it. The Hobbit movies weren’t as good as their predecessors. But on the other hand, what in the world could have been? The original Lord of the Rings movies were masterpieces that can never be repeated. And despite having so much to live up to, The Desolation of Smaug knocked it as far out of the park as it could have possibly gone. It has its flaws but Peter Jackson’s love for the source material shines through.

    9. Iron Man 3

    Gwyneth Paltrow as Pepper Potts and Robert Downey Jr as Tony Stark in Iron Man 3 (Marvel Studios)
    (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)

    Iron Man 3 isn’t remembered as a particularly strong MCU entry, curiously, but I think it holds up very well indeed. The twist involving the Mandarin had me first gasping and then giggling, it was a genuine rug pull that I appreciated very much. It’s nice to look back and remember a time when the MCU was much smaller. There’s not a multiverse in sight here and it’s all the better for it. A movie as compact as one of Tony Stark’s gadgets.

    8. The Hunger Games: Catching Fire

    Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (Lionsgate)
    (Lionsgate)

    Another excellent mid-quel that dropped in 2013. Katniss Everdeen goes back into the Games arena and the stakes are even higher this time. The Hunger Games movies may not have had quite the raw power of the books, but they were nonetheless incredible and a whole generation remembers them fondly. Catching Fire gave us introductions to some of the best characters in the series, including Finnick Odair and Johanna Mason, as well as the iconic visual of Katniss’s mockingjay dress.

    7. Frozen

    Elsa and Anna hugging in Frozen (Disney)
    (Disney)

    All this time and I still can’t let it go. Yes, over-exposure has made many people (even Disney fans) sick to death of Frozen, but it was so good when it first came out. The music was catchy, the storyline was strong, the animation was gorgeous, and the characters were so, so fanfiction-able.  It was also probably the last Disney movie to pull off the “you think this character is an ally but they’re really an enemy!” twist with any level of success.

    6. 12 Years a Slave

    Chiwetel Ejiofor as Solomon Northup in 12 Years A Slave (New Regency Productions)
    (New Regency Productions)

    Steve McQueen’s passion project, 12 Years a Slave was named the Best Picture winner of 2013 and I think most people agree it was a very well-deserved accolade. This extremely disturbing film stuck very closely to the Solomon Northup memoir it was based on and pulled absolutely no punches when it came to depicting the horrors of slavery. It also introduced the wider world to British actor Chiwetel Ejiofor, and made the previously-unknown Lupita Nyong’o an Oscar-winning superstar. The movie industry owes a LOT to this film!

    5. Philomena

    Judi Dench as Philomena Lee in Philomena (The Weinstein Company)
    (The Weinstein Company)

    Not one of the “big” films of 2013, just a small and quiet goddamn heartbreaker. Judi Dench plays Philomena Lee, a woman seeking the son she was forced to give up after becoming pregnant out of wedlock. It’s based on a true story, and the real Philomena—now an adoption rights campaigner—had input into it. It’s absolutely an uplifting film, Dench’s performance makes sure of that, but it also sparked an intense rage in me.

    4. The Great Gatsby

    Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby (Warner Bros.)
    (Warner Bros.)

    My thoughts when news of this movie hit: BAZ LUHRMANN is directing an adaptation of THE GREAT GATSBY? Oh my gosh. With Leonardo DiCaprio and SPIDER-MAN? WHERE DO I SIGN? Yes, I admit that there are some members of the moviegoing public who find Luhrmann’s style grating but I am absolutely not one of them. I love his rollercoaster-like approach to things. This film has a mere 48 percent on Rotten Tomatoes which baffles me to this day, though it did rightly take home the Oscars for Best Costume Design and Best Production Design.

    3. Belle

    Gugu Mbatha-Raw as Dido Elizabeth Belle in Belle (Fox Searchlight)
    (Searchlight Pictures)

    A beautifully understated period drama from Amma Asante, Belle tells the tale of a little-known figure in British history. Dido Elizabeth Belle was the daughter of an enslaved woman and a British officer who ended up being raised by white relatives in an upper-class household, and her story is absolutely one everyone should know. Gugu Mbatha-Raw brings Dido to life beautifully, and I was so happy that she became a huge star after this!

