Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Eddie Redmayne’s Complicated Masculinity

Eddie Redmayne is not the type of movie star whose electricity courses through you the second he walks into a room — or, in this case, the intimate courtyard of a downtown Manhattan hotel on an unseasonably warm fall day. He’s the type who drills into your consciousness with his large eyes the moment he courteously shakes your hand, with a smile that says, We’re just two humans, you and I, except I happen to have an Oscar.

“In London, I still go on the Tube,” Redmayne says when I ask him how becoming famous worldwide after the success of Les Misérables and The Theory of Everything has changed his life. “Occasionally people stop and ask for photos, but they don’t disrupt.”

It’s hard to tell whether this is literally true or he’s being protective of his fans. What’s more apparent is Redmayne’s solicitousness, the gentlemanly way he opens the door for me as we move from the courtyard to an adjacent drawing room. The space is appointed in Edwardian-inspired burgundy and beige decor, a blend of patchwork-upholstered couches and floral plush chairs. It’s appropriate for a conversation about a film set in the beginning of the last century.

Redmayne in New York City on Nov. 7, 2015.

Jared Harrell / BuzzFeed News

We move to a couch overstuffed with pillows, which Redmayne clears away so the two of us can talk over morning coffee. I lean forward to take a closer look at those eyes, which he deployed to great effect when playing a transgender woman in his upcoming movie The Danish Girl, a David Ebershoff novel adapted by Lucinda Coxon and directed by Tom Hooper, who directed Redmayne in Les Mis. That woman, the Danish painter Lili Elbe, was one of the first people to undergo gender reassignment surgery in 1930. Throughout multiple scenes in which Redmayne portrays Lili’s various stages of self-recognition — as she moves from fascination with women’s clothes to a deep conviction in her womanhood — Redmayne’s eyes are filled with wonder and fear, ever on the verge of tears.

In life and out of character, Redmayne’s eyes communicate sincerity and an amiable readiness to do what’s asked of him. He steadily drops his formality, relaxes his muscles, and settles into an even pose on the couch, both feet on the ground, hands cupped together on his lap. There’s a neutrality to Redmayne, the way his boyish build isn’t overly masculine; his features shift back and forth between strength and delicacy. His ability to embody femininity allowed Hooper to envision him for The Danish Girl.

“I look like my mum,” Redmayne admits without any hint of embarrassment. “I’ve played women since I was a kid and I’ve always enjoyed it.”

Though he became a global movie star by playing straight men, as Marius in Les Mis in 2012 and in his Oscar-winning turn as Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything, a full catalog of Redmayne’s roles reveals many gender-bending and queer parts. At his exclusive boarding school Eton in South East England, where he was in the same class as Prince William, Redmayne played fish-out-of-water ingenue Adela Quested as a teenager, in a stage adaptation of A Passage to India. He also played the bisexual, fishnet-wearing emcee in a 2001 production of Cabaret at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.

So it’s not surprising that Redmayne also played a woman in his first professional role. While still an art history major in undergrad, he was handpicked by renowned theater actor and director Mark Rylance to play Viola in a traditional Elizabethan all-male Shakespeare’s Globe production of Twelfth Night in 2002. His performance immediately thrust Redmayne into the limelight as a bona fide actor. Independent critic Paul Taylor notoriously commented: “I think that Eddie Redmayne (the undergraduate from Trinity College, Cambridge who is scandalously persuasive as Viola) would bring out the bisexual in any man.”

“I’ve played women since I was a kid and I’ve always enjoyed it.”

These witty, ironic turns may have given Redmayne some preparation to play Lili, but there are clear differences between her and his previous roles. One of the most searing moments in The Danish Girl occurs when a man who Lili believes is attracted to her as a woman suddenly calls her by her birth name, revealing that he’s attracted to her as a man dressed in women’s clothes. As Lili recoils from the man’s arms, it’s at this moment that she discovers for herself how her commitment to being Lili extends beyond playing dress-up. It’s the sort of realization that goes far beyond any of the gender-bending that Redmayne has explored before.

