Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Jennifer Lawrence in Bikinis at Esquire shoot


The mega hot Jennifer Lawrence was featured recently in Esquire Magazine. This pictorial, I believe, cemented her as the hottest girl in the planet right now, thanks to the overwhelming success of her movie, The Hunger Games, where she played the lead role as Katniss Everdeen.




Monday, March 26, 2012

'The Hunger Games': Can Jennifer Lawrence score a second Oscar nomination?

A Hunger Games movie update from EW.com...

 

After starring in The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, Rooney Mara managed to land a Best Actress Oscar nomination for her performance in the violent film adaptation of a cult-smash novel. Can Jennifer Lawrence do the same with The Hunger Games? At this point we have no real idea of what her potential competition could be, but I’d say it’s not out of the question. After all, Lawrence has already caught the Academy’s eye thanks to her breakout turn in the 2010 Sundance hit Winter’s Bone. And The Hunger Games has become an instant hit with both audiences and critics. In her review of Hunger Games, my colleague Lisa Schwarzbaum said that Lawrence “is, in her gravity, her intensity, and her own unmannered beauty, about as impressive a Hollywood incarnation of Katniss as one could ever imagine… Lawrence is expressive in her stillness, and moves with athletic confidence.”

The main question is whether Lawrence’s buzz can last all the way through early next year. A Best Actress nomination from a March release isn’t unheard of — there’s Kate Winslet for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Julia Roberts in Erin Brockovich, and Frances McDormand in Fargo — but it’s certainly the exception to the rule. If she pulls off a nomination next January, Lawrence (who’ll be 22 by that time) will be the youngest two-time Best Actress nominee ever. Winslet, meanwhile, was also 22 when she scored her second career nod (for Titanic), but her first Academy recognition, for Sense & Sensibility, was in the supporting category. So while it’s super early to say the least, we may find ourselves talking about Katniss long after The Hunger Games is gone from theaters.

The Hunger Games breaks box office records

A Hunger Games movie update from the Nationalpost.com...


Post-apocalyptic action movie The Hunger Games opened with a staggering US$155-million at and Canadian box offices, beating Hollywood’s lofty expectations and making history as the third-highest domestic film opening.

Internationally, the Lions Gate Entertainment drama about an oppressive society’s teen death match added $59.3 million from 67 markets for a global haul of US$214.3-million.

The massive U.S. and Canadian debut for the film ranked behind only last summer’s “Harry Potter” finale and 2008 Batman movie The Dark Knight, Lions Gate said.

The movie’s success brings the first blockbuster franchise to Lions Gate, a smaller Hollywood studio best known previously for the Saw horror series and comedian Tyler Perry’s films.

Hunger Games set records for highest opening of a non-sequel film and biggest debut outside the summer blockbuster season.

“The first movie in a franchise, to post a number like this, is really insane. There is no other word for it,” said Phil Contrino, editor of Boxoffice.com.

Harry Potter had seven movies before it got to that point, and Dark Knighthad years and years of building the Batman brand. This movie comes and hangs with them in the same league,” Contrino said.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 opened with US$169.2-million domestically over its opening weekend, while Dark Knight took in US$158.4-million, according to Hollywood.com.

Hunger Games is an action-filled survival drama based on the first of three best-selling young adult novels by Suzanne Collins. Jennifer Lawrence stars as Katniss Everdeen, a teen girl who fights in a televised battle-to-the-death ordered by her society’s rulers. Everdeen becomes a beacon of hope for freedom against the totalitarian government.

Lions Gate executives got a sense of the huge appetite for “Hunger Games” when they ventured with director Gary Ross and producer Nina Jacobson to the ArcLight Cinema in Hollywood late Thursday ahead of the first screenings just after midnight.

Fans packed the lobby for showings on multiple screens, with many of the book’s devotees dressed as characters. Similar scenes occurred across the country. By Saturday evening, executives went to bed thinking the film would finish the weekend with about US$140-million domestically. But sales held up stronger than expected from Friday night to Saturday night, dropping just 25% instead of the typical 40 percent or more.