    2. Snowpiercer

    Chris Evans as Curtis in Snowpiercer (Opus Pictures)
    (The Weinstein Company)

    Snowpiercer lived in my head rent-free long after the credits rolled. How to even sum it up? “A terrifying dystopia, on a train, starring Chris Evans as a reluctant cannibal” gets the basics but still doesn’t really sell this masterpiece by constant masterpiece-maker Bong Joon-ho. It’s equal parts brutal and beautiful and I promise you will never forget it.

    1. Pacific Rim

    Rinko Kikuchi as Mako Mori in Pacific Rim (Legendary Pictures)
    (Legendary Pictures)

    It is very, very easy to get wrong a film about humans creating giant robots to destroy giant monsters. The ill-advised sequel proved that pretty conclusively. But the original Pacific Rim from Guillermo del Toro is everything cinema should be: colorful, bold, sincere, and just plain loving towards the art of film and indeed humanity in general.

    (featured image: Legendary Pictures)

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    Sarah Barrett

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  • Olivia Rodrigo Enters Her Soundtrack Era With “Can’t Catch Me Now” 

    Olivia Rodrigo Enters Her Soundtrack Era With “Can’t Catch Me Now” 

    Since everyone is in the mood to turn the clock back right now (see also: the Mean Girls x Wal-Mart commercial), it makes sense to give people a taste of going back to the 2012-2015 era by offering a new installment in the The Hunger Games saga: The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes. While Jennifer Lawrence ruled the Suzanne Collins-created universe during the aforementioned three-year period (and caught a lot of flak for later dubbing herself the first woman to lead an action movie) as Katniss Everdeen, this time around, the star of the prequel series will be Lucy Gray Baird, as played by Rachel Zegler. The latter of whom has come up quickly in the world of Major Movies after starring in Steven Spielberg’s 2021 adaptation of West Side Story. Just as Olivia Rodrigo, too, has experienced her own meteoric rise in the short two years since 2021, when “drivers license” first came out. 

    In just two short years, she’s achieved many milestones, including being the youngest artist to get three number one singles on the charts (“drivers license,” “good 4 u” and “vampire”), as well as having a record (Sour) that has become the longest-running debut to stay in the top ten of the Billboard 200 album chart. And, of course, she’s already released a sophomore album called Guts (which doesn’t display anything that gutsy, apart from more consciously aligning herself with Lana Del Rey stylings instead of Taylor Swift ones). The only thing she hasn’t done, not really (because we’re not counting High School Musical shit), is write a song specifically for a soundtrack. That is, until now. And since her greatest influences, Alanis Morrisette, Del Rey and Swift have all done that (one of them quite a few times), it was only natural for Rodrigo to finally take on this career challenge. Alas, since there’s no new installments of Twilight on the horizon, Rodrigo apparently needed to settle for the next best mass-marketed book series that would have appealed to her in her preteen years: The Hunger Games. Nothing to turn one’s nose up at, clearly, as Rodrigo has composed a soundtrack offering that rivals some of her best work on any studio album. 

    Entitled “Can’t Catch Me Now,” (which sounds like a sequel to Catch Me If You Can), Rodrigo also follows in the footsteps of her Gen Z contemporary, Billie Eilish (who provided soulful numbers for both No Time To Die and Barbie), by opting for a slow jam to punctuate the dramatic nature of a film such as this. Ostensibly told from the perspective of Lucy as she flees from the wicked clutches of Coriolanus “Coryo” Snow (Tom Blyth), the moody, guitar-laden track is once again produced by Rodrigo’s go-to, Dan Nigro. Commencing with a gentle arrangement of guitar strings, Rodrigo paints the picture, “There’s blood on the side of the mountain/There’s writing all over the wall/Shadows of us are still dancin’/In every room and every hall/There’s snow fallin’ over the city/You thought that it would wash away/The bitter taste of my fury/And all of the messes you made/Yeah, you think that you got away.”