“The difference is trans experience,” Redmayne emphasizes, “and learning about it from trans people.”

To prepare for Lili, Redmayne relied in part on books and pictures. Apart from Ebershoff’s novel, there was Elbe’s posthumously published memoir, Man Into Woman, which Redmayne examined for clues into her character. There were also photographs of Lili and paintings by her wife, Gerda Wegener, which he describes as “super-stylized and quite mannered.” But Redmayne also made sure to consult with living transgender women from various generations, to get both emotional and physical pointers on how to play the part.

The Danish Girl.

Focus Features

Jumping up from the couch, Redmayne shows me how one of the women he consulted with would look in the mirror before leaving the house every morning and sling a backpack over one shoulder — here he mimes putting on an invisible backpack, glances at me over his shoulder, and juts out his hip — before testing her stance, “to find curves that she didn't have in her body.” This influence is evident in Redmayne’s performance, as there are several scenes in The Danish Girl where Lili looks in mirrors in various outfits and stages of dress, trying to find her womanhood in her posture — not as a form of imitation, but as a way of being.

There were even times when Redmayne’s research exposed divergences between The Danish Girl’s script and the lived experiences of trans women he heard from. “What a lot of the women I met told me about were the disastrous failures of the first time they were going out [dressed in women’s clothes],” Redmayne confides, “but the script demanded that an audience at moments — and the public — believe Lili instantly in her femininity.”

In the movie, Lili first discovers her fascination with womanhood when her wife, Gerda, asks her to stand in for a female model in one of Gerda’s paintings. But as Lili’s interest grows, she decides to find women’s clothes for herself and go to a party with Gerda, who introduces her as her husband’s cousin from out of town. Many of the men at the party are instantly fascinated with the beautiful yet shy woman, and there is no hint in the movie that anyone suspects Lili to be the same person as Gerda’s husband.

Redmayne indicates that he took steps to reflect trans experience more realistically with the movie’s makeup and hair artist Jan Sewell. “I don't know what you think of the early stages of transition, of hyper-feminization or of trying too much makeup on,” Redmayne says, politely acknowledging my experience as a trans woman, as he does throughout our interaction, “but one of the things we came up with — because I look nothing like Lili, or Lili when she was known as Einar ­— working with Jan Sewell, the wig that she wears to begin with was quite strong.” This overly theatrical flourish during Lili’s first public appearance in women’s clothes was how Redmayne was able to play Lili as being instantly convincing as a woman, while still reflecting the common experience of trans women taking time to figure out how to occupy their new gender roles.

Jared Harrell / BuzzFeed News

This concern for “passing” — the degree to which a trans woman can convincingly appear to others as cisgender in public — is a substantial and complicated one for Redmayne, which reflects his discussions with the trans women he consulted. He describes what a trans woman told him about how passing creates divisions among trans women. “She would be with a friend of hers who does not blend at all,” Redmayne says, “and she would get worried about her association even though she hated herself for feeling that.”

Yet it’s also clear as Redmayne and I continue to talk that his concern does not just have to do with the trans women he met, or whether The Danish Girl accurately reflects trans experience. It’s also his own self-consciousness about being believable as Lili, both in the movie and in life (he interacted with the film crew in women’s clothes, and tabloid pictures were taken of him while on set).

“One of the things that I felt constantly scrutinized by was, am I passing? And then I was also constantly frustrated with that term because it's not about ­— in some ways it was maybe to begin about [Lili’s] passing in some ways, but then I hope by the end it's not, it's just about her being who she is,” Redmayne says, overlapping his own feelings with those of the character he plays. “I certainly felt the scrutiny and judgment of the people around me about how I was looking.”

“One of the things that I felt constantly scrutinized by was, am I passing?"

It’s hard to tell whether this self-consciousness is about Redmayne wanting to create a convincing performance as an actor, or “not fucking it up” when it comes to convincingly and accurately portraying a trans woman’s experience. The two goals are perhaps one and the same. When I ask about his own relationship to gender, Redmayne is noncommittal.

