The Rise and Fall of Teen Dystopias

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2021
  • It's the year 2021, and you are watching The Video Essay on The Computer while living in The Society and learning about The Books that focused on The Dystopia. Check out www.audible.com/sarahz or text sarahz to 500-500 to get a 30 day free trial!
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Комментарии • 10 тыс.

  • @SarahZ
    @SarahZ  11 месяцев назад +895

    Can we get a hell yeah for the 2023 hunger games renaissance 👀

  • @summerchild_
    @summerchild_ 2 года назад +14884

    Oh yeah, the five genders: nice, honest, farmer, Slytherin and parkour.

    • @zed4643
      @zed4643 2 года назад +155

      ☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️

    • @Butchcavalier
      @Butchcavalier 2 года назад +1048

      The guy from the "it ain't much, but it's honest work" meme is a farmer/honest divergent

    • @IntoxicusFreeman
      @IntoxicusFreeman 2 года назад +98

      I'm a towel

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean 2 года назад +376

      Oh no, I'm nice and honest. I guess that makes me nonquintary.

    • @cgg2621
      @cgg2621 2 года назад +231

      It's always bugged me that 3 of the names are nouns and the other two are verbs

  • @wilhelmkreis6578
    @wilhelmkreis6578 2 года назад +6117

    still haven't gotten over the fact that the bread boy was named peeta like his dad just liked bread so much he named his son after some bread and then spelled it peeta instead of pita to cover his tracks

    • @-topic9506
      @-topic9506 2 года назад +538

      I'm from a country that LOVES pita bread. this joke is made practically every time the hunger games is brought up

    • @eukarya_
      @eukarya_ 2 года назад +359

      @@-topic9506 In Spanish pita is the imperative of the verb "pitar" which means to use a whistle or a car horn, so in my country we would have jokes of Peeta as a football referee or driving a car, yeah...

    • @roreah
      @roreah 2 года назад +112

      Pita bread it's how his father made his mother fall in love with him

    • @syndrome5372
      @syndrome5372 2 года назад +371

      His cousin, naan, became a butcher. Shamed the whole family.

    • @jamespearce6121
      @jamespearce6121 2 года назад +50

      Or he just likes family guy

  • @michiyaslana5974
    @michiyaslana5974 Год назад +2452

    Hunger Games's love triangle is a pretty awesome tool to show how little control over her life Katniss had. She spent her teenage life being the family's provider, had to enter the games, kill people, deal with PTSD and survivor's guilt, become the face of a rebellion and struggle for dear life of hers and her loved ones - all the while being forced to continuously keep up appearances for the cameras. And then there's two guys who accuse her of being indecisive. INDECISIVE! She didn't have the luxury to explore her options, she couldn't develop her chemistry with Gale because Snow kept watching, she couldn't develop her relationship with Peeta at a healthy and comfortable pace because the situation demanded drastic jumps between milestones that would otherwise take years. She didn't get to live her life as a normal teenager should, and the love triangle was part of her overall tragedy.
    Meanwhile, ironically, we as the extension of her audience contributed to it with the Team Peeta/Team Gale nonsense.

    • @franciscoancer2618
      @franciscoancer2618 Год назад +217

      You are so right, Katniss is literally forced to choose between her childhood best friend or the guy who she has to marry to save her family because of Snow. And it might seem like her childhood best friend (who is played by an attractive actor) is the best choice, but she still has doubts because she never thought of him like that until he confessed, at which point she's already won The Hunger Games and has to marry Peeta.

    • @chikachika7782
      @chikachika7782 Год назад

      Not to mention part of her struggle was the fact that she was presented with options that would have made her life easier at the expense of her self worth. While it wasn't explicitly stated, prostitution was the unspoken method by alot of younger girls to survive. The only reason why she didn't become a prostitute/ have sex occasionally with older men for food or money is because she could hunt.

    • @judeconnor-macintyre9874
      @judeconnor-macintyre9874 Год назад +61

      Wait, people were team Gale?

    • @Evey94Marti
      @Evey94Marti Год назад +11

      I think it's lazy writing and truly toxic, I beg everyone and their mom to run if ever finding yourself in such a messed up situation as that before someone has to die in order to choose or be chosen.

    • @Evey94Marti
      @Evey94Marti Год назад +6

      @@franciscoancer2618 she is not, she could've said no to both.

  • @thornels
    @thornels 11 месяцев назад +677

    "If you can tell where the story is going, then the story did its job" is such an important quote especially in this time of writers ruining stories just so they can say they outsmarted the audience

    • @NerdilyDone
      @NerdilyDone 6 месяцев назад +9

      Hardcore disagree. If I know where the story ends, then a good chunk of enjoyment is gone. Not all of it, but I want stories to take me to new places. Originality isn't the problem, dumb ideas are.

    • @Fragrantcanary
      @Fragrantcanary 5 месяцев назад +16

      ​@@NerdilyDoneisn't it in some cases more about the journey such as one piece or something like that

    • @Some_Average_Joe
      @Some_Average_Joe 5 месяцев назад +17

      ​@@NerdilyDoneSo what you're saying is the Lord of the Rings sucked?

    • @yourdad5799
      @yourdad5799 4 месяца назад +24

      ​@@NerdilyDone I don't know which youtuber gave you brainrot but you as the reader recognizing the signs and foreshadowing the writer gives you to predict how the end could go and you actually guessing right is in fact not a bad thing

    • @argon7624
      @argon7624 4 месяца назад +10

      ​@@NerdilyDoneBro would *not* have fun with Shakespeare plays 💀

  • @geordiebailey8648
    @geordiebailey8648 2 года назад +3360

    "Tris, you can't open the box."
    "Umm, I'm literally Divergent, and a minor."

    • @punkitt
      @punkitt 2 года назад +154

      please i hate this comment its so good

    • @thegreendragon9628
      @thegreendragon9628 2 года назад +39

      i love this thanks

    • @mihnma
      @mihnma 2 года назад +14

      I hate you 😭😭

    • @she7061
      @she7061 2 года назад +5

      Brilliant

    • @miche8868
      @miche8868 2 года назад

      +

  • @LinusBoman
    @LinusBoman 2 года назад +4154

    I guess the real dystopia was the cash grab movie adaptations we made along the way.

    • @beatricet7396
      @beatricet7396 2 года назад +54

      Painfully accurate

    • @AxelGage
      @AxelGage 2 года назад +54

      There's nothing more half-assed about the Hunger Games movies than the fact that they saw the book covers, with their idiosyncratic lettering, and decided to scrap it and go with Bank Gothic on all the posters

    • @ohsnapitzT
      @ohsnapitzT 2 года назад

      !!!

    • @Tesseract_King
      @Tesseract_King 2 года назад +3

      Dave Vanderstrike advising the entertainment industry

    • @LaughingBat
      @LaughingBat 2 года назад +4

      I laughed far harder at that than I probably should admit.

  • @joyofcookies
    @joyofcookies Год назад +512

    You didn’t mention ‘The Selection’ which had this descriptor on the back; “Was your favorite part of hunger games the part where katniss got makeovers? Do you love The Bachelor? Then this book is for you.”