“To launch a franchise like this is incredible. It’s above and beyond our expectations,” David Spitz, executive vice president of domestic distribution for Lions Gate, said on Sunday. “We’re just going to enjoy the ride.”

Going into the weekend, industry forecasters projected about US$125-million in domestic receipts from Friday through Sunday. Box-office watchers compared the movie’s drawing power to the Twilight vampire romance films, another franchise based on popular young adult books.

The Hunger Games blew past the domestic debuts for each of the first four Twilight films, which Lions Gate now owns after buying Summit Entertainment in January.

Hunger Games rung up an average of US$37,467 at 4,137 domestic locations from Friday through Sunday.

Audiences applauded the film adaptation of the book, giving the movie an “A” grade on average in polling by survey firm CinemaScore.

Hunger Games appealed to more adults and more males than Twilight, which banked a large chunk of its receipts from teenage girls, Contrino said. Fifty-six percent of the Hunger Games audience was over age 25, and 39% was male.

The movie cost about US$80-million to produce after tax credits. The studio pre-sold distribution rights in foreign markets other than Britain to cut its cost to about US$30-million. That reduced the risk but also limited the money Lions Gate will get from overseas sales.

Elsewhere this weekend, Hunger Games had little competition at the domestic box office. No other new movies were released nationwide.

Comedy 21 Jump Street took second place for the weekend with US$21.3-million, and animated Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax finished third with US$13.1-million.

Rounding out the top five, Disney sci-fi adventure John Carter pulled in US$5-million, and military drama Act of Valor grossed US$2.1-million.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

‘The Hunger Games’ Premiere

A Hunger Games movie update from http://blogs.wsj.com...

 
“The Hunger Games” held its premiere in Los Angeles tonight. The long-awaited film version of the bestselling novel drew a celebrity crowd, including stars Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth and Elizabeth Banks. If the world has learned anything from the recent lukewarm box office and critical reception of “John Carter,” it’s that not every book adaptation does justice to its source material. Will the big-screen version of “The Hunger Games” live up to the images you have in your head from reading the book? We’ll all find out soon. The movie opens nationally on March 23.

Taylor Swift Debuts Second Hunger Games Single in Concert

A Hunger Games movie update from Thehollywoodgossip.com...


Taylor Swift is back with her second song off The Hunger Games soundtrack.

The superstar, who has already released the official video for "Safe and Sound," surprised fans in New Zealand over the weekend with an acoustic version of "Open Eyes," a track that will accompany Katniss and company on screen this Friday when the biggest movie of the year opens.




"I'm really excited about it... but, I mean, you don't think I'd get in trouble if I played it now? Probably not, right?" Swift teased thousands of attendees in Auckland before launching into the track.

Meet the Woman Who Created 'The Hunger Games'

A Hunger Games movie update from ABC News...


If you looked closely during the frenzied Hollywood premiere of "The Hunger Games," past the enormous lines of rabid fans, past the young movie stars in their couture dresses, you could catch a fleeting glimpse of Suzanne Collins, the woman who made it all possible.

The media-shy mother of two is America's answer to J.K. Rowling. Collins is the author of the thunderously successful trilogy of books set in a futuristic dystopia where every year a tyrannical government forces a teenager to fight to the death on reality television.

"I was flipping through images of reality television, there were these young people competing for a million dollars ... and I saw images of the Iraq War," Collins said in a video from her publisher, Scholastic. "Two things began to sort of fuse together in a very unsettling way, and there is really the moment when I got the idea for Katniss' story."

At the heart of "The Hunger Games" is its heroine, the fierce Katniss Everdeen, who the Atlantic Monthly called "the most important female character in recent pop culture history." She is a far cry from "The Twilight Saga's" Bella, often a damsel in distress.