“If gender is on a spectrum, where one finds oneself is completely unique,” he says, shifting back and forth between thoughtfully putting a hand on his chin and gesturing in explanation. “I also think it is wherever we are born that you are influenced by where you are, [and by] what your circumstances are as well. So I think it's very difficult to know, also particularly as an actor, when your job is to go into different versions of gender.” He cites the range of his roles, from Viola to the World War I soldier Stephen Wraysford in the 2012 BBC miniseries Birdsong, who Redmayne describes as a very broken but very male figure. “So what's interesting is that you don't really know about your own...the specifics of your own.”

Regardless of specifics, he presents himself to the world as a thirtysomething male actor who’s married to a woman, public relations executive Hannah Bagshawe, and lives in London. I ask him whether he’ll ever play someone more like himself. “I don’t know if I’d be very good at it,” he demurs, then explains that part of what allows him to act effectively is creating a separation between his own nervous self and the character he’s playing. “There's something scary about acting always, because basically you do all this work in a vacuum and then suddenly there's a lot of money spent making a film and there's suddenly a camera here!” — Redmayne thrusts out his palm and stops a couple of inches from my face — “Going, right? What are you gonna do?”

Jared Harrell / BuzzFeed News

Impulsively, I ask him if I can see his right hand after he pulls it back into his lap. He presents it to me, and I take it with my left hand, briefly feeling his surprisingly soft palm with my fingers. Then I move my hand from under his and put his palm against mine, so that our hands are mirror images of each other. People often tell me I have unusually small hands, but Redmayne’s hand is not much bigger, his fingers thin and delicate. I explain that trans women often compare hands early in transition, to see whether they can pass easily as cisgender.

“It's the biggest tell,” I say. “Hands and feet.”

“Really? Hands and feet,” he replies pensively.

Redmayne continues to talk about the trans women he met in preparation for the role — how open they were, what he learned from them, and how he incorporated lessons into his part. “Every single woman I met, bar none, would pretty much start the conversation going, ‘There is no question I'm not willing to answer,’ in an attempt to educate me,” he says. “The idea of upsetting them or not doing a good enough job is the thing that has fueled the work that I did.”

Yet there is also a significant faction of the transgender community that bristles over how, once again, a cisgender man is playing a trans character in a big, Oscar-courting movie. This tradition has a long history dating back to Jaye Davidson’s Oscar-nominated performance in The Crying Game, to Hilary Swank in Boys Don’t Cry and Jared Leto in Dallas Buyers Club. Many trans leaders and activists are calling for these plum roles to go to transgender people, who are becoming increasingly present in Hollywood.

“There's been a huge history of cisgender success on the back of trans stories, which is something I'm deeply aware of,” Redmayne says. “My take on it, I suppose, was that I do think actors should be able to play anything.”

“There's been a huge history of cisgender success on the back of trans stories, which is something I'm deeply aware of.”

He cites the casting of transgender actress Rebecca Root in the small part of Lili’s nurse in The Danish Girl as a small example of progress. “But at the same point,” Redmayne continues, “I also realize there are so few trans parts and so many brilliant trans actors and actresses that I understand [the backlash] — not only understand it, but absolutely see the anger.”

Redmayne envisions a future where more compelling trans stories will be told by trans people, both in front of and behind the camera. He cites the upcoming Jen Richards–penned web series Her Story — which stars Richards and another trans actress, Angelica Ross — as a promising example of trans lives depicted onscreen by trans people. “I've got to say I think she's pretty extraordinary,” Redmayne says of Richards. “It is a tipping point and it is changing.”

He also cites the importance of training as a means for trans people to gain more chances to play both cis and trans roles. “There is a course in London, which I went to, for trans people being trained, and it's a grassroots thing,” he says. “It’s not only giving people enough opportunity but also encouraging people to train.”

But some trans people aren’t only concerned with the lack of professional opportunities for trans actors — they also fear that an ignorant public will equate trans women with men dressed in drag if they keep seeing cisgender actors playing these roles.