    • @marlas.s.
      @marlas.s. 11 месяцев назад +102

      Lmao you gotta respect honest advertising

    • @cakesmaya1775
      @cakesmaya1775 6 месяцев назад +40

      pfft yeah the selection is pretty trashy but at least it's honest about it (guilty pleasure book)

    • @pwetty4r4
      @pwetty4r4 5 месяцев назад +8

      I remember reading that so vividly lmao

  • @karikur0
    @karikur0 Год назад +182

    I remember back in 2011, I dressed as Katniss for halloween and walked around with my bow & a quiver i made myself-proud as could be-and went trick or treating only for absolutely no one to know who the fuck I was (a unsurprisingly reoccurring, but still disappointing feature of my childhood) and all I would do was sigh and say "you'll know in march :(" while every adult looked in utter bewilderment at my mother as she tried to politely explain my disappointment. There was one (1) lady at the end of the night who was like oh! you're that girl! from the book my niece likes! who made my fucking day tho.

    • @anzaia2164
      @anzaia2164 6 месяцев назад +5

      I dressed up as hunger games Summer from Rick and Morty once. That character had like, 3 minutes of screentime. No one fucking knew who I was, but the outfit rocked anyways

  • @houston-coley
    @houston-coley 2 года назад +3848

    When Subway was a sponsor for The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, I went into one of their stores and asked if I could take home the life-size cardboard standee of Katniss Everdeen when they were done with it. The manager said "sure," and for the rest of my teen years, cardboard Katniss with the Subway logo stood guard in my bedroom

    • @diosol_
      @diosol_ 2 года назад +232

      thats amazing

    • @thecolourfulpill
      @thecolourfulpill 2 года назад +236

      Please, tell me that she's still out there...

    • @infamousgamer767
      @infamousgamer767 2 года назад +332

      A bastion, nay, a sentinel of vigilance. We'd all sleep a bit better subway katniss watching us

    • @cookietanukistudios
      @cookietanukistudios 2 года назад +75

      pics or it didnt happen

    • @fish-fingers_and_custard7685
      @fish-fingers_and_custard7685 2 года назад +47

      Oh Wow! I'd completely forgotten about Hunger Games Subway until today...

  • @alexandrac6177
    @alexandrac6177 2 года назад +8977

    My parents met during The Lockdown, but my mother couldn’t get The Vaccine while she was pregnant with me, so she died shortly after I was born. The Good Old Party came for my father next, locking him up in the aftermath of The InfoWars.
    Now my sister and I attend a regular school divided into a number of groups based on our hair color. Except… I have a secret. My hair is dye-vergent.

    • @nathanielclaw2841
      @nathanielclaw2841 2 года назад +940

      you know a bunch of conservative "authors" are writting things like that as we speak. lmao

    • @maximk9964
      @maximk9964 2 года назад +340

      The most underrated comment, I actually laughed out loud.

    • @oliviac295
      @oliviac295 2 года назад +243

      Why would they come for your father😭accurate to these stories

    • @alexandrac6177
      @alexandrac6177 2 года назад +243

      @astronomically anomaly ??? This is my autobiography wym

    • @kamakeii
      @kamakeii 2 года назад +52

      This is the best comment like, ever.

  • @CupofSonic
    @CupofSonic Год назад +2925

    Okay but hear me out: the bit from the end of Mockingjay where Katniss is thinking about why she chose to be with Peeta instead of Gale. She says that Peeta brings out softness, kindness, and Mercy in her. Where Gale is more like a fire that would consume them both. and I think that's a really good analogy for what trauma did to the three of them and what it does to people in general.
    Gale was still ready to keep fighting, and willing to go much further than Katniss would have to beat the capitol and make sure things kept changing. He literally helped Beetee design bombs that had a secondary, delayed detonation to kill medics/ anyone trying to help the injured and then dropped those bombs on children.
    Compared to Peeta who was so vehemently against holding one last hunger Games with children from the capitol.
    I think Team Peeta vs Team Gale says a lot about what a person values and how they would react in that sort of situation. and how Katniss very pointedly chooses mercy and kindness is so profound, especially in a dystopia story

    • @pinkiepielunagirls4541
      @pinkiepielunagirls4541 Год назад +208

      this is exactly why i was team peeta

    • @frozenweevil4022
      @frozenweevil4022 Год назад +221

      honestly hunger games started and peaked the genre

    • @IncredibleMD
      @IncredibleMD Год назад +17

      I mean, Katniss DID kinda just whatevs the idea of holding that last Hunger Games, herself.

    • @lia8232
      @lia8232 Год назад +164

      @@IncredibleMD which is another reason why she needed Peeta way more than Gale

    • @IncredibleMD
      @IncredibleMD Год назад +19

      @@lia8232 She's far better off without either of them.

  • @F4GBOY
    @F4GBOY Год назад +287

    It’s funny to me that several separate conventionally attractive blond women were the ones considered for the role of katniss when katniss in the books has black hair and olive skin ,is described as surly ,and is referenced to look younger than she is because of malnourishment

  • @alexv3357
    @alexv3357 2 года назад +11130

    I've always liked how Honest Trailers described _Divergent:_ "In a world ruled by five SAT vocab wordsー"

    • @aazhie
      @aazhie 2 года назад +1118

      This and "theatre kids parkouring all over Denny's at 3:00am" is so accurate XD

    • @pequodexpress
      @pequodexpress 2 года назад +81

      Fantastic deep dive.

    • @mothertothemoon7
      @mothertothemoon7 2 года назад +214

      Yes hahaha! I can’t remember of it was that same honest trailer or another video that said “the fault in our co-stars”

    • @Wattywatasaurus
      @Wattywatasaurus 2 года назад +251

      “Wait, guys, we did this one already. It’s The Hunger Games!”
      “No Jon, it’s not The Hunger Games.”
      “It’s not? Are you sure? Because it looks and sounds exactly like The Hunger Games.”
      “Yeah, there’s no fight to the death in this one.”
      “So… it’s the same movie, but without the actual games? That sounds horrible.”

    • @wjzav1971
      @wjzav1971 2 года назад +99

      Always love it when grimm dystopias come up with their bullshit words to describe normal things in the world.
      I'm not sure if it is better or worse when they use normal words for them but capitalize them and give them a "The".
      Like in Maze Runner. "We call it The Changing". "You will never survive The Scorch!" "We call them greavers!"

  • @sarah-zv8ld
    @sarah-zv8ld 2 года назад +10949

    i am literally on my hands and knees crying and begging every author and aspiring author to stop naming their books "a noun of noun and noun." please. my children are starving

    • @nbv6975
      @nbv6975 2 года назад +1079

      Hey, for a fun secondary option, you can now just flip open a dictionary to a random page, select a word at random, and name your book “Noun.” Really adds a little spice!!

    • @overgrownkudzu
      @overgrownkudzu 2 года назад +559

      a child of starving and books

    • @mattcgw
      @mattcgw 2 года назад +291

      So light novel isekai

    • @Corviidei
      @Corviidei 2 года назад +1018

      @@overgrownkudzu no no, starving is an adjective. Try “A Child of Starvation and Books.” Much better

    • @juliaanderson9458
      @juliaanderson9458 2 года назад +48

      Omfg I was just saying that the other day. Whyyyy!!!

