'The Hunger Games': Is the violence acceptable? (+video)
'Hunger Games' star Jennifer Lawrence says it's justified, while some parents think otherwise.
'Hunger Games' is dividing parents on whether the books, and so the movie, are appropriate for children.
Courtesy of Lionsgate
Children between the ages of 12 and 18 forced to kill each other in a large arena until only one of them is left standing.
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It hardly sounds like an ideal story for pre-teens, or, depending on parental views, some early teens. But many parents may be making the choice soon whether to bring their children to the cineplex when “The Hunger Games,” the first installment of the dystopian young-adult trilogy about children taking part in a horrible reality show, arrives in theaters March 23. The movie is based on the book of the same name by Suzanne Collins, which is the first of a trilogy.
The book’s violence, in which many children and teenagers are killed, has been a hot topic since it was released. Star Jennifer Lawrence, who plays the heroine Katniss Everdeen in the film, was asked about the controversy after seven seconds of the film was cut to earn the movie a 12A rating in the UK, a rating that would allow children 12 and older in the theater, with younger children requiring an accompanying adult to gain entrance. In America, the movie is rated PG-13 for “intense violent thematic material and disturbing images, all involving teens."
Lawrence told Reuters she thought the violence was acceptable.
“It's the violence and the brutality (which) is the heart of the film, because it's what gets the people angry to start an uprising and to start a revolution,” she said. In the “Games” trilogy, it’s a corrupt government that forces the children to compete in the deadly Hunger Games.
“I do think the violence and brutality is justified,” Lawrence said. “But I understand if everybody has a different standard for ratings.”
Actor Josh Hutcherson said in an interview with Reuters that he believes the film strikes the right tone because it doesn’t glorify the violence taking place.
“I think kids are more mature than they have been over the years… It's not overly gruesome or brutal but it is part of the story in some way,” Hutcherson said.
The idea of kids being more mature is what seems to worry some parents, who think children will become desensitized to violence. In 2010, a New Hampshire mother, Tracy LaSalle, requested at a school board meeting that the first book be removed from her daughter’s seventh-grade classroom because she said her daughter had started having nightmares and that she worried the other children would become too used to the brutality described in the novel. The book was being read aloud in the classroom.
“Mrs. LaSalle stated there is no lesson in this book except if you are a teenager and kill twenty-three other teenagers, you win the game and your family wins,” the minutes from the meeting read, according to a School Library Journal article.
A school board member, Philip Pancoast, told the SLJ that he considers the book to be average young adult literature.









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