Contemplating this concern, Redmayne’s mood turns solemn. “I just hope we get to a point in the world in which the acknowledgement that wherever you are on the spectrum and whoever you want to be is validity enough,” he says, “that one doesn't have to look a certain way or pass in any sense of the word.”

Redmayne continues: “There's no way that [The Danish Girl], this performance, is ever going to please everyone; that's the nature, I suppose, of what we do. I do just hope within a political sphere, if it continues this conversation, and I mean that conversation and debate and dialogue, and forces people to understand and educate themselves, particularly in the cisgender community, enough to be able to have a point of view — then that's, I hope, only a good thing.”


Jared Harrell / BuzzFeed News

What Poem Changed Your Life?

“Two roads diverged in a wood and I, I took the one less traveled by…”

Poetry is one of the most beautiful, powerful kinds of literature.

Poetry is one of the most beautiful, powerful kinds of literature.

Disney / Via freshbakeddisney.com

The beautiful words and important messages in poetry have a big impact on how people feel.

The beautiful words and important messages in poetry have a big impact on how people feel.

Chris Ritter / BuzzFeed / Via Flickr: zachd1_618

Different authors and poems have the ability to truly change how you see the world.

Different authors and poems have the ability to truly change how you see the world.

Chris Ritter / Krystie Yandoli / BuzzFeed

They've also gotten readers through tough times and inspired us to be our best selves.

They've also gotten readers through tough times and inspired us to be our best selves.

Chris Ritter / BuzzFeed / Via Flickr: legin101


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13 YA Novels That Will Get You In The Holiday Spirit

‘Tis the season to read more books.

Dash & Lily's Book of Dares by Rachel Cohn & David Levithan

Dash & Lily's Book of Dares by Rachel Cohn & David Levithan

Over the holiday break, 16-year-old Lily decides to leave a notebook full of challenges on a bookshelf in her favorite bookstore. When Dash discovers the book, he and Lily find themselves trading their dreams and wishes through the notebook and falling in love.

Knopf Books for Young Readers

Kissing Snowflakes by Abby Sher

Kissing Snowflakes by Abby Sher

Forced to spend her winter break in Vermont with her father and his new wife, Sam just hopes her winter break won't be a complete disaster. When she meets a hot ski instructor, Drew, Sam begins to think this vacation may not be so bad after all.

Point

My True Love Gave To Me by Various Authors

My True Love Gave To Me by Various Authors

This holiday anthology is filled with 12 stories from some of YA's bestselling authors including Rainbow Rowell, Stephanie Perkins, David Levithan, and many more. These stories will make you swoon, laugh, and cry in the very best way.

St. Martin's Griffin

The Unlikely Romance of Kate Bjorkman by Louise Plummer

The Unlikely Romance of Kate Bjorkman by Louise Plummer

In this holiday romance, Kate Bjorkman tells the story of how she finally got her happily ever after, using her Romance Writer's Handbook as a guide. Poking fun at the convention of romance novels, while also respecting the art of it all, this novel is a fun twist on an otherwise ordinary romance.

Laurel-Leaf Books


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19 Hilarious Tweets About "The Hunger Games"

“Peeniss.”


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22 Photos That Show Just How Insane '90s Rave Culture Really Was

Peace. Love. Unity. Respect.

Photographer Michael Tullberg was a witness to the sights and sounds, and his new book Dancefloor Thunderstorm, reveals his first-hand account of what '90s rave culture was really about. Here, Michael shares pictures from the book and tells BuzzFeed the stories behind the photos.

"The Toy Ladies were the rave-era fashionistas, before the term was even coined. The scene was filled with lots of eclectic D-I-Y raver fashion like this, mainly because you couldn’t find anything remotely like it in almost any of the stores."

Michael Tullberg

Michael Tullberg


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34 Of The Most Beautiful Book Covers Of 2015

Do judge these books by their covers.

Chris Ritter / BuzzFeed

Delicious Foods by James Hannaham

Delicious Foods by James Hannaham

Art by Kara Walker.

Little, Brown and Company

The Hundred-Year Flood by Matthew Salesses

The Hundred-Year Flood by Matthew Salesses

Design and illustration by Laserghost.

