Synopsis
Katniss Everdeen reluctantly becomes the symbol of a mass rebellion against the autocratic Capitol.
Votre Filmothèque
Cast
- Jennifer LawrenceKatniss Everdeen
- Josh HutchersonPeeta Mellark
- Liam HemsworthGale Hawthorne
- Woody HarrelsonHaymitch Abernathy
- Elizabeth BanksEffie Trinket
- Julianne MoorePresident Alma Coin
- Philip Seymour HoffmanPlutarch Heavensbee
- Jeffrey WrightBeetee
- Stanley TucciCaesar Flickerman
- Donald SutherlandPresident Coriolanus Snow
- 83
TheWrap
Suffice it to say that while Mockingjay, Part 1 might not be as consistently thrilling as “Catching Fire” — the second movie always has the luxury of being all PB&J and no crust — it's the movie equivalent of a page-turner, consistently suspenseful and filled with surprises and illuminating character moments. - 80
Total Film
With measure and muscle, Lawrences Jennifer and Francis nail the job of selling the long, twisting road towards revolution. - 80
Time Out London
While it definitely takes its foot off the action, Mockingjay – Part 1 goes deeper and darker. - 80
New York Magazine (Vulture)
A part with this much sobbing, hand-wringing, and mournful gazing into the middle distance could be, in the wrong hands, a laugh riot, but Lawrence’s instincts are so smart that she never goes even a shade overboard. She’s a hell of an actress. - 70
Variety
For all its obvious smarts and mildly provocative ideas, Mockingjay doesn’t seem to trust its audience quite as much as it clearly trusts its heroine. - 60
The Telegraph
Mockingjay – Part 1 is all queue, no roller-coaster. The third of four films in the successful and admirable Hunger Games series is any number of good things: intense, stylish, topical, well-acted. But the one thing it could never be called is satisfying. - 60
CineVue
Collins' revolutionary-lite rhetoric has become unravelled by the commercially driven decision to split the final novel into two films - ultimately lessening the satirical bite and reverting to the very gender archetypes it originally sought to challenge. - 60
The Guardian
Director Francis Laurence ekes a paltry story out. The special effects are limp and the script a little creaky, although somehow it still manages to thrill.
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