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Hunger Games fans prepare for upcoming movie release with films of their own creation

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Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) and Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson) will make their big screen debut this weekend in The Hunger Games. But they've been portrayed on small screen for years — by fans. (Photo by Murray Close for Lionsgate Films.)

Fans of The Hunger Games have purchased millions of dollars in tickets to the opener of the first movie in the series this weekend. But for years, many of the fans have produced their own screen adaptations of the films, posting them to YouTube and other sites on the Internet.


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This weekend, The Hunger Games opens, and it’s likely to be one of the year’s most successful movies.

Based on the trilogy of dystopian young adult novels by Suzanne Collins, it’s about a teenage girl named Katniss Everdeen living in a future, totalitarian North American nation called Panem. Each year, the country’s impoverished 12 districts send two teenagers each to the capital for a spectacularly brutal ritual: a televised fight to the death, in which the victor brings home food and other aid for his district.

Children kill each other on national television — it’s Lord of the Flies meets Survivor.

First published in 2008, The Hunger Games lures readers in with a plucky female protagonist and a plot filled with political injustice, bloody hand-to-hand combat, and a love triangle. While the first film comes out this weekend, some enthralled readers didn’t wait for Hollywood to put the book on screen.

Not long after it was published, fans started filming scenes and posting them on YouTube — there are hundreds of videos there now.

One of the most popular videos, with more than one million plays, is by a group of teens in Pittsburgh who call themselves Books2Film. Director Hannah Snyder, 15, wrote a script for the entire book with a friend.

"We looked at it and we were like, 'Oh wait a minute. This is not practical,'" she explained.

So Snyder and her friends settled on filming a single dramatic scene.

Kim Shelby, a graphic design student at Southern Utah University, spent eight months producing a trailer (for a film that didn't exist) as her senior project.

The result belies the $300 budget.

"Everyone was really into it,” she said. “How often do you get to kill people on a Saturday afternoon?"

David Levithan, one of the editors of The Hunger Games trilogy, said he loves these videos — and that they beat Hollywood to the punch.

"Once the movie comes out, there's going to be an official screen version of what this story looks like,” he said. “I think it’s pretty awesome that hundreds of teenagers, and some adults, have gotten their vision out there first."

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PRI's Peabody Award-winning "Studio 360 with Kurt Andersen" from WNYC is public radio's smart, surprising guide to what's happening in pop culture and the arts. Each week, Kurt introduces you to the people who are creating and shaping our culture. Let "Studio 360" steer you to the must-see movie this weekend, the next book for your nightstand, or the song that will get stuck in your ear

Found in:   arts & entertainment   books   movies   culture   USA   hollywood
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Clark 23 March, 2012 10:15:37
I hate to sound old, but I'm not sure what the world is coming too. I'd never heard about the book series until this movie came out. Apparently its about kids in the future being forced to hunt and kill other kids? It's one thing to read a book about, but it's another thing to put it up on the big screen in all it's graphic "glory" and have kids see it. hmmmm. I must be getting too old.
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