Little A

Satin Island by Tom McCarthy

Satin Island by Tom McCarthy

Design by Peter Mendelsund.

Knopf


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J.K. Rowling is the master of cleverly hiding clues.

Most people remember Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix as the book that introduced us to Dolores Umbridge, Thestrals, and a really angsty Harry Potter.

Most people remember Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix as the book that introduced us to Dolores Umbridge, Thestrals, and a really angsty Harry Potter.

Look at the trio storming through The Great Hall like they own the place. ⚡️❤️

Warner Bros.

While all of those things are true, there's something in the fifth book that even the most dedicated of Harry Potter fans may have missed. And it deals with Horcruxes.

While all of those things are true, there's something in the fifth book that even the most dedicated of Harry Potter fans may have missed. And it deals with Horcruxes.

Warner Bros.

For those who don't know, a Horcrux is created when you place a part of your soul into an object after you've killed someone.

For those who don't know, a Horcrux is created when you place a part of your soul into an object after you've killed someone.

Remember how Voldemort split his soul into seven different pieces and placed each part into something different?

Warner Bros.

Now let's go back to book five. There's a passage that reads:

Now let's go back to book five. There's a passage that reads:

"They found an unpleasant looking silver instrument, something like a many-legged pair of tweezers, which scuttles up Harry's arm like a spider when he picked it up, and attempted to puncture is skin. Sirius seized it and smashed it with a heavy book entitled Nature's Nobility: A Wizarding Genealogy. There was a musical box that emitted a faintly sinister, tinkling tune when wound, and they all found themselves becoming curiously weak and sleepy, until Ginny had the sense to slam the lid shut; a heavy locket that none of them could open; a number of ancient seals;..."

Warner Bros.


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Monday, November 23, 2015

Jon Snow Lives In The First Promo Image For "Game Of Thrones" Season 6

IS IT APRIL YET?!

The fate of Jon Snow (Kit Harington) has been the question Game of Thrones fans have been asking since the Season 5 finale in mid-June.

The fate of Jon Snow (Kit Harington) has been the question Game of Thrones fans have been asking since the Season 5 finale in mid-June.

HBO / Via corleonesandlannisters.tumblr.com

And now, six months later, HBO has released the first promo image for Season 6, featuring a bloody, but SEEMINGLY ALIVE, Jon Snow.

And now, six months later, HBO has released the first promo image for Season 6, featuring a bloody, but SEEMINGLY ALIVE, Jon Snow.

HBO


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Jennifer Lawrence in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2.

Murray Close / Lionsgate

Endings are hard, and they are especially hard when concluding a multibillion-dollar movie franchise based on a series of beloved best-selling YA novels. So it is perhaps fitting that the very first scene shot for The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 — in fact, the very first shot for both of the Mockingjay films, which were made at the same time over the course of 152 days in 2013 and 2014 — was one of the very last shots in the movie.

(This would be, by the way, when the MAJOR SPOILERS for Mockingjay – Part 2 begin.)

"It's the scene right after she cries with the cat, and she's back out into the woods going hunting again," director Francis Lawrence told BuzzFeed News.

Yes, "she" is Katniss Everdeen, the seminal role that catapulted Jennifer Lawrence (no relation to Francis) to global superstardom and proved beyond all doubt that Hollywood could make a global blockbuster action franchise centered around a single, and singular, female character.

And in Mockingjay – Part 2, Katniss, her compatriots, and her enemies — including Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson), Gale Hawthorne (Liam Hemsworth), Plutarch Heavensbee (Philip Seymour Hoffman), President Coin (Julianne Moore), and President Snow (Donald Sutherland) — really go through it, as the rebellion that has adopted Katniss as the Mockingjay, its spiritual mascot, fights its way to the Capitol to depose Snow for good. As is the case in Suzanne Collins's novel on which the Mockingjay films are based, people die, many of them beloved, and the ones who are left are irrevocably scarred, both inside and out.

