She also recognizes that she does possess power, the kind of power that Snow is afraid of because it inspires unity and hope. Just as Katniss and her team are leaving District 8, another airstrike arrives, targeting the hospital.
Katniss and Gale disobey orders and climb to the rooftop on a nearby building to shoot down the bombers. Once the attack is over, Katniss surveys the destroyed hospital. There are no survivors. She is enraged at this disregard for human life and an attack on the defenseless and weak.
She delivers a fiery message to Snow, all of it captured by her fearless camera crew. Back in 13, Katniss and Finnick watch another interview with Peeta, but this time she can see that he has been tortured and is hurt.
Katniss eventually gets Gale to confess, but she feels betrayed. Gale and Katniss, growing farther and farther apart, return to District 12 to film more propos. Katniss remembers how she used to be happy there and wonders what her life might have been like had she run away with Gale.
During another live Capitol programming, in which Snow and a very battered and fragile-looking Peeta appear together, Beetee is able to break through the Capitol feed to broadcast clips of the rebel propos. While Command rejoices, Katniss knows that their success means more pain and suffering for Peeta. The feed cuts out just as Peeta is hit to the floor, his blood splattering the tile. That said, how does Mockingjay, Part 2 end? What does this grand finale have in store for us? Will it go out with a bang?
Or bow out quietly? When it comes down to it, the Hunger Games end with spoiler! Katniss living happily ever after — more or less.
The important thing is that Katniss has finally put all this pain behind her and moved on with her life, and unless some crazy events conspire to keep her busy, it seems like she has finally found peace. As for the other storylines, most of the conflicts are resolved and things end on a peaceful note — save for a couple of bombings, of course typical for Panem.
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 2 gives audiences a spectacular ending to the book series that sparked a pop culture phenomenon. This final movie wraps things up in a nice package and gives audiences what they need to leave the theater satisfied. So what, exactly, goes down? Let's start with the execution of Snow or rather, right before it. The ideas for the scene were Phil's, but he never got to say the lines.
Effie is a bigger presence in both Mockingjays in general, which was kind of expected given Elizabeth Banks' performance in the book, she is completely absent until the very end when she ushers Katniss to Snow's execution, which is not much for Banks to do. But what was a surprise is the moment when Effie and Haymitch plant one on each other. No mention is made to a relationship at any other point, so potentially it was just a recognition of the chemistry Banks and Woody Harrelson have developed over four movies.
Still, it's a change we think most fans can get behind. In the book, when Katniss wants to go to the Capitol to join the fight and end the revolution, Coin flatly denies her because she is not a trained soldier.
So Katniss and Joanna go through basic training like all the other rebels Katniss fights with a gun instead of her bow and arrow here, too. Katniss passes but Johanna's physical condition doesn't. Katniss is then sent to the Capitol with the PR squad. But in the movie, Katniss actually sneaks away to the Capitol, and thus skips any kind of training.
0コメント