  • @mollywantshugs5944
    @mollywantshugs5944 Год назад +1245

    The thing that killed dystopian fiction for me personally was the realization that I already live in a dystopian hellscape. I want fiction where things can be better.

    • @lifeisgood9889
      @lifeisgood9889 Год назад +43

      Well said. Same

    • @yellowstarproductions6743
      @yellowstarproductions6743 Год назад +24

      So basically a half dystopia and half utopia fiction story or book, yeah I agree with you

    • @creed8712
      @creed8712 Год назад +15

      @@yellowstarproductions6743the problem is utopia isn’t real.
      Even in Star Trek so far back you could see the seeds of things that sorta shake the idea Rodenberry had and now after a war Star Trek is just another dystopian sci-fi universe

    • @jgamer2228
      @jgamer2228 Год назад +19

      Jesus Christ, don’t cut yourself on all that edge.

    • @josephmother2659
      @josephmother2659 Год назад +60

      @@jgamer2228 nothing edgy about believing society can be changed for the better

  • @herioutwo7672
    @herioutwo7672 Год назад +608

    The Hunger Games love triangle is actually pretty cleverly written, but the marketing exaggerated it to the point of irony. It has so much more depth than just "which boy will this girl pick in the end???" (which once again manages to speak on the entertainment we consume as an audience). Katniss never cared for romance, but the Peeta vs Gale debate has more to do with choosing ideals and morality. Peeta represents peace, mercy and kindness, whereas Gale is all about the rebellion and doing what "has" to be done in a war. For Peeta, killing is personal and something that should always be avoided. Gale on the other hand is a hunter, and he mainly hunts by laying traps (unlike Katniss who has to look her pray in the eye every time she takes a life), therefore making the act of killing impersonal - but necessary to sustain himself and his family.
    The love triangle ties into other themes as well, like class differences. Peeta is a merchant's child and Gale is from the seam. Katniss thinks Peeta's and her life were worlds apart. She demonstrates this through her internal monologue about her parents - Katniss’s mother made a financial sacrifice when she decided to marry Katniss’s father. It was a decision that made her family abscond her, and countless people know this. Katniss doesn't think highly enough of herself to believe that she alone would be enough to make someone like Peeta risk abandoning what she views as a comfortable town life - therefore Peeta literally does not cross her mind as a romantic interest, even though she has subconsciously taken notice of him; "apparently, I have not been as oblivious to him as I imagined, either. The flour. The wrestling. I have kept track of the boy with the bread." So there might have been feelings that she stored away as unreachable due to the circumstance of their class difference.
    In the first games, Katniss does not allow herself to recognize any potential feelings because doing so would put her in severe emotional danger. If Peeta matters to her, his death will be tragic, and Katniss will have to mourn him. Katniss values kindness above all else. Katniss love Prim because of her everlasting and persistent kindness and throughout training Katniss is constantly attempting to determine if Peeta is kind because she is terrified of the fact that he might be. This is why Katniss distances herself from Peeta, and the very second she is given the chance for both of them to go home, she involuntarily screams his name. And while she does play up the romance to an audience she despises, she also has genuine moments with him. Like the kiss that stirs her chest and "makes her want another one". After the two-victor rule is revoked, Katniss knows she would never recover if she impeded not making it out together. “You are not going to leave me alone here’ I say, because if he dies, I’ll never go home. Not really. I'll spend the rest of my life in the arena trying to think my way out.”
    She's willing to gamble her life, even if her gamble meant dying, because at least she would no longer be playing the Capitol's game anymore. This is exactly what Peeta said to Katniss the night before entering the arena, and Katniss dismissed it because she promised to win for Prim. But now, she's one step away from victory and despite all, willing to die with Peeta. Because it would be on THEIR terms. This is what starts the rebellion. Things get complicated when they win because now she HAS to love Peeta by the demands of the Capitol and Snow, which she resents. And on top of this, she's confused because she never expected any type of future with someone like Peeta, and scared to death of the potential consequences of it: ”It’s no good loving me because I’m never going to get married anyway. And he’d end up hating me later instead of sooner. That if I do have feelings for him it doesn’t matter because I will never be able to afford the kind of love that leads to a family, to children. And how can he? After all we’ve been through? I also want to tell him how much I already miss him but that wouldn’t be fair on my part."
    I personally believe Katniss unknowingly loved Peeta by the second book, or was at the very least starting to fall for him. My girl is an unreliable narrator, dense, young, insecure, and traumatized as fuck, but she describes a "longing" and "hunger" for him. Heck, she is even filled with a "brief moment of happiness" when dreaming of Peeta's child playing in a future with no games. Which is both foreshadowing as well as a glimpse into her real feelings. So in a way, her "yearning" for Peeta is a yearning for peace as well as developing love. (Side note, but I also find it funny how she cannot imagine herself ever having kids with Gale, but felt "empowered" when Peeta dropped the baby bomb lmao. It isn't really explained as to why she feels this, but I guess it could do with the fact that he voiced Katniss/parents's fear of having their child reaped for the Hunger Games? Maybe because he understood her, or because he made the capitol audience understand?).
    Her "feelings" for Gale on the other hand are all about the expectations of District 12, her home, the woods, and the girl she was before the games. This is why she talks about a future with Gale as obvious and something she ultimately "could" want if they ran away together, even if she doesn't like him romantically at the moment. She can still "learn" to love him. She wants to love Gale for the same reason she wants to be the girl she was before the games. "I wish Peeta were here to hold me, until I remember I'm not supposed to wish that anymore. I have chosen Gale and the rebellion, and a future with Peeta is the Capitol's design, not mine." So the love triangle is ALSO about Katniss navigating trauma and freedom.
    There is also the symbolism between bread and hunger - Panem ("panem et circenses" - bread and circuses. meaning to generate public approval and create distraction from bad governance by satisfying 2 of the most trivial requirements of the population - food (bread) and entertainment (circuses). Panem's citizens focus on watching the Games to see who will win, thereby earning food (bread) for their district.) There is also Peeta - "this boy, Peeta Mellark, and the bread that gave me hope", and marriage - (the "toasting" ceremony - toasting bread as a form of shared love ties in to Peeta throwing Katniss the burnt bread). As much as we love to focus on the "games" part of The Hunger Games, "hunger" is equally - if not more - important. For Katniss, hunger is something that she constantly wants to forget. She spent her whole life growing up hungry, and whereas Gale and Katniss were forced to hunt, Peeta bakes. Baking is the "coming together" of ingredients. During the Games, Rue’s district sends Katniss a loaf of bread to signal their appreciation for her treatment of Rue. In this unprecedented demonstration of solidarity between districts, it's a threat to the order of the Capitol, which relies on division of the districts in order to maintain control.
    All in all, the love triangle is super complex and adds to the themes and story of the novels, even though the "romance" part is rather uninteresting. Especially because Gale was never an option if we are talking actual romance, or even the thematically ""correct"" choice.