    In truth, the song sounds like any angst-ridden Rodrigo number that seeks to invoke guilt on the part of the man who has wronged her, peppered with occasional warnings that vengeance will be hers in the end. To boot, it also possesses a certain “Carolina” by Taylor Swift tinge (this being the song Swift wrote for the Where the Crawdads Sing Soundtrack). Not just because both are slow-tempoed and dripping with accusatory venom, but because each ultimately tells a story about a girl who is left no choice but to retreat into the feral wilderness. The only place where she can ever truly be free. Swift, too, sings from the perspective of the story’s protagonist, Kya Clark, as she declares, “​​And you didn’t see me here/No, they never did see me here/And she’s in my dreams/Into the mist, into the clouds/Don’t leave/I’ll make a fist, I’ll make it count/And there are places I will never ever go.” Namely, anywhere near so-called civilization. The same can be said for Lucy, who eventually sees Snow for what he is: a tyrant and an asshole. And, yes, it seems appropriate that with a last name like Snow, Rodrigo should make mention of winter when she says, “Bet you thought I’d never do it/Thought it’d go over my head/I bet you figured I’d pass with the winter/Be somethin’ easy to forget/Oh, you think I’m gone ’cause I left.” But oh no, Lucy is right there, according to Rodrigo, haunting the trees—whether as a specter or through the mockingjays that parrot back Coryo calling out her name. 

    With Rodrigo/Lucy promising the erstwhile object of her affection that he won’t ever be able to forget her no matter how hard he tries, Swift’s influence again hovers over the song. After all, she’s always making promises like that after a jilting, e.g., “You search in every maiden’s bed for somethin’ greater, baby” (“Is It Over Now?”), “​​But now that we’re done and it’s over/I bet you couldn’t believe/When you realized I’m harder to forget than I was to leave/And I bet you think about me” (“I Bet You Think About Me”). 

    The sense of unbridled freedom that Rodrigo and Swift imbue within the protagonist whose point of view they’re embodying is also worth remarking upon. In “Carolina,” Swift details, “Carolina knows why, for years, I roam/Free as these birds, light as whispers/Carolina knows.” There’s a similar portrait drawn by Rodrigo in “Can’t Catch Me Now” when she warbles, “But I’m in the trees, I’m in the breeze/My footsteps on the ground/You’ll see my face in every place/But you can’t catch me now.” The idea is that each woman exists in nature, becoming an intrinsic part of it. So that no matter what happens, she’ll always live on “in the trees” and “in the breeze,” as Rodrigo puts it.

    Indeed, there’s something Native American-spirited in a philosophy like that, also presented when Rodrigo warns, “Through wading grass, the months will pass/You’ll feel it all around/I’m here, I’m there, I’m everywhere.” Unlike Paul McCartney in “Here, There and Everywhere,” when he says, “I want her everywhere, and if she’s beside me/I know I need never care/But to love her is to need her everywhere,” Coryo isn’t liable to be as “excited” by the prospect of Lucy’s omnipresence. Regardless, as McCartney also sings (for, clearly, this song influenced Rodrigo’s lyrics), Lucy is essentially claiming, “I will be there and everywhere/Here, there and everywhere.” Just as “Can’t Catch Me Now” will be for the next few months as it climbs the charts amid reinvigorated The Hunger Games fever.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Everything to Know About Tigris Snow Ahead of “The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes”

    Everything to Know About Tigris Snow Ahead of “The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes”

    The release of “The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes,” the “Hunger Games” prequel, is just around the corner, and it’s the perfect time to catch up on everything “Hunger Games” before the release of the film on Nov. 17. The prequel, which takes place 64 years prior to the events of the Hunger Games trilogy, follows the story of Coriolanus Snow (played by Tom Blyth) and his relationship with Lucy Gray Baird, a tribute and eventual victor of the 10th Hunger Games (played by Rachel Zegler).

    The film will introduce new characters like Casca Highbottom (Peter Dinklage), the dean of the Academy, and Dr. Volumnia Gaul (Viola Davis), the head game maker. But the prequel will also feature familiar characters like Tigris Snow, Coriolanus’s cousin, and one of the key characters that helped Katniss in the Capitol in “Mockingjay.” In the original movies, Tigris is played by Eugenie Bondurant, but she’ll be played by Hunter Schafer in the prequel, and the movie will explore her backstory and her relationship with her cousin.

    Here’s everything to know about Tigris Snow, including spoilers for “The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes.”

    Tigris Snow in The Hunger Games Books

    What Happens to Tigris Snow in “The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes”?

    In “The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes,” Tigris’s parents die early during the Dark Days, aka the collapse of the First Rebellion 74 years prior to the events of the Hunger Games series. After their death, she is sent to live with her cousin Coriolanus and their grandmother, Grandma’am. Tigris attends the Academy and eventually the University, where she studies fashion. Tigris and Coriolanus have a close relationship, and she supports her cousin when he is selected as a mentor for the 10th annual Hunger Games, encouraging him to meet his tribute, Lucy Gray, at the train station when she arrives at the Capitol.

