Hunger Games Party + Movie Review
23 Mar
2012

Hunger Games Party + Movie Review

The Party!!

Penelope at The Reading Fever put on an awesome party for some Utah book bloggers to go see The Hunger Games! We went to Chili’s for a late dinner, there was a raffle and I won the totally awesome The Hunger Games: Official Illustrated Movie Companion!  And my friend Miriam won a refillable cup.  Plus, Penelope got all of us Team Katniss bracelets that have the date on them. Thank you sooo much Penelope!! You rock!

The whole gang!

Jessica (me) and Miriam.

And then, since we had assigned seats, we showed up to the movie 10 minutes before it started and I paid $7.50 for water and Reese’s Pieces. I wore all black with my Mockingjay pin.

The movie crowd was a little nuts.  There was lots of screaming during the trailers – especially The Host and Breaking Dawn Part 2.  Thankfully, they calmed down and were almost completely silent through the movie, well except for some screaming at ONE part :)  And some sniffling.  I sniffled a little too.  I think Enna came with lots of kleenex.

Movie Review

(Slightly spoilery.  But not much.  I mean, you’ve read the books, right?  I’m not gonna reveal more than the books.)

Wow. Intense and gruesome are how I described the movie to my husband this morning.  There’s a lot of blood and it’s almost worse just seeing the blood and the after-math of the violence than seeing it play out on screen because I’m sure my imagination is worse.  The costumes were amazing.  There was the extreme fashions of the capital and the poverty of District 12.  The costumes of District 12 reminded me a lot of World War II.  I was really excited to listen to the soundtrack of the movie and I was surprised at how little music there was throughout the movie.  A lot of scenes were just the actors talking – there didn’t need to be all this music to make you feel something.  The acting, especially from the teenagers, was amazing.  Peeta (Josh Hutcherson) and Katniss (Jennifer Lawrence) did an especially superb job portraying real and intense pain.  And the way they filmed it with the camera movements and editing made it feel like a documentary.  This movie is going to win awards.  Lots of them.

What blew me away the most about this movie was how similar the supposedly futuristic society is to ours.  The idea of celebrity, violence as entertainment, our obsession with luxury and fashion are all things we do now.  I know that the books have all these themes, but there’s something about watching it that really got to me.  When I sat and thought about it, it’s disturbing how close our society is to doing something like this.  At one point in the movie, all the tributes are brought out on horse drawn chariots and it drove home the point that as a society we HAVE done something like this before.  History can repeat itself.  When I left the theater, I deeply felt how disturbing it is to watch violence and call it entertainment.  A lot of movies have tried to accomplish that before, but this is the only movie where I felt like it came across to the point that I wanted to change.  There’s a scene in the movie where Haymitch is watching these kids play with a toy sword and the brother chases his sister around with it while the parents laugh.  Talk about an eye opener.  There are so many little things in this movie that make you feel like all of this is so wrong.  Gayle points out to Katniss at the beginning that if no one watched it, there wouldn’t be a Hunger Games.  And Katniss says, “But they won’t stop.”  But I’m going to.  I just don’t feel like watching violent movies anymore.

I loved this movie.  It made me think deep thoughts, it was so moving and amazingly well done.  What did you think?

17 Sep
2011

The Island of Misfit Bloggers

I didn’t get to participate in Book Blogger Appreciation Week like I wanted to because my car broke down three times in two weeks. Don’t worry, everything is back to normal now and life is a lot less hectic and stressful now that my car is fixed. (I had to get a new alternator, battery and ignition switch. I got stranded 3 times – I’m so not exaggerating. All of it cost me $800. Wait. That’s almost how much my car is worth. Now I’m stressed again.) But I did get to read some great posts from all different kinds of bloggers. The topics revolved a lot around community and fitting in. It made me think. Do I fit into the blogging community?

I came across some classics book blogs. I didn’t know there was such a thing. Should I become a classics only book blog? I’ve already become actively involved in the YA book blogging community. Should I just focus on YA books? Where do I fit in?

I also read a lot of posts about honesty and being true to yourself. I love both genres and I can’t read one without the other. If I read only classic literature, it would start to feel “heavy” and kind of dry. But on the other hand, if I only read YA it would feel too “light” and insubstantial to me. I love the entertainment that YA brings and I love the challenge of a nice, long classic piece. They balance each other perfectly. I usually alternate between reading a classic and a YA novel. Except recently. I’ve read three YA novels in a row and Oliver Twist is waiting impatiently on my shelf.