    • @ieatredbears5163
      @ieatredbears5163 Год назад +68

      It's intresting to think that she loved peeta but refused to acknowledge it and felt like she should love gale but didn't. It was like she wanted to defy everything she was supposed to feel including her feelings. I could also see it as her not fully recognizing her feelings because they were never important in keeping her or her family alive but hunger was. So her being "hungry" for peeta is just her only being able to identify her emotions that way because she's emotionally stunted.

    • @jadeterrain4771
      @jadeterrain4771 Год назад +28

      This is brilliant. A+

    • @marylincherie1806
      @marylincherie1806 Год назад +8

      hm, when Gale was injured in the books and Katness would not leave his side at the kitchen table despite hurting Peeta over and over and she knew it, to me as a reader she was more into Gail at that point - probably why they were dating - and not like a brother/cousin. Still some interesting analogies in your post.

    • @amandawojcik8693
      @amandawojcik8693 10 месяцев назад +9

      oh my god you deserve more likes that was brilliant

    • @sobbing3743
      @sobbing3743 9 месяцев назад +8

      this is so well done

  • @mrsmaggiekoch
    @mrsmaggiekoch 2 года назад +2311

    "Dauntless: basically the theater kids parkouring all over Denny's at 3 a.m." 10/10 gold.

    • @CrowCoded
      @CrowCoded 2 года назад +13

      I liked that book series more than Hunger Games. But they both dropped the ball on the third book.

    • @chibiktsn3
      @chibiktsn3 2 года назад +9

      Best line in a video essay with many great lines.

    • @missybarbour6885
      @missybarbour6885 2 года назад +28

      Man, internet people call any boisterous annoying kids "theater kids" but we are a VERY SPECIFIC kind of annoying! Loudly performing physical feats to show off to everyone you think you're better than makes you a jock! A JOCK!

    • @patrickstar2027
      @patrickstar2027 2 года назад +5

      @@missybarbour6885 nah not anymore, source:me who did some theater stuff in high school

    • @tristiancirca89
      @tristiancirca89 2 года назад +1

      😂😂😂

  • @ryanjstannard
    @ryanjstannard 2 года назад +1953

    People in Distopians: Alright, time to go to The Breakfast™ at The Cafe™, so I can be sustained for The Test™, which takes place at The School™.

    • @-topic9506
      @-topic9506 2 года назад +111

      I must join The Breakfast Club

    • @TheLandBeyond_Creations
      @TheLandBeyond_Creations 2 года назад +118

      @@-topic9506 or else The Government™️ will get you

    • @wind_reader
      @wind_reader 2 года назад +81

      Each proper noun accompanied by the Vine boom sound effect

    • @Helperbot-2000
      @Helperbot-2000 2 года назад +3

      @@wind_reader now i cant read it without hearing the boom

    • @heatgerm
      @heatgerm Месяц назад

      The funny thing is I read a YA dystopian novel called Feed by M.T. Anderson where students went to School™
      I loved it though. Extremely bleak.

  • @four_girls_in_search_of_awesom
    @four_girls_in_search_of_awesom Год назад +813

    There was a book I really liked in high school about a dystopia where families can only have a limited number of children. The first book was about a young boy was wasn’t legally supposed to exist, and his family secretly keeps him hidden. Then he realizes the neighbors have a hidden daughter, they become friends, and she makes him braver to sneak outside sometimes. At the end, she goes to a protest that was organized online, one where many hidden children said they’d show up to make a stand. The boy doesn’t go, and later finds out that most people didn’t turn out, and those who did were gunned down. I don’t think I’d ever read and enjoyed anything with a downer ending before. It felt poetic, and it kinda felt real. I still really love dystopias, and I’m not totally sure why.

    • @christinaguilfoy100
      @christinaguilfoy100 Год назад +69

      oh god, do you remember the name?? this is tickling the inside of my brain but i can’t remember the name of the book

    • @noahparks9686
      @noahparks9686 Год назад +143

      @@christinaguilfoy100 Among the hidden

    • @sparkypikachu7776
      @sparkypikachu7776 Год назад +25

      Man. I'll never understand that logic of making kids illegal. Ik it was fiction but still I don't see a reason they'd do that like idc how high the population is just absolutely no.

    • @defaultkoala2922
      @defaultkoala2922 Год назад +28

      Wow thanks for dredging that up for me. Had a few of these Dystopian YA novels kicking around while listening to this that I could not remember the names of but can remember the plots. Thanks for helping with this one

    • @lovesfairytail122
      @lovesfairytail122 Год назад +9

      I remember reading it and crying

  • @jordand331
    @jordand331 9 месяцев назад +104

    Never forget when I read Allegiant immediately after it came out and complained about the ending to my mom, who then went to the hospital where she worked as a nurse, saw a patient reading it, and asked them “is that the one where the main character dies at the end?” Sorry, to whoever that was

    • @dukstedi
      @dukstedi 6 месяцев назад +7

      oopsy doodle😂

    • @orangeants
      @orangeants 5 месяцев назад +9

      That was probably a core memory for that kid lol. Being in the hospital and getting the the biggest spoiler ever about a book series that inspired a lot of emotional attachment 😭

    • @surelylune
      @surelylune 3 месяца назад +1

      literally such an insane thing to do. why would you ever do that

  • @JacksonBockus
    @JacksonBockus 2 года назад +1992

    Divergent is a commentary on the people who take Myers Briggs types seriously and won’t shut up about them.

    • @CraigMiyazaki
      @CraigMiyazaki 2 года назад +251

      That's totally what an IMDB would say

    • @cruzcflores
      @cruzcflores 2 года назад +80

      @@CraigMiyazaki Yeah, I believe that’s under the “trivia” section

    • @Brisarious
      @Brisarious 2 года назад +97

      @@CraigMiyazaki omg that's such a Gemini thing to say

    • @Michaelalovespandas
      @Michaelalovespandas 2 года назад +164

      If you get a different result every time, it’s because you’re divergent

    • @5UH9VQLVE5
      @5UH9VQLVE5 2 года назад +53

      gosh ur such a slytheroid

  • @poppycola1135
    @poppycola1135 2 года назад +5585

    My favorite thing about Divergent is that it isn’t the *whole world* that’s doing the society-based-on-buzzfeed-personality-results thing. It’s just Chicago and I think a few other places.

    • @fleurgi
      @fleurgi 2 года назад +453

      The author read the subcategories available for Standardized Testing graders and decided to build her world around these words.

    • @wjzav1971
      @wjzav1971 2 года назад +377

      I am always confused and curious about what the rest of the world is up to in these localized dystopian governments.
      Like, what are other nations doing outside North America? Is Panem in trade relations with them? Is it all a wasteland out there?
      If San Angeles from "Demolition Man" has eschewed all forms of violence, are there any hostile states outside who would seize the opportunity to invade?
      Is WCKD the only organization on the entire planet interested in solving the Scorch with mazes? Are there others?
      Brave New World or 1984 at least gave a short explanation that other places are equally fucked up.

