The Hunger Games books were so much smarter than the movie

Here is a picture of me with a Hunger Games poster.

It’s huge. It’s right in my apartment’s entranceway. And at first glance, it’s cheerful: a June Cleaver type, canning preserves with her smiling, pigtailed daughter, who says, “We’ll have plenty to eat thanks to my tesserae, won’t we mother?” At second glance, one might notice the worrying caption, “Don’t let your family starve this winter!” At third, you might recognize the Panem Capitol seal, or actually read the block of bold text beneath that shouts, in unnerving capitals:

BE RESPONSIBLE — FEED YOUR FAMILY — YOUTHS 12-18 MUST ENTER THE LOTTERY FOR THE REAPING — NO EXCEPTIONS — ON PENALTY OF DEATH

What makes a 35-year old not-really a Hunger Games-player?fanKeep a Hunger Games poster up in 2023, if you are a fan. Because it reminds me that you can’t judge a book by its online discourse or its movie adaptation — there’s more Lord of the Rings in the story of the Hunger Games than there is Harry Potter.

Let’s talk tesserae

A photo of a nearly square framed poster, hung on a wall. A June Cleaver-type cans preserves with her smiling pigtailed daughter, under the text “We’ll have plenty to eat thanks to my tesserae, won’t we mother?” Another bit of text says “Don’t let your family starve this winter!” At the bottom of the poster, block text reads BE RESPONSIBLE — FEED YOUR FAMILY — YOUTHS 12-18 MUST ENTER THE LOTTERY FOR THE REAPING — NO EXCEPTIONS — ON PENALTY OF DEATH.

Photo: Susana Poli/Polygon

You probably know the broad strokes of Suzanne Collins’ dystopian YA series. In the techno-genetic society of Panem, the hedonistic Capitol maintains its dominance over 12 other districts through military might and a yearly, televised debutante-ball-slash-reality-show-slash-battle-royale featuring 24 children from the lesser districts. These “tributes” are chosen in a ceremony called the Reaping, where their names are put on paper slips and randomly drawn from a globe. The district allows any child aged 12-18 to be considered, as long as the person lives in that area.

However, you may not have the right information: The Reaping isn’tIt’s a completely random lottery. For one thing, it’s weighted toward older kids. A 12-year-old’s name will only be in the globe once, but a 13-year-old will have two slips of paper, a 14-year-old three, and so on. Another reason is that the Hunger Games favor the poor.

This is a ghoulish little detail that’s absent from the Hunger Games movies, and easy to miss in the books. In Panem, if a family finds itself without means — the examples we see firsthand are widowed and disabled parents — its children can sign up for a “tessera,” or a year’s starvation rations for one person. Children can sign up each year they’re eligible for the Hunger Games, and each year, they can sign up for as many tesserae as they have family members.

The word derives from the ancient Greek and Roman word “tessera,” meaning “tile,” referring both to a ceramic piece and, more relevantly, to a token, as in an object you might purchase at an arcade. Each year during the Reaping an extra slip of paper is added bearing the child’s name for every tessera that a child asks.

It’s mentioned in the books that both protagonists, Katniss and Gale, have taken numerous tesserae to keep their families from starving, and to save their younger siblings from increasing their odds. An 18-year old who is financially secure would only have seven slips around the world. Katniss is the only one with 20 slips. Gale is 42.

Effie Trinket holds up a slip of paper at the Reaping, taped shut in The Hunger Games film.

Lionsgate Image

It’s a Tiny detail. It has no bearing on the plot: Katniss’ sister Prim, whose name is only in the globe once, gets picked, prompting Katniss to volunteer in her place. The other unlucky tribute that year is Peeta, the baker’s son and the mayor’s grandson, who has never wondered where his next meal would come from. The tesserae idea is pure world-building, and it’s a remarkably deft element at that.

With tesserae, Collins didn’t have to Say it that the Capitol’s culling is weighted toward workers who produce the least for elite consumption, not in so many words. She didn’t have to directly explain that the Hunger Games were designed to display the Capitol’s dominance over the districts, but the tesserae system was designed to perpetuate class divides within the districts themselves. She simply built her setting in line with the universal truth: When rain is falling everywhere, there’s a reason some people get wetter than others.

In some ways, the story of tesserae is the opposite of the Harry Potter books, where drilling in on the details only diminishes the series’ overt themes. You can forget about the popping thing. Once you think about Hogwarts’ slave labor or about how magic can instantaneously heal broken bones but that wizards built their entire society on not sharing with other people, it is easy to start questioning the morality and ethics of the wizarding community.

And that’s what I like about my poster: It reminds me that the Hunger Games books were subtler and more complex than they might seem today, based on the conversations they sparked. Especially after they became megalithic: after imitators flooded YA publishing, and after the dominant online discourse around them — other than talking about the movies — focused in on how annoying Katniss’ first-person narration is.

My poster reminds me, more than anything else, that the medium itself is the message.

The firebrand girl

Product listing for the LASplash “The Hunger Games: The Exhibition Girl on Fire The Classic Eyeshadow Palette.”

The first color on this palette, Primrose, is named for the main character’s little sister, who is killed by a bomb set by her own forces.
LA Splash Cosmetics.com Image

The Hunger Games’ story always strained against the basic fact that simply by being adapted into cinema, it was rendered into spectacle. The movies removed viewers from Katniss’ perspective and recast them as Capitol citizens: an audience swept away by a far-off life-or-death drama of love and war that could have no more relevance to their actual lives than fiction.

My poster was provided by the nice people at the official Hunger Games CafePress store (now defunct — 2012 was a different time!After my article at The Mary Sue about the print, she reached out and offered to send me the printed copy for no cost. (Unfortunately, the email thread mentioning the artist’s name is long lost.) But that collection of book-fan-created apparel and housewares was quickly eclipsed in the main push of Lionsgate’s advertising blitz.

A screenshot of the official Hunger Games Tumblr blog, featuring an image of an elaborately made up Effie Trinket with the words “What will you be wearing to the opening ceremonies?” and an image of an at the time real bottle from the official Hunger Games nail polish line.

Image: Lionsgate/Tumblr

There were official Hunger Games tie-in makeup palettes, official athletic wear based on the tributes’ uniforms — the movie even started an official Tumblr account in the voice of a Capitol fashion magazine, exhorting followers to compete to become the next “stylist,” i.e., the person who puts pretty dresses on the child gladiators. This was not all. 1. film. Once the franchise’s blockbuster bet was proven good, the merchandising process escalated: The product lines became bigger, sparklier, more sanitized. This was not ironic on the corporate side.

I think people underestimate the Hunger Games because — as with the Lord of the Rings movies — they remember the derivative stuff that came after the books more than they remember the strengths of the work that sparked the genre. They also remember movies where the basic constraints of the medium condense and flatten the message, which they don’t get.

My work-from home desk allows me to glance at my poster. It features an image I would never have seen on a PR-managed Tumblr. It’s not a message for Capitol citizens, after all; it’s a reminder to the other districts. Your children are never completely safe — but if you work for us, and other people don’t, you can make them safer than those other people’s children.

And it’s a reminder to me that in this pop-culture golden age of the adaptation, film doesn’t elevate the lowbrow, or legitimize the overlooked. Not by default. It’s another way of telling a story, not the finalUne façon de raconter une histoire.

The book isn’t always better, but the movie is always different. And most of all, you can’t judge a book by its discourse.

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