But "The Hunger Games" is much heavier than most young adult fare, and some people have complained that it is too violent for kids. But Collins, whose father served in Vietnam when she was a little girl, wants young people to think critically about the brutality of war and culture's desensitization to violence.

"What do you think about choices your government past or present, or other governments around the world make?" Collins said in a video posted on YouTube. "What's your relationship to reality TV versus your relationship to news? Was there anything that disturbed you because it reflected aspects of your own life, and what can you do about it?"

In the movie Katniss is played by Oscar nominee Jennifer Lawrence.

"She is simply standing up for what's right, when something is wrong," Lawrence said. "She is kind of this futuristic Joan of Arc."

Her story has struck a chord not just with teenagers but with adults too, both women and men.

"If you look as the basic themes of 'The Hunger Games,' they apply not just to teenage women," said Robert Thompson, director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University. "They apply to human beings as well -- feeling oppressed by authority, wanting but not having independence, existing in a hostile world."

Tested by a Picturesque Dystopia

A Hunger Games movie update from Nytimes.com...


There’s a short anxious scene in the new film “The Hunger Games” when its 16-year-old heroine, Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence), races through a deep, dark forest; falls down a hill; and rolls and rolls, only to rise up and thrust herself again into the unknown. Katniss, the lethally tough linchpin from Suzanne Collins’s trilogy of novels turned into a rather less imposing film heroine, is a teenage survivalist in a postapocalyptic take on a familiar American myth. When she runs through that forest, and even when she falls, there’s something of the American frontiersman in her, as if she were Natty Bumppo reborn and resexed.

For as long as this brief scene lasts, it seems possible that Gary Ross, the unlikely and at times frustratingly ill-matched director for this brutal, unnerving story, has caught the heart-skipping pulse of Michael Mann’s “Last of the Mohicans” if not that film’s ravishing technique and propulsive energy. Alas, Mr. Ross, the director of the genial entertainments “Pleasantville” and “Seabiscuit,” and whose script credits include “Big,” has a way of smoothing even modestly irregular edges. Katniss, who for years has bagged game to keep her family from starving, was created for rough stuff — for beating the odds and the state, for hunting squirrel and people both — far rougher than Mr. Ross often seems comfortable with, perhaps because of disposition, inclination or some behind-the-scenes executive mandate.

It may be that Mr. Ross is too nice a guy for a hard case like Katniss. A brilliant, possibly historic creation — stripped of sentimentality and psychosexual ornamentation, armed with Diana’s bow and a ferocious will — Katniss is a new female warrior, and she keeps you watching even while you’re hoping for something better the next time around. (Mr. Ross is onboard to direct the follow-up, “Catching Fire.”) For some fans of the trilogy, the screen version will inevitably be disappointing, especially for those keeping inventory of the details, characters, grim thoughts and cynicism that have gone missing. For others the image of a girl like Katniss taking up so much screen space with so few smiles may be enough to keep faith.

The screenplay by Mr. Ross, Ms. Collins and Billy Ray hews dutifully close to its source material, at least in wide strokes. Katniss lives in District 12 of Panem — as in panem et circenses, Latin for bread and circuses — a totalitarian state that has risen from the postwar ashes of North America. Every year a boy and a girl ages 12 to 18 are chosen from each Panem district to compete in the gladiatorial games of the title, a fight that owes something to that ancient Roman blood sport and something else to the Greek myth of the Minotaur, the part man, part bull that devoured Athenian youths given in tribute. The Minotaur is eventually slain, but that’s getting ahead of Katniss.

The film takes off at the selection ceremony, or reaping, a nationally televised event complete with armed soldiers and a bubbly bubblehead M.C. (Elizabeth Banks), during which Katniss’s younger sister, Primrose (Willow Shields), is chosen. Katniss quickly volunteers to take Prim’s place, becoming, with Peeta (Josh Hutcherson), District 12’s tributes. The two are whisked off to the Capitol, where they’re plucked and primped by a team of gaudily hued stylists (overseen by a gilt-lidded Lenny Kravitz as Cinna), a potentially razor-sharp sequence that should underscore the Capitol’s decadence but here comes across as a variant on Dorothy’s cheery wash- and brush-up when she enters the Emerald City. Katniss may not be in Kansas, but neither does she seem in palpable danger.

