Hunger Games is really making a huge noise in the entertainment industry these days. It is not a surprise since the movie is adapted from New York's best selling novel of the same name by Suzanne Collins. If you haven't seen the pics from the Entertainment Weekly magazine, see it here.
The cast of The Hunger Games in Concord, North Carolina. From left: Isabelle Fuhrman, Jack Quaid, Jacqueline Emerson, Dayo Okeniyi, Leven Rambin, Alexander Ludwig, Amandla Stenberg, Josh Hutcherson, Jennifer Lawrence, and Liam Hemsworth.
Lawrence, Hutcherson, and Hemsworth pose in the North Carolina woods. Growing up, Katniss and Gale would often risk their lives by crawling beneath the electric fence encircling District 12 to hunt in the forest. She would use the skills learned on these excursions to keep both Peeta and herself alive in the deadly arena.
Hemsworth and Hutcherson stand tall among the trees. Gale, whose father’s untimely death left him to scrape by as his family’s sole provider, and Peeta, the meek son of the District 12 baker, are brought together by their shared—yet competing—affection for Katniss.
Lawrence, who stars as The Hunger Games’ chestnut-haired heroine, Katniss Everdeen, lays between Hutcherson (left), who plays her fellow District 12 tribute, Peeta Mellark, and Hemsworth, who plays Gale Hawthorne.
Here is an excerpt from Vanity Fair's interview with Peeta Mellark, I mean, Josh Hutcherson:
Tell me about getting this role.
It was a very rigorous auditioning process. I’ve been a fan of the series for a little while now, and I went in and I met with Gary and Suzanne [Collins, the author of the Hunger Games books] and a couple of the producers initially, and I did a little audition. It was great, and I really hit it off with them and felt really good about it. And then a couple weeks went by, which were brutal. And then they brought me in to do a screen test, basically, with Jennifer, where I read with her. … And then I had to wait another couple of weeks or so before I found out that I got the part. And that was brutal, after doing a screen test. I think it was actually about a week and a half, [and] waiting to hear anything was just, like, ugh. Because I wanted it so badly, and all that time just lying there, waiting to see what happens, was pretty rough.
Have you read the books?
I don’t read a whole lot of books, because I’m usually busy reading scripts, but these books were so good that I literally read all three of them over the course of five days or something. I really powered through them. And while I was reading the books, my mind was being blown as to how much I felt like I was like Peeta, and how I felt like I could relate. I’ve never really felt more right for a character in my whole life. That, in a way, is kind of even more scary, because if you don’t get hired, it’s like, Oh my God, what am I? What am I doing? What’s wrong?
[She] and I totally hit it off. We’re both very crazy people—we don’t really hold anything back. Which is really great. We were able to have a really good time, and not let anything get in the way of it looking stupid or anything like that. We probably look stupid like 99 percent of the time, but we have a good time doing it—so it’s worth it.
At times when you’re adapting a book into a movie, you have to take certain creative liberties to bridge the gap between the two forms of media. And with Suzanne involved, I feel like that can really ease people’s minds who are worried about it being changed too much, because it’s staying true to the story. But there are certain things—like, for instance, in the Hunger Games books it’s completely internal monologue with Katniss. She talks out loud, or you hear her voice in her head basically talking about how she feels and what not. In the movie, you can’t really do that without narration… . [Y]ou have to find a way to tell these things without using exposition or without using narration. I think we did that really well, and I think that people are going to be really happy with it. What’s cool too is that even though it’s a big, action, kind of studio movie, it had a really sort of indie feel on set, where we had a lot of creative liberty.
We had a pretty small crew for being such a giant movie, which was really nice also, because when you had these big emotional scenes on set, it’s not like there’s, you know, 150 people standing there and staring at you. You became really close with everyone, and it was like a little family, which in my opinion made it much more comfortable to give really great performances.
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