    Tigris grows to care for Lucy deeply and offers her clothes to wear for the interviews, mends her iconic rainbow dress, and helps with makeup as well, unofficially becoming the first stylist for the Games. Throughout the Games, Tigris is horrified by the violence and cruelty the tributes face in the arena, and eventually, it influences her decision to join the Second Rebellion later on.

    Her relationship with Coriolanus sours as she watches her cousin rise to power, and she eventually comes to resent President Snow. Tigris eventually becomes an official stylist for the Games and goes through a number of cosmetic procedures to make her features more felinelike over the years. Tigris also gets several tattoos to add to her feline look.

    What Happens to Tigris in the Original Hunger Games Trilogy?

    After the events of “The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes,” Tigris makes her first appearance in the Hunger Games trilogy in “Mockingjay” when she joins Plutarch Heavensbee and the efforts to overthrow President Snow in the Second Rebellion.

    Tigris now owns a shop for fur-lined clothes in the Capitol and houses refugees during the Second Rebellion. Tigris helps hide Katniss, Peeta, and the rest of Squad 451 under her store when they enter the Capitol to assassinate Snow. Katniss recalls seeing Tigris in earlier Hunger Games, and Tigris confirms that President Snow and the Gamemakers eventually had her fired due to her surgical enhancements.

    Tigris feeds them and then goes around the Capitol to collect intel for Katniss and the 451 Squad to aid in their plans to assassinate President Snow. Before they leave, Tigris provides them all with clothes to disguise them as Capitol citizens. Tigris survives the war, but her ultimate fate after that is unknown.

    Tigris Snow in the The Hunger Games Movies

    Tigris’s role in the original Hunger Games movie franchise was minimal, as she makes her first appearance in the final film, “Mockingjay Part II.” Like in the books, she helps hide Katniss, Peeta, and the other members of the 451 Squad, and she provides them with food, shelter, and intel on President Snow.

    Schafer’s Tigris will be an important part of “The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes” movie, as viewers will meet her prior to her surgical enhancements and tattoos, and her relationship with Coriolanus will be front and center.

    Athena Sobhan

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  • Peter Dinklage talks about his The Hunger Games prequel character: “I love the tragedy…”

    Peter Dinklage talks about his The Hunger Games prequel character: “I love the tragedy…”

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes delves into the early life of a young Coriolanus Snow (played by Tom Blyth) as he transforms into the infamous villain from the film franchise. Along with exploring the origins of The Hunger Games, the film introduces new characters such as Viola Davis’ villainous Volumnia Gaul and Peter Dinklage’s Dean Highbottom, the creator of the brutal games. The impressive new cast includes Rachel Zegler, Hunter Schafer and Josh Andres Rivera.

    The Game of Thrones star opened up about his character in The Hunger Games saying, “I love the tragedy in Highbottom because he’s dealing with the guilt of the consequences of co-creating the Games because it’s now out of his control. The genie has been uncorked and running mad and he can’t get it back in.”

    Peter continued, “To Highbottom, Coriolanus represents his father; he looks and sounds and behaves like him, at least in my mind. Highbottom has a feeling that history is going to repeat itself, and he doesn’t trust this young man and has an eye on him for good reason.”

    Peter Dinklage The Hunger Games

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes is scheduled to hit the theatres in India on November 17, 2023.

    See Also: Rachel Zegler and Tom Blyth share their thoughts on The Hunger Games franchise 

    Filmfare

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  • Get To Know Tigris Snow Before ‘The Hunger Games: A Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes’

    Get To Know Tigris Snow Before ‘The Hunger Games: A Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes’

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes takes us back to Panem long before Katniss Everdeen volunteered as tribute. The upcoming prequel movie, based on the book of the same name by author Suzanne Collins, will introduce viewers to a younger Coriolanus Snow and other members of his family, like Tigris Snow.

    The prequel to The Hunger Games series, The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, is coming to theaters soon. It takes place roughly 64 years before the main series, and audiences will get to see the formidable President Snow as an 18-year-old kid. This Coriolanus Snow, as played by Tom Blyth, is still trying to reconcile the horrors of the recent war with how his family’s future will play out in Panem. The Snow family was once associated with the wealth and upper class of the Capitol. After the war, they fell on hard times financially. They may still live in a fancy high-rise condo, but they often don’t have enough food to eat. All that remains of the once-great Snow family is Coriolanus, his aging grandmother, and his cousin, Tigris.