That changes once she and Peeta are transported to the outdoor arena where, with wits and weapons, they battle the other tributes and assorted perils generated by the game makers (including a dandified Wes Bentley), who dole out death via computer touch screen. There, in a rapidly cut massacre that pits boy against girl and finds youngsters killing and falling and dying in a frantic, fragmented blur, Mr. Ross and his editors, Stephen Mirrione and Juliette Welfling, set the stage and stark mood. For her part Katniss, though frozen in fear, follows the advice of her and Peeta’s mentor, Haymitch (an overly cute Woody Harrelson), and runs in the opposite direction. It’s a strong, visceral scene that quickens the pace and pulse, and distills the story’s horror — suffer the little children to enter the arena — in blunt visual terms.

Nothing else in the arena comes close to that initial fight in its sheer primal impact. Working with Tom Stern, Clint Eastwood’s longtime cinematographer, Mr. Ross tries to find mystery in the forest, in its canopy of trees and thick undergrowth, but never locates a deeper dread, despite the computer-generated fireballs and hounds, and especially the other tributes. Part of what makes the “Hunger Games” books so effective is that they literalize the familiar drama of adolescence, translating the emotional assaults, peer pressure, cliques and the tortured rest into warfare. “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” did the same on television, except there the villains were supernatural demons. In “The Hunger Games” the real enemies are adults, including, of course, the parents catching the show on TV.

Fans of the Japanese cult film “Battle Royale” may see some overlap with its allegory about juvenile delinquents sent to an island to fight to the death, and others may be reminded of Orson Scott Card’s science-fiction novel “Ender’s Game,” about children trained to battle an alien species. If you’ve seen the pint-size assassins in the recent action flicks “Kick-Ass” and “Hanna,” which feature prepubescent girls who lock, load and shoot without batting a lash, you may think you’ve also seen it before. You haven’t, not really. Although the girls in those movies are vaguely sexualized, their age exempts them from the narrative burdens of heterosexual romance. They don’t have to bat those lashes at the boys, and they don’t need to be saved by them either, as in the “Twilight” series.

What invests Katniss with such exciting promise and keeps you rapt even when the film proves less than equally thrilling is that she also doesn’t need saving, even if she’s at an age when, most movies still insist, women go weak at the knees and whimper and weep while waiting to be saved. Again and again Katniss rescues herself with resourcefulness, guts and true aim, a combination that makes her insistently watchable, despite Mr. Ross’s soft touch and Ms. Lawrence’s bland performance. One look at District 12, which Mr. Ross conceives as a picturesque old-timey town — filled with withered Dorothea Lange types in what was once Appalachia — and it’s clear that someone here was enthralled with the actress’s breakout turn in “Winter’s Bone” as a willful, resilient child of the Ozarks.

A few years ago Ms. Lawrence might have looked hungry enough to play Katniss, but now, at 20, her seductive, womanly figure makes a bad fit for a dystopian fantasy about a people starved into submission. The graver problem is a disengaged performance that rarely suggests the terrors Katniss faces, including the fatalism that originally hangs on her like a shroud. What finally saves the character and film both is the image of her on the run, moving relentlessly forward. Unlike those American Adams who have long embodied the national character with their reserves of hope, innocence and optimism, Katniss springs from someplace else, a place in which an American Eve, battered, bruised and deeply knowing, scrambles through a garden not of her making on her way to a new world.

“The Hunger Games” is rated PG-13. (Parents strongly cautioned.) Brutal child-on-child violence and death.

The Hunger Games Opens on Friday nationwide.