Making those moments work in a mainstream feature film — as opposed to Collins's psychologically driven novel — was a tall order for Lawrence, producer Nina Jacobson, and screenwriter Peter Craig, all of whom spoke with BuzzFeed News about the challenges they faced adapting the second half of Collins's novel for the big screen. Like with adapting Mockingjay – Part 1, the trio followed the extensive outline, or "scriptment," written by Collins, who received an "adaptation by" credit on both Mockingjay films. (Craig took over primary screenwriting duties once Empire co-creator Danny Strong left the project after writing the early drafts.)

All three credit Collins for zeroing in on the core objective that drives Katniss in each Mockingjay film, and differentiates them as well. "The first movie is, for Katniss, about getting Peeta back [from the Capitol]," said Jacobson. "The second movie is about getting revenge against Snow — assassinating Snow."

Unlike Mockingjay – Part 1, however, which deviated extensively from Collins's text to depict how the rebellion was playing out in the various districts of Panem, the filmmakers knew the concluding movie in this franchise would need to hew closely to Collins's book.

"There's a lot more plot in it," said Craig. "There were all of the much bigger iconic moments from the book that the fans loved and wanted to see. So the challenge was just how much things stacked up on top of each other. We had to make sure that we were servicing all of it and were true to all of it. Plus, I think all the things Suzanne really wanted to get across in the book were all really in Part 2."

Even so, the filmmakers still found room to make some pointed and surprising changes from Collins's book. And that started with…

Finding room for Johanna

Peter Craig and Suzanne Collins

Jason Merritt / Getty Images

In Collins's novel, after she and Peeta are rescued from the Capitol, former victor Johanna Mason (Jena Malone) begrudgingly partners, and eventually bonds, with Katniss, as they both go through a grueling training regimen and punishing final exam to prove to President Coin that they are fit to join District 13's military assault on the Capitol. Katniss succeeds, and Johanna does not. None of it, however, made it into the film.

"We were all very wary of training," said Lawrence. "Training sequences quite often get montage-y, and I'm not a huge fan of that. To spend the time to do it right so it doesn't feel like a montage would be also eating up a lot of time."

Added Jacobson, "I think nobody looks at Katniss Everdeen and thinks she needs training on how to be a soldier."

The problem, however, was that everyone loved Johanna as a character, and Malone's portrayal of her. "So, the trick was in trying to maintain Johanna’s presence without the training," said Lawrence.

And that unenviable task fell to Craig, who had to figure out how to make Johanna come to life in just two scenes with Katniss, and one group scene at the end. "I just tried to get at that she was the last shove that Katniss needed [to get to the Capitol]," Craig said. "That was somebody who could really look her in the eye and say, 'Go do this.' Johanna had kind of given the most." Craig said that there was even discussion about letting Johanna accompany Katniss to the Capitol, but Collins vetoed that quickly. "Suzanne felt very strongly that they wouldn't let her go," he said with a laugh. "Morphling is not heroin, but, you know, she's a morphling addict at that point. … There was just no way."

Deciding how Katniss makes it to the Capitol

Rather than wait for an official assignment to go to the Capitol from Coin like she does in the novel, Katniss decides to stow away on a supply ship to the front lines, in defiance of her explicit orders to stay behind. "It was really about making her active, especially knowing going into Mockingjay – Part 1 that she's kind of sidelined and being manipulated," said Lawrence. "In this one, we really wanted to get that motor of I have to go after Snow going. To have her assigned to a squad doesn't feel like it's a motor towards Snow. But if she takes off on her own to get to the Capitol, you feel like the story just kicks into a new gear."

Tracking Peeta's journey from wringing Katniss's throat to sharing her bed

Murray Close / Lionsgate

Mockingjay – Part 1 ends with Peeta, brainwashed (or "hijacked") by Snow, nearly throttling Katniss to death after he's rescued from the Capitol. Part 2 chronicles his recovery, which is so thorough that, by the end of the film, Katniss feels safe enough to share his bed. That is quite a journey, and Jacobson said it’s one of the key creative reasons she believed Collins's book needed to be split into two movies.