    • @adeleaslan8182
      @adeleaslan8182 2 года назад +275

      When I first heard of divergent I thought the factions were ways to control people by forcing them to pick a life style and personality to maintain and mellow out humans and make them fear being anyone else so it was easier for the government to control them. I really thought the author was going with some symbolism of people being forced to conform to their families or societies idea of a perfect person and trying to find themselves in a group of people by sticking with one way to live. I didn’t think these people *actually* only had one personality trait

    • @njb1126
      @njb1126 2 года назад +45

      Are I90 and 94 still full of bad drivers in divergent?

    • @wjzav1971
      @wjzav1971 2 года назад +76

      @GrantKP And the Rebels look all gorgeous, with clean faces and trimmed hair, are all well-fed and somehow able to go head to head with the evil government troops despite fighting a guerilla war with pathetic weapons and having to live in the wild.

  • @ThePrincessUmbrella
    @ThePrincessUmbrella 11 месяцев назад +133

    I think something that would've made Divergent more interesting would've been if it was revealed that *everyone* was divergent, and the government was just lying and telling everyone that they belonged to an arbitrary category that made them easier to control. That way Tris wouldn't be ~special~, and it would be a bit more resonant that the government created categories that people needed to conform into for social acceptance, since that actually *is* a problem, as your co-writer pointed out!

    • @everest5718
      @everest5718 7 месяцев назад +26

      Honestly when I was a teen and read those books, thats what I thought the twist was gonna be. I kept waiting but it never happened lol

    • @ositaiza888
      @ositaiza888 6 месяцев назад +9

      I was truly convinced that was gonna be the twist,, I was so disappointed when I found out the acc twist :/

  • @juliastms
    @juliastms Год назад +511

    Seeing Jennifer Lawrences body type in the Hunger Games movies gave me so much confidence as a teenager and I‘m so grateful for her deliberately staying „healthy and strong“ (I think she even talked about gaining muscle mass to become stronger) instead of loosing weight for the role.

    • @Saibellus
      @Saibellus Год назад

      that complaint was stupid as fuck anyway. shes literally the only person in the district who can reliably get meat and fresh vegetables/fruits/berries. she needs to hunt, which requires stamina and strength. idk its dumb any way you slice it to me.

    • @caitlyncastellion4361
      @caitlyncastellion4361 Год назад +37

      i love that she didn’t want to lose weight because she didn’t want young girls to want to be thin like katniss

    • @Evey94Marti
      @Evey94Marti Год назад

      She's just thin like all others with beauty WHITE privilege

    • @zvezdoblyat
      @zvezdoblyat Год назад +15

      ​@Caitlyn Castellion I think the bigger underlying issue is: why would girls want the body of someone slowly starving to death? Because who Katniss is. That whole thought process is tragically stupid.
      I was so confused when I watched it as a kid because she sure as hell didn't look hungry, and gale was a huge dude with tons of muscle. Definitely not starving.

    • @paulgibbon5991
      @paulgibbon5991 8 месяцев назад +10

      @@zvezdoblyat I enjoyed the movie, but I remember being quite confused about why it was called the "Hunger" games when nobody looked particularly malnourished. Whereas in the book, there's a great piece of worldbuilding that is entirely Katniss looking at a typical Capitol plat of food and calculating what she'd need to do to have something like that at home.

  • @Eli_Guy
    @Eli_Guy 2 года назад +2813

    "Divergent tells the story of a dangerous dystopian city, known as Chicago"
    Having lived in Chicago my whole life, this had me laughing way too hard

    • @yellowstarproductions6743
      @yellowstarproductions6743 Год назад +6

      50:39

    • @alim.9801
      @alim.9801 Год назад +32

      I went to visit Chicago and now watching the movies I'm like trying to identify landmarks 😂
      Chicago is really cool. The natural history museum is my favorite museum I've ever seen and also I want more of the pizza. Congratulations your hometown has ruined all pizza for me

    • @ravenward626
      @ravenward626 Год назад +16

      Yeah, it kind of seems like the main audience for these "Teen Dystopias" grew up and realized that they were already in an adult dystopia. That's the kind of hope killer which makes stories of change and justice seem to ring hollow.

    • @Eli_Guy
      @Eli_Guy Год назад +6

      @@ravenward626 Yeah, that Cyberpunk Edgerunners scene with David walking to school was way too close to my morning commute

    • @sleepy.timaeus.arts.
      @sleepy.timaeus.arts. Год назад +3

      @@ravenward626 this is what ive been thinking. i do wish it would come back a bit since i feel there’s still more for us to talk about and touch on, especially in a more diverse lens. also, dystopia is just plan interesting to me 😔

  • @genevievefangirl
    @genevievefangirl 2 года назад +3646

    I will say that I think the ending of Hunger Games is interesting in that while the society gets a happy ending, it isn't a happy ending for Katniss, at least not entirely. She never really recovers from her trauma even though her and Peeta get together and have children. I think it is a nice commentary on how being the person to spark change doesn't mean happiness is guaranteed.

    • @simplesimply3753
      @simplesimply3753 2 года назад +428

      That is entirely why I love the books so much. It actually showed trauma and how much it damage it does. Something I feel a lot of media doesn’t show.

    • @puck2470
      @puck2470 2 года назад +352

      This is a good point. In a way, I think The Hunger Games' ending went the same route as Lord of The Rings - Frodo saved society, but was broken afterwards.

    • @iloveyourunclebob
      @iloveyourunclebob 2 года назад +197

      I REALLY appreciate that throughout all the books Katniss is not okay. It's not HORRIBLE TRAUMA "I'm perfectly fine and nothing is different. This has barely had an effect on me." THG isn't perfect, but I honestly think the series really is great, especially for YA novels dealing with something so traumatizing.

    • @somedude172
      @somedude172 2 года назад +121

      this. i remember reading the hunger games series as a traumatized 12 year old who wanted to change the world- the ending really sat with me. i remember pondering it for months after reading the series

    • @SkinnyPigDesigns
      @SkinnyPigDesigns 2 года назад +115

      @@iloveyourunclebob so true! We often assume that after heroes fight a war, they all live happily ever after and that's how it's supposed to be. I've read so many personal stories of people who have fought in wars and even though they won and were hailed as heroes, their personal lives ended up a mess due to the trauma of what they experienced. Obviously, The Hunger Games is fiction, but I think that Katniss can still be looked at as an example that it's okay to not be completely okay in the end and it's true that there really are no total winners in war

  • @FleurSteff
    @FleurSteff Год назад +285

    I think other dystopian ya did so badly were the way they automatically treat adult characters as irrationally evil to the readers/viewers face. Hunger Games respects the adult characters and gave people like Haymitch, Effie, and President Snow personalities that are naturally adult with adult confilcts.

  • @BoreBoar
    @BoreBoar Год назад +278

    Absolutely will never forgive my 9th grade English teacher who was also the school cheerleading coach and quit after one year of barely being present in the first place, who had us deviate from the standard curriculum and read Divergent instead of Fahrenheit 451.

    • @TPNsBiggestFan
      @TPNsBiggestFan Год назад +25

      NOO

    • @niallreid7664
      @niallreid7664 Год назад +19

      HOW did she get away with that? I must know more.