Directed by Gary Ross; written by Mr. Ross, Suzanne Collins and Billy Ray, based on the novel by Ms. Collins; director of photography, Tom Stern; edited by Stephen Mirrione and Juliette Welfling; music by James Newton Howard; production design by Philip Messina; costumes by Judianna Makovsky; produced by Nina Jacobson and Jon Kilik; released by Lionsgate. Running time: 2 hours 22 minutes.

WITH: Jennifer Lawrence (Katniss Everdeen), Josh Hutcherson (Peeta Mellark), Liam Hemsworth (Gale Hawthorne), Woody Harrelson (Haymitch Abernathy), Elizabeth Banks (Effie Trinket), Lenny Kravitz (Cinna), Stanley Tucci (Caesar Flickerman), Donald Sutherland (President Snow), Wes Bentley (Seneca Crane), Toby Jones (Claudius Templesmith), Alexander Ludwig (Cato), Isabelle Fuhrman (Clove), Amandla Stenberg (Rue) and Willow Shields (Primrose Everdeen).

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

'The Hunger Games': From the bookshelf to the big screen

 A Hunger Games movie update from CNN.com...


Adapting a beloved novel for the big screen often guarantees a solid showing at the box office. "The Hunger Games" looks to be no exception.

Based on Suzanne Collins' young adult novel, the movie is on track to rake in more than $80 million its opening weekend, reports say.

But existing story lines, settings and dynamic characters are often accompanied by moviegoers' idealistic expectations, leaving screenwriters to ponder: How do you honor the novel and please readers without compromising the film?

Luckily for fans, "Hunger Games" screenwriter and director Gary Ross said he found a way.

"I still want to go to that movie the same way everybody else does. I want to see aspects of the novel preserved," Ross told CNN. "I'm a fan first. ... I loved the book so much. I didn't have any desire to rework (it) in any major way."

However, Ross said certain aspects of "The Hunger Games" just don't translate cinematically.

Those who have read the books, told from 16-year-old Katniss Everdeen's perspective, already know why.

"The Hunger Games" takes place in a post-apocalyptic world, in the fictional nation of Panem. Every year, one boy and one girl "tribute" are randomly selected from the nation's 12 districts to compete in the Hunger Games, a televised fight to the death.

Wealthy Capitol citizens called Gamemakers manipulate the Hunger Games. Though they only briefly appear in the novel, their presence is felt by Katniss, a District 12 tribute, throughout the Games.

"I can't shoot inside Katniss' head," Ross said. "In the book, she speculates about what the Gamemakers are doing. Well, we created a whole (visual) world that the (Gamemakers) are in."

There may be departures in the adaptation process, Ross added, but in the grand scheme of things, the movie is faithful to the novel.

Dayo Okeniyi, who plays Thresh, a tribute from District 11, also stressed the importance of honoring Collins' novel at a recent movie premiere.

"If we deviate much, there are fans out there who will stalk me and kill me," Okeniyi joked. "(The fans) don't ask for much. At the same time they watch everything ... 'Oh, she's supposed to be looking at the right, not the left' -- little details."

While sticking to the novel might keep fans of the book series happy, telling the story scene by scene would yield a long, drawn-out cinematic experience, said Thelma Adams, a contributing editor at Yahoo! Movies.

"You've got to be willing to cut," she said. "Find out which characters are central and which aren't. Which relationships are central and which aren't."

Adams said "Hunger Games" screenwriters Ross, Collins and Billy Ray were smart to streamline a few characters, while pushing others into larger roles, such as head Gamemaker Seneca Crane.

Casting the right actors is imperative when adapting a novel for the big screen, she said, adding that Jennifer Lawrence, Liam Hemsworth and Josh Hutcherson are "pitch perfect" for their roles as Katniss, Gale Hawthorne and Peeta Mellark, respectively.

"You can't say that about every (role)," she said. "You can't say that 'Twilight's' Peter Facinelli -- he's the only one who could have played (Carlisle Cullen.) He's not."