    Who is Tigris Snow?

    Tigris Snow is the backbone of the Snow family during the events of Songbirds and Snakes. With their grandmother not able to do much, Coriolanus and Tigris must fend for themselves. Coriolanus is trying to ensure their family’s future by attending school. Once he’s done, he should be able to get a good enough job to pull them out of their financial troubles. In the meantime, Tigris pretty much supports the family on her own. She is a few years older than Coriolanus and has worked to find a low-level position in the fashion industry. In addition to working, Tigris does most of the shopping and food preparation for the Snows. There are hints that she may have also performed sex work to ensure her family stayed afloat.

    A woman who looks like a tiger in 'The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2.'
    (Lionsgate)

    This isn’t the first time Hunger Games fans will have seen Tigris. In the Mockingjay book and the movie adaptation The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2, Tigris helps Katniss and her friends. When Katniss’ team is trying to make their way to the Snow house, they find refuge with Tigris (Eugenie Bondurant). The older Tigris is known in the Capitol for her bold fashion designs. However, she was ostracized by society for making her appearance “too extreme” in her quest to look like a tiger. President Snow himself fired her from working on the fashions of the Hunger Games because he couldn’t stand how she looked. Knowing that they are related and that she kept him alive for years makes his dismissal even worse.

    Euphoria‘s Hunter Schafer will play Tigris in the upcoming film, premiering in theaters on November 17.

    This piece was written during the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike. Without the labor of the actors currently on strike, the work being covered here wouldn’t exist.

    (featured image: Lionsgate)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    D.R. Medlen

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  • A ‘Hunger Games’ Stage Play Will Debut in 2024

    A ‘Hunger Games’ Stage Play Will Debut in 2024

    The phenomenal teen fiction series, The Hunger Games, is finally coming to the stage. The show premieres in London, during the fall of 2024.

    The stage show will be based on the first book in the series, written by Suzanne Collins. That means it will feature Katniss Everdeen, the character portrayed in the movie series by Jennifer Lawrence. (That means the play will be casting a new Katniss.)

    Matthew Dunster (known for Hangmen) will direct, while Conor McPherson is in charge of the stageplay. The author of the series herself expressed her excitement at seeing the project come to fruition, saying:

    I’m very excited to be collaborating with the amazing team of Conor McPherson and Matthew Dunster as they bring their dynamic and innovative interpretation of The Hunger Games to the London stage,” Collins said.

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes
    Lionsgate

    READ MORE: Young Adult Adaptations You Forgot Existed

    McPherson was honored to receive Collins’ blessing.

    She has created a classic story which continues to resonate now more than ever … In a world where the truth itself seems increasingly up for grabs, The Hunger Games beautifully expresses values of resilience, self-reliance and independent moral inquiry for younger people especially.

    YA adaptations are apparently all the rage on the stage these days. The Harry Potter play has been running successfully for years in London and on Broadway; the play based on Stranger Things is set to debut on the West End in less than a month. Meanwhile, The Hunger Games film series is about to relaunch with a prequel (based on another Collins novel) The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. It opens in theaters on November 17.

    LOOK: The #1 Summer Movie the Year You Graduated High School

    Stacker compiled Box Office Mojo data on summer movies dating back to 1975 and listed the #1 film at the box office each summer.

    Gallery Credit: Stacker

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • ‘Hunger Games’ Director Says Final Movies Should Have Never Been Split: “I Totally Regret It”

    ‘Hunger Games’ Director Says Final Movies Should Have Never Been Split: “I Totally Regret It”

    When the new installment in the Hunger Games franchise, a prequel film titled The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes based on Suzanne Collins’s 2020 novel, hits theaters next month, it will adapt a very long book in its entirety. Director Francis Lawrence, who also helmed three of the four original Hunger Games movies, said he learned his lesson after splitting the final Hunger Games book across two movies.

    Mockingjay: Part One arrived in theaters in November 2014 and grossed more than $755 million worldwide but was ultimately viewed as an appetizer to the satisfying main course of Mockingjay: Part Two, which debuted in November 2015. The franchise’s final installment earned about $100 million less than Part One at the global box office, suggesting some fans weren’t willing to wait a full year for resolution.