    • @BoreBoar
      @BoreBoar Год назад +48

      @@niallreid7664 my state was like 50th in education for a reason LMAO. They absolutely did not care and probably preferred that it was something less "controversial".

    • @jalapeno1119
      @jalapeno1119 11 месяцев назад +7

      lol my freshman English HONORS teacher skipped over Shakespeare

    • @alias704
      @alias704 10 месяцев назад +1

      I read the hunger games as well in school. But like in grade 6. In 9th grade we only did real old German dramas.

  • @allisonwalker-elders6319
    @allisonwalker-elders6319 2 года назад +2120

    Ah yes, A Bone of Thorn and Bone, about a peasant princess girl who’s the youngest eldest daughter with a terrible secret and hidden superpower, both of which everyone knows about.

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean 2 года назад +50

      Is this a reference to something specific, or just YA trends I've failed to keep up with?

    • @Mia-sc5dz
      @Mia-sc5dz 2 года назад +162

      @@timothymclean lmaooo this is a joke about a court of thorn and roses, a YA novel that’s full of smut and terrible characters

    • @thenotsoamazinggracetnsag3463
      @thenotsoamazinggracetnsag3463 2 года назад +17

      Why did I think Elsa from frozen

    • @eliasalbarracin5549
      @eliasalbarracin5549 2 года назад +9

      @@Mia-sc5dz Oh man, I just checked that out at my local library. I can't wait to laugh my ass off.

    • @allisonwalker-elders6319
      @allisonwalker-elders6319 2 года назад +71

      @@Mia-sc5dz I feel like it's an amalgamation of a court of thorn and roses, red queen, shadow and bone, and a few others that are all "young girl has superpower and it's because she is secretly royal."

  • @kamilawojdyla
    @kamilawojdyla 2 года назад +2685

    “Divergent tells the story of a dangerous dystopian city known as Chicago”
    Me, a native Chicagoan: Can confirm, it is a dangerous dystopian city”

    • @RoseEyed
      @RoseEyed 2 года назад +52

      We have great food and pretty lights tho

    • @kamilawojdyla
      @kamilawojdyla 2 года назад +20

      @@RoseEyed Cant argue with that!

    • @FalonGrey
      @FalonGrey 2 года назад +54

      Chicago in fiction: Dear God, the government has taken control, we fear for our lives.
      Chicago in the real world near future: Oh god, the pizzas now have multiple deep dish layers, we fear for our lives.

    • @iloveyourunclebob
      @iloveyourunclebob 2 года назад +6

      @@RoseEyed it is amazing that I can drive 40 minutes north to my friend's apartment and then be able to order any type of food I can think of

    • @mediawarrior5957
      @mediawarrior5957 2 года назад +2

      then there is Detroit

  • @amyeddelman
    @amyeddelman Год назад +157

    I think the public “downfall” of Jennifer Lawrence among women could also be due to the fact that a lot of the female fan base of the hunger games series was reaching that point of maturity, where they realized it’s fine to be like other girls, other girls are great, and loudly trying not to be is cringe. And JL pretty much built her whole brand off being not like other girls/actresses. Like yes I think some people did just get tired of it, but I think it came at that time where the older gen z/younger millennial women were really confronted with dismantling their own internalized misogyny.

  • @caracarter5946
    @caracarter5946 Год назад +82

    I don’t think the point of Mockingjay was “both sides bad”. To me, it read more that Coin was a false savior who portrayed herself as a rebel because she wanted the power Snow had. There are several commanders in the rebel side (Paylor, Boggs, Heavensbee, etc) that are truly in the rebellion to overturn the system. Coin was willing to kill innocents, but not everyone in command on the rebel side knew that that was her plan, only a select few (of course it’s entirely possible I’m misremembering, I’m due for a re-read of the whole series).

  • @Wmother3
    @Wmother3 2 года назад +3304

    That Subway commercial really feels like a comedy sketch. It is truly comedic gold.

    • @SarahZ
      @SarahZ  2 года назад +730

      Bold could be getting murdered by a fascist government. Or a delicious Subway sandwich

    • @jerryturgin6583
      @jerryturgin6583 2 года назад +43

      @@SarahZ hey there is a ton of spam in the comments and some phishing going on. I would disable links in the comments for right now, if you are worried about it

    • @phangkuanhoong7967
      @phangkuanhoong7967 2 года назад +35

      i'm not American, so that ad totally blew my mind.

    • @melasn9836
      @melasn9836 2 года назад +50

      Beginning with the old man who gets executed for starting a silent protest is a CHOICE.

    • @kathylennerds750
      @kathylennerds750 2 года назад +20

      It’s also like … perfectly American to just.. hmmmmm :)

  • @mihika152
    @mihika152 2 года назад +3057

    one time i read a fanfic about how four became so distraught over tris’s death he moved to scotland and became snape’s dad

  • @reverendsteveii
    @reverendsteveii Год назад +175

    The genius of the hunger games books wasn't truly revealed until the movies were made and marketed the exact same way the actual games were marketed in-universe. The #TeamPeeta vs #TeamGale thing, the nerfing of the suicide pact, the dance remix of Hanging Tree, this series was such a thorough skewering of the society of the spectacle that it actually predicted what our society would do with it after it was released.

    • @corvuscallosum5079
      @corvuscallosum5079 8 месяцев назад +2

      is that a motherfucking Guy Debord reference?

    • @dukstedi
      @dukstedi 6 месяцев назад

      HungerGames may be what becomes of our Idiocracy when try to get our shit 2gethr.

  • @rebeccalubera146
    @rebeccalubera146 Год назад +90

    I'm just thinking watching this that vaguely remembering that Veronica Roth is Christian and having liked the Divergent books as a catholic teenager in a very conservative household i think honestly the main fantasy of Divergent is a kind of christian rock feeling of "you can be a good person and wear eyeliner and your parents can't tell you to only wear grey and give up everything fun" and i hope someone has done a close read of this take

  • @vow4621
    @vow4621 2 года назад +907

    The idea that problems can be solved by "getting rid of the bad people" is probably the root of most of our problems as a society.

    • @erikdaniels0n
      @erikdaniels0n 2 года назад +41

      See also: the 2020 US Presidential Election

    • @lepcusmagna860
      @lepcusmagna860 2 года назад +33

      we need to get rid of the bad people promoting these ideas >:(((

    • @5UH9VQLVE5
      @5UH9VQLVE5 2 года назад +1

      I mean, they can always check into the reeducation camps voluntarily

    • @FunnyFany
      @FunnyFany 2 года назад +7

      **glances vaguely in the general direction of SU crits**

    • @melaniey.5596
      @melaniey.5596 2 года назад +41

      Yeah... that’s one of the problems I have with superhero or “vigilante” stories (which pain me a lot because I really like them). Societal and systematic problem are reduced to “if we beat the bad guy the day is saved” with its easier but not a true solution, just tackling a symptom instead of the problems (I suppose that’s one of the escapists elements of those stories, the false dream that complex problems can be solved with simple solution).