Let's not forget how angry "Twilight" fans were when brunette Nikki Reed was first cast as Rosalie Cullen.

It's no secret fans want popular characters to look a certain way, specifically how they envisioned them while they were reading the book.

"Reading is a really intimate, internal experience, where you play your own movie in your head," screenwriter Will Fetters said.

Fetters, who adapted Nicholas Sparks' novel "The Lucky One," which hits theaters in April, added that it helps if certain books already read like they were constructed for film -- "The Hunger Games" being one of them.

Despite the intense, made-for-the-big-screen action sequences in "Games," Ross said there was plenty to be concerned about in adapting it to the screen.

"A lot of the action stuff, you know that's hard work, and you know you're going to get it," Ross said. "But it's really the delicate stuff. ... It's those intangible things you really have to capture: Katniss' character, her relationship with Rue, her relationship with her sister. ... It's that kind of stuff that's very difficult."

Collins, who had a hand in the screenwriting process, took to her Facebook page to share her thoughts on the adaptation of her novel: "I feel like the book and the film are individual yet complementary pieces that enhance one another."

Which is how it should be, Fetters said.

"When going to an adaptation, you're going understanding that it's not going to be the exact images you saw," he added. "We're all working under constraints to interpret what we saw in our heads and hope that it's the same thing readers saw."

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Jennifer Lawrence Is 'Crazy' Good In 'Hunger Games'

A Hunger Games movie update from Mtv.com...


'It's amazing, honestly, to watch her effortlessly flip back and forth,' Josh Hutcherson tells MTV News of castmate's performance as Katniss.





Although there were a few skeptics out there who questioned the casting of Jennifer Lawrence in "The Hunger Games," most of that chatter died down when Lionsgate started releasing photos and clips of the Oscar nominee in action as Katniss Everdeen.

Now, as we inch closer and closer toward the release date of the highly anticipated film, Lawrence's castmates have been saying how she embodies the spirit of the beloved and critically acclaimed protagonist created by author Suzanne Collins.

Lawrence's co-star and real-life friend Josh Hutcherson recently told MTV News that despite being a very different person from Katniss, the actress' ability to quickly turn the character on and off was startling.

"She is literally 180 degrees different from Katniss," Hutcherson said. "It's amazing, honestly, to watch her effortlessly flip back and forth, because she's very fun, very hilarious, and to watch her on 'Action!' go boom, right into the character is kind of impressive, so much so that she's talking and being Jennifer up until they're rolling sound and when they say 'Action!' boom, [she goes] right into character."

Hutcherson said Lawrence's abilities are so good they're unsettling. "That's what crazy people do. Crazy people change who they are as a person just like that, so she's a crazy person," he joked.

We asked Hutcherson to clarify that statement, just to be sure that he does indeed think Lawrence is crazy. "100 percent," he said with a smile, still joking. "I've said that for a long time."

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Will The Hunger Games Be Better Than Twilight?

 A Hunger Games movie update from Eonline.com...


Will The Hunger Games Be Better Than Twilight?
by Leslie Gornstein

Given that The Hunger Games does not feature a spineless doormat in love with a controlling, condescending stalker, yes, I can almost guarantee that The Hunger Games will be better than any installment of Twilight.
But I have more evidence than just Bella and Edward:

Let's break down our analysis by looking at the key elements of any film, shall we?

The Actors

Twilight featured, of course, Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson, two actors whose talent has not been universally praised. Jennifer Lawrence, who headlines The Hunger Games as Katniss Everdeen, has a bit more cred from critics and her peers. (She has scored an Oscar nomination for her breakout performance in Winter's Bone, for one.)

The Characters & Source Material

Did I mention that the characters in Twilight are not exactly role models, or even all that compelling? Good. Because for every bit of hand-wringing or moment of moping in the Twilight saga, The Hunger Games trilogy features a guy, or gal, who refuses to sit around, waiting for a hero. (Or just a wedding.)