"To be hijacked and then recover in one movie, I don't even know how we would have done that," she said. "You would have had to get him back so soon, and then he'd be a mess, and then he'd have to get better really quickly. So we needed the time, to give him all of the second movie to recover."

To do that, Craig cut early scenes that emphasized how much loathing Peeta had for Katniss, and instead focused on carefully including scenes with Peeta and Katniss together. "My idea was basically that … by exposure to her, he's gradually brought back to remember what he actually felt about her," he said. "It's almost like, to make the antidote for a snake bite, you make it out of the venom."

And yet again, Collins provided a key insight that helped Craig unlock what keeps drawing Katniss back to Peeta. "I remember a conversation with Suzanne, [about how] towards the end, when they're ready to make their final push towards [Snow's] mansion, Peeta's the one who has to really convince her that all of this is worth it, and he has to be the one who really speaks to her," Craig recalled. "Because over the course of all four of the movies, he's really the only one who's been through everything she's been through, and he's really the only one who understands the completely unique position she's in."

Showing President Snow's decline…

Murray Close / Lionsgate

The Hunger Games films have always deviated from the books by cutting away from Katniss's point of view to depict events that are happening beyond her perspective. Sometimes, however, those scenes don't quite pan out as expected. "It's kind of tricky," said Lawrence. "There was a scene that we had with Snow and Peeta in Mockingjay – Part 1 that got cut because it didn't work."

The problem with that scene — which was released online earlier this year to great fanfare — was that it was, in essence, not about Katniss. So with Mockingjay – Part 2, the filmmakers made sure to always connect her in some meaningful way to every scene outside of her point of view — like when Snow watches Katniss get shot, and then raises a toast with his inner circle. "There's that connection that links the two," said Lawrence.

The scene itself becomes something of a surprising fake-out — at first, it seems that Snow is toasting Katniss's death, when he is instead using the occasion to poison Antonius (Robert Knepper), the military commander who lost District 2, while toasting, in essence, the inevitable end of his reign.

"I was always really fascinated with trying to find the real life of Snow," said Lawrence. "And, of course, there are a lot of choices one can make. He can think he's going to win until the end. [But] I decided that I liked the route of Hitler in the film Downfall, where you witness it all crumble around you."

For Craig, it was also a chance to show one of Snow's key tactics that you only hear about in Collins's book. "I love that he was a poisoner," Craig said. "So I thought, let's have him poison one of his advisers. We had a really distinct purpose that we wanted to accomplish with that scene too: that Snow really wanted this to be like another arena, and he wanted everybody to see it. It was part of his madness."

As for Snow's final denouement, Lawrence decided not to leave the cause of his death ambiguous as it is in Collins's novel — we clearly see a mob of Panem rebels swarm him to rip him to shreds, and Katniss gets the satisfaction of seeing it too. "Having made a decent amount of movies now, and been in editing rooms, and had [test] screenings, you [would] get that question of, like, What happened to Snow?" said Lawrence. "You don't want to have a bunch of people tune out at the end of the movie wondering what happened. It's just not the kind of loose end that would work for us."

Lionsgate

…and showing President Coin's ascent

Lionsgate

"In the books, you only ever see Coin from Katinss's point of view, and Katniss pretty much doesn't like her from the get-go," said Jacobson. "To a teenager, she's like this sort of mean authoritarian figure." Instead, the filmmakers decided that by allowing us to see Coin outside of Katniss's perspective, we could watch her evolve from the efficient and egalitarian leader of District 13 in Mockingjay – Part 1 into a calculating and ruthlessly savvy politician bent on consolidating her own power in Part 2. And one major reason for beefing up Coin's journey was the actor who actively pursued the chance to play her. "We had Julianne Moore!" said Jacobson. "Like, come on! You want to give that person some great stuff to play."

For Part 2, that meant subtle changes to Moore's hair, makeup, and wardrobe, building in some knowing glances from Plutarch, and creating a scene after Katniss sneaks away to the Capitol in which Coin tells Plutarch, "I want everyone to know whatever game she's playing, she's playing for us."