  • @artemiswolf4508
    @artemiswolf4508 2 года назад +4473

    She didn’t even mention the worst part about the hanging tree song.
    In the books it the lyrics were “Wear a necklace of rope, side by side with me” but District 13 actually censors that part of the song and replaces it with “necklace of hope”.
    By changing this single lyric the song becomes about two lovers running away together while in the original version it is clear that person A is telling person B to commit suicide because that’s the only way they can be free.
    They did this because they didn’t want the real grim reality of the story to set in, they didn’t want people to realize what the song was actually about, they just wanted a more clean “inspiring” anthem for their revolution regardless of if it was accurate.
    And by doing that they basically erased the reason why that song was seen as a revolutionary anthem to begin with.
    It was supposed to be one of the first hints about District 13 being almost as corrupt and oppressive as the Capitol.
    In the movie and dance remix the lyrics go “Wear a necklace of hope”…
    If that’s not a perfect metaphor I don’t know what is.

    • @alexandrapedersen829
      @alexandrapedersen829 2 года назад +399

      I forgot about this and it's such a good detail. I never actually realised that the film uses District 13's censored lyrics; life really does imitate art.

    • @jesusramirezromo2037
      @jesusramirezromo2037 2 года назад +424

      Except the movie DOES mention Necklace of rope
      The guy that made it says "The lyric was originally a Necklace of rope, i had it changed to Necklace of hope" and procedees to explain why, its not a small scene you miss, its completley explained

    • @jesusramirezromo2037
      @jesusramirezromo2037 2 года назад +19

      @@alexandrapedersen829 it dosent ignore it tho

    • @alexandrapedersen829
      @alexandrapedersen829 2 года назад +113

      @@jesusramirezromo2037 Well, I suppose that's why I never noticed that it did. My semicolon seems pretty pretentious now.

    • @lilybean9585
      @lilybean9585 2 года назад +100

      As someone who never read Hunger Games but new the song, I always thought “necklace of hope” didn’t quite fit with the rest of the song. Now I know why

  • @kay5197
    @kay5197 Год назад +192

    I love how in all of Sarah’s videos you see the background outside slowly turn from day to night, showing how long she’s been ranting abt this stuff

  • @howdyhowdyhelga
    @howdyhowdyhelga Год назад +368

    ngl, i always kinda read katniss as a confused aroace girl who was never really interested in gale or peeta - she had just resigned herself to being in a relationship with gale in the beginning, because it was expected of her in a way (i got the impression their families expected it) and they had been friends long enough that getting married wouldn't feel so weird, not to mention he could take care of their families. but, after the things he pulled in mockingjay (directly causing the events that kileld prim), katniss lost her trust in him, so she instead chose to make a life with peeta, because he was the only other person she was close to and understood what she had been through.

    • @placeholderdoe
      @placeholderdoe Год назад +19

      Interesting way to read

    • @alim.9801
      @alim.9801 Год назад +45

      I could definitely see her being aroace or at least greysexual. She never seemed to have strong romantic feelings but more like a nonromantic but still strong bond with both of them, if more so with Gale.

    • @Nerdnumberone
      @Nerdnumberone Год назад +27

      @alim.9801 Putting a confused aroace character in the middle of a love triangle sounds like an interesting setup. It could also serve as a great parody. The main protagonist is focused on the main conflict (like a revolution or whatever), while half of their supporting cast is trying to develop a romantic relationship. The protagonist could occasionally notice their advances and act on them in the way some aroace people try to develop relationships since society stresses how important and fulfilling it is. It's just really obvious that everybody else is more invested in their love life than they are (even characters who don't court her directly).
      Screw it, go full harem. XD

    • @justalula7151
      @justalula7151 Год назад +9

      @@Nerdnumberone That's kinda like the premise of the manga/light novel/ and anime My Next Life as a Villainess: All Routes Lead to Doom! where the fml is reincarnaited into a visual novel game where she's supposed to be the main villianess so she's just trying to avoid dying and ends up getting basically like every important character from the game (from the fml,ml, the love rivals and the girls the other love rivals were supposed to end up with) to fall in love with her unknowingly. She's completely oblivious to everyone around her being openly in love with her and is just focused on growing her crops. So she's not canonically aroace but she doesn't rlly show any romantic interest in anyone either.

    • @Nerdnumberone
      @Nerdnumberone Год назад +2

      @justalula7151 I am familiar with Bakarina. Yeah... that does seem similar to this.

  • @oscollective
    @oscollective 2 года назад +547

    "Why would anyone want to be anything other than Dauntless?" Uh...because as a physically unfit, chronically ill teenager, Dauntless was all my worst nightmares in one place. Amity always sounded the best. It's quiet and peaceful, and you get to be a farmer.

    • @SarahZ
      @SarahZ  2 года назад +356

      Yknow I respect that. Fuck yeah farming district

    • @Level99Chickens
      @Level99Chickens 2 года назад +112

      farming is like 86% intense physical labor tho :(

    • @caterinapicco7316
      @caterinapicco7316 2 года назад +83

      I get your point but the thing that i remember the most about the amity is the fact that their bread is drugged so that they are always happy and chill and their anger is being controlled and suppressed. Not very nice imo

    • @evies.1018
      @evies.1018 2 года назад +156

      It’s honestly super problematic how so much of the “bravery” in Dauntless boils down to just being fit and able-bodied. If you get Dauntless as the result of the testing ceremony and then aren’t in shape enough to make it through the months of intense physical training (where the lower-ranking people would get cut and made “factionless”), you’re just tossed out and worse off than before since you can’t go back to your birth faction and are cut off from your family. You’re not Dauntless enough, never mind that bravery as a concept has nothing to do with how well you can fistfight. And that’s not even touching how you need to be able to jump from a train in order to even get into Dauntless. Like would a Dauntless initiate in a wheelchair or some sort of leg injury or something not be able to get in at all? Plus the entire faction (iirc) is also some weird su!cide cult where once you’re too old to parkour or whatever you’re supposed to end your life and the weird way that Al taking his life is handled in the book. It’s just all around a mess when it comes to physical and mental health.

    • @yonicorn1641
      @yonicorn1641 2 года назад +7

      @@caterinapicco7316 that's the best part imo :)

  • @ScottDavid7
    @ScottDavid7 2 года назад +725

    The Divergent series was good for exactly one thing
    The line from the movie where some guy is like "You won't shoot me" to the protagonist and she literally says "Why does everyone keep saying that??" and shoots him.

    • @oliviaw-k8145
      @oliviaw-k8145 2 года назад +40

      Yesss I remember that

    • @lordoftheducks332
      @lordoftheducks332 2 года назад +11

      I refused to read or watch Divergent out of spite because my sister liked it and bugged me about it too much but that sounds literally amazing

    • @ScottDavid7
      @ScottDavid7 2 года назад +23

      @@lordoftheducks332 It's worth it to look up the "you won't shoot me" scenes from that movie, they're VERY good and the most iconic parts of otherwise unremarkable movies

    • @legrandliseurtri7495
      @legrandliseurtri7495 2 года назад

      Wasn't that also in the books?