For one, the kids of The Hunger Games are kind of busy holding onto their vital organs. But even without a death match at its core, the story is about characters who have better things to do than fret about boyfriends.

The Director

The Twilight Saga has had four different directors so far, including David Slade (who helmed 30 Days of Night), Chris Weitz (who is culpable for The Golden Compass and American Pie) and Bill Condon (who actually has an Oscar), and Catherine Hardwicke (who is...Catherine Hardwicke). As for The Hunger Games, we have Gary Ross, who directed Seabiscuit, a film that garnered seven Oscar nominations.

Production Design

Golden eyes and a Carolina Herrera wedding dress are nice. (No, really, they are. That's in all seriousness.) But Elizabeth Banks' wardrobe alone promises that Hunger Games will offer better eye candy.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

New The Hunger Games TV spot






A few more days to go and we are all set. To satisfy your hunger, no pun intended, here's a clip from the latest Hunger Game TV spot. Enjoy!

Friday, March 9, 2012

Liam Hemsworth - 'The Hunger Games movie is unbeliebable'

A Hunger Games movie update from www.Entertainmentwise.com...


Liam Hemsworth has praised the film adaptation of 'The Hunger Games', saying it's "unbelievable".
By Shaun Kitchener On March 8, 2012

The Australian star, boyfriend of Miley Cyrus, plays Gale in the page-to-screen transfer, and revealed that he only recently saw the finished cut.

"I saw the film for the first time last week," he told MTV News. "I was pretty nervous to see it for the first time, and it's turned out unbelievable.

"It's honestly one of the most powerful films I've seen and I'm really looking forward to everyone seeing it. It's pretty exciting. We had young girls with tears in their eyes. It's exciting to see the passion. It's cool."

Media insiders have tipped its stars, including leading lady Jennifer Lawrence, to become Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson-style famous off the back of the franchise, which Liam said he is nervous but excited for.

He continued: "If this is as big as it's anticipated to be there will have to be some changes to my life - security systems and all that stuff.

"Now I'm living on the beach without a care in the world. It's a hard thing to think about, your life being completely different. But I didn't want to miss out on something because I was scared."

'The Hunger Games' is out on March 23 in the UK.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

"Cinna" on Ellen





This handsome rock star was here to tell Ellen about his exciting role in the new film, "The Hunger Games.

Monday, March 5, 2012

'The Hunger Games' cast kicks of their mall tour

A Hunger Games movie news update from TheCelebrityCafe.com...


'The Hunger Games' cast kicks of their mall tour
by Marissa Pessolano

Stars of the highly anticipated Hunger Games movie have kicked off their mall tour on March 3.

Stars Jennifer Lawrence, Liam Hemsworth, and Josh Hutcherson will be meeting with fans in eight cities before the premiere of the film on March 23.

Yesterday, the tour made its first stop at the Westfield Century City Mall in Los Angeles.

The Daily Mail reports that over 1000 fans showed up, eager to meet the cast.

The three main stars will not be appearing together in every city, however. Also along for the ride are cast members Dayo Okeniyi (Thresh), Isabelle Fuhrman (Clove), and Amandla Stenberg (Rue). 

The cast will be signing posters and answering questions from the fans.

According to the Examiner, the main trio was asked what they liked best about the characters that they are playing at their first stop in Los Angeles.

Hutcherson who plays Peeta emphasized his characters beliefs in not being able to change the person that you are, no matter what situation.

Lawrence, who plays Katniss, explained that she loves the strengh, loyalty and bravery that her character posses. She says that she is someone she admires.

Hemsworth likes his character, Gale, because he is completely against the Hunger Games and tries to find a way to stop them.

The tour will also be making stops in Atlanta, Phoenix, Chicago, Dallas, Miami, Minneapolis, and Seattle.

The Hunger Games movie is based on a book by the same name. It is the first of the three book series.

The movie is expected to be the next big thing, taking over the previous role of Harry Potter and Twilight.