So, maybe I’m a little crazy trying to have one foot in each community. I can’t help it. It’s who I am. What would it say if I changed myself just to fit in perfectly? Thinking about this got this lovely song stuck in my head and that’s where the title of my post came from.

So, do you fit in perfectly to your blogging community, whatever it may be? Or do you want to join me on the Island of Misfit Bloggers?

1 Jul
2011

Flashback Friday: "There's No Such Thing as a Purple Rock."

One of my earliest memories as I remember it.  I decided to be a little more sentimental this week.  Hope you like it.

There’s a boy who lives across the street in a white-brick house. He’s my best friend and I’m four years old. I don’t remember his name now, but I remember playing in his basement with a toy that you could sit and spin on and riding bikes down our street together.

One day, he told me he was going to the mountains for a week. I didn’t know where “the mountains” were, but they seemed far away. I had no idea how long a week was, but it sounded like a very long time.

I asked my mom every day if it had been a week yet. It seemed like she always said no. And no matter how much I asked, the answer was still no. She thought it was cute at first that I missed him, but she got tired of answering my question over and over. I almost felt like he would get home sooner if I asked just one more time if it had been a week yet.

He finally did come home. I was so surprised when my mom finally said yes when I asked her yet again if it had been a week yet. Fully expecting him to get home that instant, I waited at the window all day until their car pulled into their driveway. And then I had to wait for him to come outside.

When he did come outside, we stood on the corner across the street from my house on his side of the road. Across from us is a house with a nice yard surrounded by a wrought iron fence and filled with pretty flowers that you can’t touch. Kiddy-corner from us is a house with no fence, a yard full of weeds, and mean dogs on chains that I run by as fast as I can whenever I pass it on the sidewalk. On the corner on my side of the street is the Black Dog’s house, but they have a fence. From the corner we’re standing on, you can see the blue, jaggedy Wasatch Mountains in the background. There are two vertical, parallel ridges on the tallest mountain that look like a great big slide. I always wondered, if I was big enough, if I could slide right down the mountain. The mountain reminds me of home because you can only see the slide from where we live. If you go any farther north or south, the slide disappears.

“I brought you a present,” he says.

“What is it?,” I say a little cautiously. He’s not holding anything and I don’t want him to tease me.

“It’s a purple rock,” he says.

With all my 4 year-old indignation I inform him that, “There’s no such thing as a purple rock.”

“Yes there is.”

“No there isn’t.”

“Yes there is.”

“No there isn’t.”

“Then how do I have one?”

He’s got me stumped. Then a thought hits me. “How do I know you have one? I haven’t seen it.”

“I’ll give it to you, then.”

I still don’t believe he has it, but I put my hand out anyway waiting for him to give it to me.

“You have to close your eyes.”

I give an impatient sigh and close my eyes. He better not be teasing me or he is going to be in big trouble.

I feel the rock in my palm and I open my eyes. My first reaction is that the rock is white, and not purple, but underneath the white I can see beautiful lilac flecks. It sparkles a little in the sun. It’s the prettiest thing I’ve ever seen. Rocks are brown and grey. I’ve never found one that was purple.

“Did you find this?,” I ask earnestly. This is suddenly very important to me.

“Yes. I found it in the mountains.”

Him finding it makes it all the more valuable to me. Somehow, it makes it a real rock because it came from outside and that made it rare and hard to find. It also said to me that he missed me as much as I missed him. And when he found something so unique and amazing he gave it to me instead of keeping it for himself.

To me, the gift was more than just a rock. Looking at it, I felt wonder growing inside of me, blooming like little flowers. It felt like magic to get something you didn’t think was real. Even staring at it, it almost felt like it wasn’t real. Magic exists for a small moment when the way we see the world changes.

He moved away soon after that. I wish he hadn’t moved when I was so young so I could at least remember his name. But that rock continues to be one of my most prized possessions.

Yes. I still have it.

You think you know everything there is to know about this world full of brown and grey rocks until life gives you a purple one. Those are the best kind of gifts.