Movie · 2014 · Science Fiction, Adventure, Thriller · 2h 3m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 4.2/10 (2.3M ratings)
Fire burns brighter in the darkness.
Overview
After surviving the Quarter Quell, Katniss finds herself in the hidden stronghold of District 13, where the rebellion against the Capitol is gaining momentum. Struggling with the weight of becoming the symbol of resistance, she must navigate fragile alliances while trying to protect those she loves. As propaganda battles rage and Panem moves closer to full-scale war, Katniss is forced to confront the true cost of revolution.
Ratings
Curator score: 4.2/10
IMDb: 6.6/10
Letterboxd: 3.38/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 70%
Metacritic: 64
TMDB: 6.8/10
Director
Francis Lawrence
Production
Lionsgate, Color Force
Cast
Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Woody Harrelson, Elizabeth Banks, Julianne Moore, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jeffrey Wright, Stanley Tucci, Donald Sutherland, Willow Shields, Sam Claflin, Jena Malone, Mahershala Ali, Natalie Dormer, Wes Chatham, Elden Henson, Patina Miller, Evan Ross, Paula Malcomson
Where to watch
Hulu
Curator Review
Verdict
A grim, politically charged middle chapter that trades arena spectacle for propaganda warfare, trauma, and rebellion logistics. It’s often slow and incomplete on its own, but the mood, performances, and world-building make it rewarding if you’re invested in the series or in dystopian revolution stories.
Best for
fans of bleak YA dystopias
viewers who like political resistance and propaganda narratives
audiences who enjoy character fallout more than action
series watchers committed to the full arc
Skip if
you want a self-contained movie with a complete payoff
you need constant action or arena-style set pieces
you’re impatient with setup-heavy middle chapters
you dislike brooding, emotionally restrained blockbusters
Overview
Mockingjay – Part 1 is the franchise’s most overtly political entry, shifting from survival spectacle to the machinery of rebellion. The result is less kinetic than its predecessors, but also more interesting in how it frames Katniss as a reluctant icon being shaped by competing powers, cameras, and slogans.
Worth noting
What works best here is the atmosphere of exhaustion and manipulation. The film leans into trauma, media warfare, and the uneasy feeling that every victory is staged. Jennifer Lawrence anchors it with a wary, bruised performance, while the ensemble gives the rebellion a sense of fragile momentum.
Bottom line
As a standalone movie, it can feel like a long prelude. But if you respond to dystopian world-building, resistance narratives, and the idea of revolution as performance, it has a lot to offer. It’s the kind of installment that plays better as part of a larger emotional arc than as a one-night payoff.
Top Letterboxd reviews
kiana 🎞 (3.5★) · 16385 likes
too much gale and not enough finnick 🙄🤚
liam f (2.5★) · 12919 likes
it's no coincidence that the worst Hunger Games film is the one where Peeta has the least screen time
bel (2.5★) · 10177 likes
wish they would have just thrown gale in the hunger games hes really annoying
amber ᱬ (4★) · 8855 likes
katniss: *mentally unstable & traumatized*
plutarch: I LIKE YOUR VIBE! KEEP IT GOING!