    “I totally regret it,” Lawrence told People of stretching the contents of Collins’s book into two films. “I’m not sure everybody does, but I definitely do.” While he originally maintained that the “two halves of Mockingjay had their own separate dramatic questions” and thus deserved individual outings, Lawrence feels differently nearly a decade later. “What I realized in retrospect—and after hearing all the reactions and feeling the kind of wrath of fans, critics and people at the split—is that I realized it was frustrating. And I can understand it.”

    Lawrence and Lionsgate were ostensibly following the lead of its YA book-to-movie forebears like Twilight and Harry Potter, which also split their final films into two parts. The upside was that “we got more on the screen out of the book than we would’ve in any of the other movies because you’re getting close to four hours of screen time for the final book.”

    But the filmmaker says he can see why a year-long wait between movies can feel deceitful. “In an episode of television, if you have a cliff-hanger, you have to wait a week, or you could just binge it and then you can see the next episode. But making people wait a year, I think, came across as disingenuous, even though it wasn’t,” Lawrence said. “Our intentions were not to be disingenuous.”

    His peace offering ahead of the prequel? The longest Hunger Games movie ever made, at a runtime of 2 hours and 36 minutes. “I would never let them split the book in two,” Lawrence said. “There was never a real conversation about it. It’s a long book, but we got so much shit for splitting Mockingjay into two—from fans, from critics, from everybody—that I was like, ‘No way. I’ll just make a longer movie.’”

    And a lengthier movie ye shall receive when The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes debuts in theaters November 17.

    Savannah Walsh

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  • The Hunger Games Begin in ‘Songbirds And Snakes’ Trailer

    The Hunger Games Begin in ‘Songbirds And Snakes’ Trailer

    The Hunger Games franchise begins a new chapter with The Ballad Of Songbirds & Snakes. The film is a prequel, and follows the rise of Coriolanus Snow and the early history of the Games. In the later entries in the series chronologically, Snow is the leader of Panem and the ruler of the Capitol.

    While Snow might seem like he has himself under control most of the time, he hides a ruthless and evil interior. Of course, there must have been specific events that led him to be the way he is. A villain like him doesn’t come along out of nowhere. The Ballad Of Songbirds & Snakes explains those events. He was born into a rich family, but he was orphaned during the course of a war. Without spoiling too much about what’s going to go down in the film, Snow is faced with some serious ethical dilemmas. Since we see how he ends up later on, it’s safe to say he probably doesn’t make all the right calls.

    Watch the new Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes trailer below:

    READ MORE: 10 Random Movies That Are Inexplicable Hits on Netflix

    Francis Lawrence, director of most of the other Hunger Games sequels returns for this entry. The movie also features tons of great actors like Viola Davis and Peter Dinklage.

    Here is the prequel’s official synopsis:

    THE HUNGER GAMES: THE BALLAD OF SONGBIRDS & SNAKES follows a young Coriolanus (Tom Blyth) who is the last hope for his failing lineage, the once-proud Snow family that has fallen from grace in a post-war Capitol. With his livelihood threatened, Snow is reluctantly assigned to mentor Lucy Gray Baird (Rachel Zegler), a tribute from the impoverished District 12. But after Lucy Gray’s charm captivates the audience of Panem, Snow sees an opportunity to shift their fates. With everything he has worked for hanging in the balance, Snow unites with Lucy Gray to turn the odds in their favor. Battling his instincts for both good and evil, Snow sets out on a race against time to survive and reveal if he will ultimately become a songbird or a snake.

    The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes is scheduled to open in theaters on November 17.

    The Best Sequels Not Made By the Original Movie’s Director

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Jennifer Lawrence Smacks Down Kissing Complaints From Liam Hemsworth

    Jennifer Lawrence Smacks Down Kissing Complaints From Liam Hemsworth

    Jennifer Lawrence wants Liam Hemsworth to “get over it.”

    Though fans of the attractive actors were presumably delighted to see them kiss in 2014′s “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay — Part 1,” Hemsworth was anything but. The Australian famously revealed as much on “The Tonight Show” that year.

    “Any time I had to kiss Jennifer was pretty uncomfortable,” Hemsworth told host Jimmy Fallon.

