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A Look Back at The Hunger Games Movie Posters

Jessica Tripler

Staff Writer

Jessica Tripler is an academic who lives in Maine. Follow her on Twitter @jessicatripler.

Now that all four films based on Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games trilogy are in the can, let’s take a look back at the artwork that did so much to help set the tone for the series:

The teaser posters for all four films share the image of the mockingjay pin and flames, both major symbols throughout the series.

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Each installment also had a poster with Katniss amidst the flames. Notice how she transforms from being an ordinary girl with a bow and arrow to a flat out super hero, while becoming indistinguishable from the mockingjay.

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For each film, a series of posters highlighted individual characters. Often, these posters were presented as Capitol-sponsored propaganda. The first two films had tribute posters:

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“Faces of the Revolution” posters from The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 showcase individual rebels with red mockingjay face paint. Unlike the tribute posters, they are staring the viewer down, fierce:

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Katniss wasn’t the only character whose arc was told in promotional images:

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The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 had “District Heroes” — propaganda from The Capitol. These seem to reflect current social issues in the US:

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The filmmakers also supported  a Capitol Couture website. Not posters, but very arresting images that help build the world of the films:

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The “throne series” images from Mockingjay Parts 1 and 2 tell a story. Not the most subtle, but I actually love them for that:

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Posters for the films in IMAX offer a little more complexity and symbolism:

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Following the anti-militarism theme Collins developed over the series, the posters promoting the Capitol’s agenda don’t look much different from those promoting the rebel cause:

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I love the way Lionsgate was very consistent with the red white and black color scheme, futuristic fonts and design, and symbolism of the mockingjay and flames, without being boring.

I also liked the way some posters played with color and texture. The Hunger Games: Catching Fire had a series of portrait posters:

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I didn’t find promo images that featured Katniss looking torn between Peeta and Gale (for which I am grateful). But I’d be remiss if I left Katniss’s men completely out of this post. Here are Gale from the “Meet the Rebels” series (Mockingjay – Part 1) and Peeta’s tribute poster from the Quarter Quell in Catching Fire:

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And last butnot least, Katniss from the final film. I’m not thrilled with the tagline, but I like her expression, her almost-relaxed posture, and the way the natural elements  — clouds, sun, and the mockingjay — gesture away from the politics of war and back towards the life to which Katniss hopes to return to someday.

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