Friday, March 2, 2012

Hunger Games Stars Teases Film's "Twists" and "Additions"

A Hunger Games Movie update from Eonline.com...


Hunger Games Stars Teases Film's "Twists" and "Additions"
by Ted Casablanca and John Boone

Mockingjays, prepare yourself. Because though The Hunger Game be "very true" to the book, some changes were made from the novel to the big screen. And no, we're not simply talking about dear, forgotten Madge (RIP fabulous role for Dianna Agron).

Well not just Madge, anyway. Director Gary Ross has some tricks up his sleeve that will throw even die-hard H.G. fans for a loop…and one of the film's stars was happy to sound off on the surprises in store for moviegoers:

"There's some twists. There's some additions," Leven Rambin—who plays the gorgeous but ruthless tribute Glimmer in the flick—recently told us, promising that fans will definitely be surprised.

She continues, "There's some small, like innuendos that I think people will be like 'Oh, I didn't catch that in the book'…because it wasn't in the book."

So what exactly is changed?

Does Jennifer Lawrence choose Josh Hutcherson and Liam Hemsworth, thus ensuring the movie an NC-17, Shame-like threesome scene?! Does Lenny Kravitz bust into a rendition of "American Woman" during the Games?!

Do Woody Harrelson turn into a vampire and moon over Elizabeth Banks?!

We doubt any of those. But either way, Leven kept her lips zipped!

Ahh, we haven't seen franchise secrecy like this since those Breaking Dawn vamps tried to keep Bella Swan's wedding dress under wraps…which they did, with frustratingly good success. Hey, at least we only have to wait 21 more days until it hits theaters, right?

Though don't fret too much that things will be completely different. At least so says bad boy Cato, played by Alexander Ludwig.

"I think it will surprise most fans because usually when you see a movie about a book it's not really that true to the book," he filled us in. "Or at least it varies a little. But Gary's done an excellent job of making sure it stays very identical to the book."

Which for Alex means a pretty gruesome and out-there death. But for those of you who haven't read the book, we won't spoil it. What fun would that be?

Woody Harrelson Talks Being “Haymitch” in ‘Hunger Games’

A Hunger Games Movie update from MTV.com...


Woody Harrelson opens up about his role in the upcoming blockbuster, ‘The Hunger Games’!
Posted on March 2, 2012 by By: David Robert

The first film in ‘The Hunger Games‘ series doesn’t hit theatres for another few weeks, but anticipation for the blockbuster is growing at an alarming rate with fans of the books scrambling for any information about their beloved characters. MTV’s Movie Night had the chance to chat with Woody Harrelson (he plays “Haymitch Abernathy“) about being a fan of the books, Tweens and being drunk on-set!

“I didn’t really know about ['The Hunger Games' books] before they sent me the script, you know Gary [Ross, the director] asked me to do it, and I looked at it and said ‘Well, it’s pretty good script,” he says. “I also started reading the book and thought ‘Wow, great!’ and then I finished them all in short order, and then I found out that ‘The Hunger Games’ is like a phenomenon, you know?“

Woody went on to say that although he’s been in the industry for more than 3 decades, he says that this is the first time he’s been on the “Tween” radar – something he’s not quite used to.

“I’ve never really done kids movies, this is like the first time that Tweens are coming up to me!” he says with a laugh. “They’re like ‘You’re playing Haymitch??’, you know, probably like their mom told them or something. They’re really psyched, you know, they love these books.”

One of the things that Woody’s character Haymitch is known for in the books, is his taste for alcohol, appearing drunk in most of his scenes. How did he and director Gary Ross decide how “drunk” Woody should appear in the film?

“During filming, with Gary and I trying to decide the level of drunkenness in any given scene, and I was always pushing for more drunkenness, and he didn’t want me to be drunk in every scene. He was always pulling back, and I was always pushing for more. Knowing Gary, he probably got the right balance.”

Well, we’ll see if he did when ‘The Hunger Games‘ hits theatres on March 23rd.

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