"If you don't see her at all, it feels very abrupt that she comes back and she's become somebody so much more calculating," said Craig. "It was good to see her begin to understand the ways that she could manipulate public opinion. It helped to make her seem much more strategic, and to let us in on the fact that some of these really shrewd decisions — Machiavellian decisions, actually — were actually coming from her, and it wasn't Plutarch anymore."

Making room for Commander Paylor

Murray Close / Lionsgate

Coin's plans, of course, are cut short by the arrow Katniss shoots through her heart — which also led the filmmakers to write in more scenes for the woman who would take her place, Commander Paylor (Patina Miller). So Miller is there in District 2 when the rebels attack The Nut, and she's the one who addresses the rebels before their incursion into the Capitol.

"We had to try to get her in front of people as much as possible so that people had a little bit of a sense of who she was," said Craig. "We needed to really establish that she was a good option. She wasn't — especially after two supposed tyrants — vying for the presidency at that point. It's good to know that this was somebody who had more morality."

Finding the right line for violence

Lionsgate

One of the key elements of all of Collins's Hunger Games novels is their visceral depiction of the consequences of violence, and in the second half of Mockingjay, that is on especially vivid display: Characters are described as having holes in their faces; one character's legs are unmistakably blown clean from his body; and a very young Capitol girl is cut down by gunfire while crying over her mother's dead body. But those moments don’t have the same bloody jolt in the film.

"We always knew this was going to be the difficult one to tackle in terms of violence, because this is where the real themes of the consequence of war and violence come into play for the entire series," said Lawrence. "There are a lot of hard things to watch that happen in this movie, and part of the success of the book was Suzanne didn't flinch when she told these stories for teenagers. So you want to make it as intense as possible, but you also don't want to cross over into that R rating where you're alienating kids. So my goal was always to try to focus as much as possible on the emotional intensity and impact of the violence rather than the gore."

One complicating factor, said Lawrence, is that the MPAA can give a film an R rating for "intensity" alone. "Even if it's not bloody, [if] something just has enough impact and is intense enough, you can get an R rating for it," he said. "That's the thing that we were trying to find the right line for. … You'll notice when you see the movie there's very little blood. I was not interested in the glorification of violence or fetishizing the actual gore and carnage or seeing a lot of aftermath or blood hits and all of that. It was really about the consequence of it."

Lionsgate

That careful depiction of violence is most notable in the rebels’ final surge toward Snow's mansion, with Katniss, Gale, and the Capitol citizenry stuck in the middle. In Collins's book, some particularly lethal pods massacre rebels and civilians alike in the ensuing battle, something the filmmakers thought would not work for their film. "You get this idea of, OK, well now Snow's going to use his own citizens as a human shield and bring them all into the center of the Capitol, to the mansion — well, maybe they wouldn't have pods on," Lawrence recalled. "If he's marching his own people, he's not going to just kill them all."

Jacobson also had a more macro reason for paring down this final battle sequence. "For me at least, in the third act of movies — the time that you're supposed to find most exciting — I often feel bored," she said. "Action that get disentangled from character — I find it some of the most boring parts of many big movies that I see. You're just sort of watching a lot of ass kicking and a lot of explosions and a lot of bashing of each other. You don't really feel the stakes anymore, and you don't really know what is the impact of it on the characters. It just feels like it's going on a long time. So we always tried to keep all of our action grounded in the impact it was having on our protagonists. And if it didn't genuinely involve them in a way that was impactful and emotional, then why do it?"

Lionsgate

Giving Finnick a more heroic end

What Are Your Favorite Books About The Holidays?

‘Tis the season to read more books.

It's almost that time of year again.

It's almost that time of year again.

WB

The holidays are almost upon us and you know what that means.

The holidays are almost upon us and you know what that means.

Nickelodeon

MORE BOOKS!

MORE BOOKS!

Disney

But before your family gives you the only gift you really want this year, what books will you be reading this holiday season?

But before your family gives you the only gift you really want this year, what books will you be reading this holiday season?

TriStar Pictures


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