    “When you look at it on the outside, it looks like a great picture,” he continued. “She’s one of my best friends. I love her. But if we had a kissing scene, she would make a point of eating garlic or tuna fish or something that was disgusting.”

    Lawrence, who is currently promoting the R-rated sex comedy “No Hard Feelings,” addressed her former co-star’s claim on Thursday’s episode of the online show “Hot Ones.”

    “It was not intentional,” she told host Sean Evans through rather revealing laughter. “It was just what I was eating, and then we’d kiss. He should just get over it.”

    The actors’ decade-spanning gibes seem to be nothing but playful banter, however. Lawrence previously praised Hemsworth in an interview with Nylon in 2014, saying that he “taught me how to be fair and to stand up for myself.”

    Jennifer Lawrence and Liam Hemsworth became close friends while working on “The Hunger Games.”

    Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty Images

    “I’m a wimp about standing up for myself and Liam is always fair,” she told the outlet. “He’s always on time, he’s always doing his job, and he’s good about making sure that things stay fair. He’s teaching me to toughen up a little bit. That was important, I need that.”

    Lawrence also told Nylon that she never expected to “have a man this good-looking ever be my best friend.”

    The two certainly appeared to form a close bond as their “Hunger Games” fame skyrocketed.

    “The boys and I would always go back to our hotel and just drink whiskey and get stoned,” Lawrence told The New York Times last year about Hemsworth and fellow “Hunger Games” actor Josh Hutcherson.

    “I don’t do it anymore, I’m a mom!” she was quick to add.

    The Kentucky native welcomed her first child earlier in 2022 following her marriage to art gallery director Cooke Maroney in 2019. (Hopefully she’s easing up on the garlic these days, for Maroney’s sake.)

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  • ‘No Hard Feelings’ Is a Perfect Reintroduction to Jennifer Lawrence

    ‘No Hard Feelings’ Is a Perfect Reintroduction to Jennifer Lawrence

    But while Maddie isn’t Lawrence, and Lawrence isn’t Maddie, she’s a fantastic reintroduction to the actor. Director David O. Russell was famous for casting Lawrence as characters she was logically way too young to play, in Silver Linings Playbook, American Hustle, and Joy. But in No Hard Feelings, we finally get to see the actor playing her own age, 32. (Or, as her character puts it: She “turned 29…last year…two years ago.”) She also gets to throw herself wholeheartedly into the physical comedy she excels at. (Nobody gets maced for laughs like Jennifer Lawrence, and let’s not even talk about that throat punch.) At the same time, she’s delivering a dramatic performance that rings true. As it turns out, you don’t need to be so serious to be taken seriously.

    Maybe if that script Lawrence said she was writing with Amy Schumer back in the day—a comedy starring the two as sisters that Schumer described as “funny,” “dirty,” and “real”—had come to fruition, we could have seen this side of Lawrence on the big screen sooner. Maybe the success of a Lawrence-starring straight comedy (unlike the knowing satire of 2021’s Don’t Look Up) and her producing arm means the script will resurface and we’ll finally get to see it. Better late than never. In the meantime, No Hard Feelings feels like a movie that Lawrence would actually want to watch; she’s having fun, and it shows.

    No Hard Feelings can also be read as a reclamation of sorts. In 2014, Lawrence was among a group of celebrities whose information was hacked, and nude photos of her were posted online without her permission. A few months after the crime, she told Vanity Fair that she’d thought about making a statement, but nothing felt right or fair. “I started to write an apology, but I don’t have anything to say I’m sorry for,” she said. It was a violation.

    In No Hard Feelings, Lawrence is nude during the aforementioned beach ass-whooping—a shocking moment in the age of careful cut-arounds and implied nudity. When her private photos were hacked, Lawrence told VF, she felt “like a piece of meat that’s being passed around for a profit.” Now the nudity is coming on her own terms. Lawrence is a producer of No Hard Feelings; nobody bullied her into making this scene. She’s fully naked, she’s pissed, and she looks strong.

    Even off-screen, Lawrence seems to be thriving in her new freedom to be goofy. At the film’s New York premiere, she stopped by the overflow theater where lowly members of the press, myself included, were watching the film, far removed from all the glam down the hall. “Enjoy da mooooovie!” she bellowed over her shoulder in a silly voice as she exited the theater and the lights went down.

    Certainly, there’s no question about whether Lawrence enjoyed it.

    Kase Wickman

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