The Hunger Games has two vision: The book,and movie.They are differences and similarities.These can change the meaning of the story. To Begin With,There are similarities between the book and movie.In the movie and book katniss and rue worked together by rue giving katniss food and katniss gave rue water. In the book and movie when katniss volunteered after her sister primrose everdeen was pick out of the reaping The people who were there gave katniss good respect when she volunteered at the reaping. On The Other Hand, The differences between the book and the movie is that. In the book peeta’s dad gave katniss cookies,but in the movie peeta’s dad did not give katniss no cookies.Katniss was trying to focus on who
You compare and contrast,the movie from the book an example would be when in the movie thresh finds clove into the cornacopia because she found rue's death humorous.But in the book thresh finds clove and stones her head.Things to compare are in both the movie and the book is clove dies by thresh.That's the comparison but,the difference is the way she died.When Katniss receives the “mockingjay” pin she in the book gets it from Madge Undersee.But in the book she gets it from Mrs.undersee.
1. Katniss’s change during the course of the novel has been influenced by the Capitol and the arena during the Hunger Games. In the beginning she volunteered for her love for Prim and did not think she would win, but during the games she actually believes she has a chance. And throughout the games she found herself hating the Capitol more and more, for example when she said “I want to do something, right here, right now, to shame them, to make them accountable, to show the Capitol that whatever they do or force us to do there is a part of every tribute they can’t own. That Rue was more than a piece in their Games.
Violence may not seem like a good reason for the Hunger Games book being better than the movie, but in reality, it is. The Hunger Games movie is violent but not to the same extent as the book. The movie’s violent scenes were watered down and are less gruesome and bloody than the scenes in the book. Especially, this is the case in the last scene of the story where Katniss shoots Cato, the last tribute left in the games, and he falls into a pack of mutant dogs. In the movie the exact same thing happened, Katniss shot Cato the last tribute left, but instead, the movie producers made his death happen immediately after he fell into a pack of mutant dogs. In the novel, Cato’s suffering lasted a few hours and Katniss and Peeta had to wait anxiously
The book I read for this first independent reading assignment is Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury. This novel showed a dystopian world, in which books have been banned outright, and are being burned by the firemen. This work of fiction possessed many elements that had been shown in other works of literature that I had worked with in the past, though it also possessed definite differences, specifically Lord of The Flies, Ender's Game, and finally The Hunger Games.
One of the hardest things for a director to do is to turn a book into a movie. There is a fine line between keeping the movie just like the book, and by barely crossing that line you can end up making a completely different vision than the book has set out for you. There are also many viewers out there that will completely hate the movie if it is nothing like the book that they read originally. The director has to realize that although there are many different types of audiences to please, that it still has to be a great movie that people cannot stop talking about.
In the book and the movie there were many differences in survival and hunger. In the movie Katniss journey during the game is very detail and very well told. In the movie the her journey went very fast and wasn't as detailed. I specific difference is when Katniss find the water source right away in the book but in the movie it takes her about a day to find water after she gets a little weak. Another difference in survival is when Katniss gets hit with the fireball she gets the ointment sent to her from sponsor in both the movie and the book but in the movie when she puts it on it heals right away unlike in the book when it takes a little while to heal.
Love can affect the decision a person makes. One major aspect the over in both the book and the movie is the stress that Katniss goes through by not making decision that might kill her family. In the book, Katniss is accounted by President Snow and is threaten to not make decisions that will spark a rebellion. More than half the book includes the conflict of rebellion unlike the movie which more than half of the movie is focusing on the Games. Because the movie did not focus on the rebellion, the viewer don’t fully understand why President Snow is attacking Katniss.
“The Hunger Games,” written by Suzanne Collins, describes how a dystopian future would be like. There is so much action and suspense, along with vivid details about everything that is happening to Katniss throughout the entire book. The reoccurring theme of rebellion made this book satisfactory. The concept of “The Hunger Games” is intriguing, and Collins pulls it off well.
For instance, one of the similarities are both the book and movie, Katniss and Peeta became closer and they decided to form an alliance so they could be stronger.` Another good similarity is that when rue died, Katniss covered her in flowers. One more similarity between the two is that peeta threw her the bread when it was raining.
Overall, the story structure was very similar. For examples, Katniss is a hunter in both the story and the book version of the story. Katniss is from District 12 in both versions. She also has to volunteer to save her sister, Prim, whom she clearly has a mother-daughter relationship with in both the movie and the book. Occurring throughout the story in both the movie adaptation and the book, is the struggle within herself as she falls in love with Peeta. The movie even tries to show her remembering Peeta throwing her bread when she was starving. The love Peeta has for Katniss is evident in both versions of the stories, and basically their story doesn’t change at throughout the plots of either the book or the film.
Both the Hunger Games and The Road are two books set in the same type of environment of being poor, explored choices of humans facing a test of humanity, impacted by human modernization and technology and emotional power. We will explore the different themes and compare the logic between the pages.
Another difference in the novel that’s significant is the Mockingjay pin that is given to Katniss by Madge, the Governor’s daughter once it’s known that Katniss will be participating in the Hunger Games. Madge is described as one of the few people that Katniss is semi-friendly with; otherwise she is described as a loner who only has time to do what she has to do to take care of her family. This comes as a surprise to Katniss, who had assumed that Madge disliked her. This is an important piece of the book because in the movie, Katniss finds the same Mockingjay pin at the local flea market, and it is given to her by the owner, a woman named Greasy Sae. The significance of the pin is never explained in the movie, and viewers are left wondering if it will play an important role later on in the film. The director and author make many subtle, yet evident changes between the novel and film, which can only be noticed if one reads the novel and views the movie. However, those that have are left questioning why the changes were made, and what to expect next.
"The Hunger Games" is a science fiction novel written by the American author Suzanne Collins that was published in 2008. A film adaptation directed by Gary Ross was released in 2012. Although some movie adaptations differ greatly from the original stories presented in the books, this adaptation follows the plot development in an unusually detailed manner. However, certain changes were made that influence our perception of the movie.
In District 12 of Panem, 16-year-old Katniss Everdeen is walking to meet her friend, Gale, a boy she seems to like, in the woods so they can do some hunting for food. As she’s walking, she thinks about her mother and her younger sister, Prim, who is 12 years old. They have depended on Katniss for food ever since their father died in a mine explosion when Katniss was 11.
The film The Hunger Games, released in 2012 and based off the first book of a literary trilogy, has become a source of entertainment and intrigue among many Americans. Featuring a futuristic and dystopian United States, it has captured the imagination for some and kindled a intense obsession for others. While on the surface this movie might seem to simply be a story with a riveting plot line about young love, vicious combat, and survival, it is much more than that. As most films do, if one takes a closer look, The Hunger Games gives rise to multiple sociological patterns and themes. If one observes with an informed and critical eye, sociological issues that are embedded in the film are revealed. From this, one can draw cultural and