    • @ScottDavid7
      @ScottDavid7 2 года назад +2

      @@legrandliseurtri7495 Not those specific lines, Tris being brutal when the bad guys thought she wouldn't be was but a line that funny sure wasn't

  • @adonut6485
    @adonut6485 Год назад +135

    1:05:20 this is funny because as of now The Hunger Games franchise has made a HUGE resurgence online. With the movies now being on Netflix it seems people are talking about it again. Honestly the timing couldn’t be more perfect with the new prequel movie coming out later this year. I haven’t seen this much hype for the franchise in years- we’ll see how long it lasts but it’s kind of nice seeing the books and movies get the appreciation they deserve. Suzanne Collins is an incredible author and the books have aged so well with many topics being relevant today

    • @orangeants
      @orangeants 5 месяцев назад +2

      Even more so now with TBOSAS

    • @TheSakura809
      @TheSakura809 4 месяца назад

      Ok hot take but I don't find Suzanne Collins's writing very good at all. Still love the story she created though!

  • @cass6020
    @cass6020 Год назад +115

    Okay but the thing that I loved as a teen about the adaptation of Hunger Games is that the books track an almost entirely nonverbal commentary from Katniss and the movies had to naturally exposit all kinds of information Katniss spends pages thinking about stuff and knowing stuff about the world. They don't take the lazy (or I guess, the laziest possible) route of having her just like, narrate things constantly. I love the reality tv and arena managing aspects being used to build out the world, it felt like they really used the change in medium well, and as a teen reader this level of analysis in 'is the movie better, or worse?' was a thing I'd thought about before but was only just getting invested in from the point of view of a hobbyist writer trying to grasp what each thing is good at doing.
    You know what I liked about the Divergent movie? Watching angsty teens do parkour and get tattoos, and listening to Ellie Goulding sing cool songs

  • @marinemanaphy101
    @marinemanaphy101 2 года назад +1519

    What consistently blows my mind is that, back when The Hunger Games was so big, people were **begging** for a Hunger Games video game - not one about the movies or books in terms of story, but just the gameplay of being in a Hunger Games arena and fighting to win. At a period where tie-in games were dead I can understand why they didn’t do it, but this is a series that was perfectly built for anthologies, video games, etc. Then Battle Royale games became the biggest genre on earth, and I hope the rights holders were kicking themselves for missing the biggest open net on earth.

    • @elias306
      @elias306 2 года назад +314

      I remember how popular the “Survival Games” was in Minecraft

    • @TigerAceSullivan
      @TigerAceSullivan 2 года назад +136

      oh man, the number of people who used to and still do play the survival games on minecraft to fill this niche is insane

    • @RobinOttens
      @RobinOttens 2 года назад +144

      This confused me too. Death matches in closed off arenas were already a big thing in multiplayer games since the first game ever gamed. You also had a wave of games around that time where bow and arrow was suddenly the primary weapon. And then battle royale games exploded. Yet no one ever thought to make an official Hunger Games Game.

    • @CobaltN64
      @CobaltN64 2 года назад +61

      Fortnite dancing in the 13th district

    • @marinemanaphy101
      @marinemanaphy101 2 года назад +52

      @@RobinOttens right? literally all the conditions were there for The Hunger Video Games and nobody ever decided to make it which is just so weird.

  • @aprilshowers0606
    @aprilshowers0606 2 года назад +1810

    “the day rue became black” is such a good video, ty for shouting it out :’))

    • @bettievw
      @bettievw 2 года назад +168

      I love that video so damn much, it lives in my soul. Rue was so incredibly sweet, and the actor who played her seems so wonderful in her interviews, it still lingers with me how hard that must have been on a fucking *14 year old child* 😭. Ugh, tears, man.

    • @alejandrocervantes3624
      @alejandrocervantes3624 2 года назад +42

      Im only half convinced this time she didnt mentioned the creators name (as Sarah's done before) because she didnt know how to pronounce it 🥣🔧💫👀

    • @lilyl.6715
      @lilyl.6715 2 года назад +8

      @@alejandrocervantes3624 lmao I thought that too

    • @JLMac322
      @JLMac322 2 года назад +2

      It's a masterfully done video, I hope everyone goes to watch it after this

    • @Gloomdrake
      @Gloomdrake 2 года назад +3

      @@JLMac322 if I have enough time to watch it a third time

  • @shen8171
    @shen8171 10 месяцев назад +59

    I think the popularity of the Dystopian YA novel had a lot to do with the 2010s pop culture. Everything was colourful and lighthearted, music was very fun, RUclips brought comedy sketches and Zoella hauls to teens…It was very much a lighthearted time compared to later years, so I think the Dystopian YA was so enjoyable because it felt a lot darker than real life. But post 2016, and especially now, it feels too close to home and people want stories that give them that fluffy feeling of the early 2010s.

  • @greendoritoman2464
    @greendoritoman2464 Год назад +181

    every time I feel bad about my own writing I just think about the fact that a published author named a character "the Old Man" in their uber serious teen dystopia

    • @samyen3210
      @samyen3210 Год назад +2

      That was one of my favorite books when I was in early hs. Still have them in my bookshelf

    • @hailghidorah2536
      @hailghidorah2536 Год назад +4

      Was he “of the Mountain”, by any chance?

  • @StarlightPrism
    @StarlightPrism 2 года назад +4286

    Idea for a shitty YA dystopia: a world where horses are illegal. It's illegal to own or ride horses, and wild horses are exterminated. Our protagonist comes across a lone wild horse one day and they develop an instant bond. She is soon invited into a pro-horse rebel group that wants to take down the tyrannical government, and she and her horse will be the key to victory! It gets in the YA dystopia demographic AND the horse girl demographic!

    • @TheNumnutRandomness
      @TheNumnutRandomness 2 года назад +865

      "Sadie! Get away from that Thing! We can't trust them since... The Stampede."
      "You don't understand, daddy! You'll never understand!"
      _horse neighs approvingly, before turning into the key of a forgotten underground city, where it turns out horses were outlawed by The GLU Factory for pro-car propaganda_

    • @seaemji8591
      @seaemji8591 2 года назад +282

      the perfect mix between horse girl story and dystopian ya story. I want to read it now.

    • @Addiebella
      @Addiebella 2 года назад +127

      IM ALMOST SURE THIS EXISTS

    • @enjolraswaters7491
      @enjolraswaters7491 2 года назад +156

      but horses dont exist

    • @PolyChromium
      @PolyChromium 2 года назад +117

      Is hbomberguy the president of this government?

  • @OverlyPositiveFanboy
    @OverlyPositiveFanboy 2 года назад +1168

    Hunger Games series: "Our love triangle starts off as deliberately artificial to comment on the typical tropes."
    Hunger Games marketing: "Our you Team Gale or Team Peeta?"

    • @boxorak
      @boxorak 2 года назад +88

      Ain't it fun when someone instantly proves a satirical work's point?

  • @NovaPax
    @NovaPax 4 месяца назад +11

    The hanging tree remix brought back some crazy memories. When I was obsessed with the books, I'd have my kindle play them on text-to-speech all the time, especially going to bed. It was SUPREMELY creepy to wake up in pitch darkness because a robot is whispering murder poetry directly into your ear.

  • @PaulGuy
    @PaulGuy Год назад +107

    "What happened to young adult dystopia novels?"
    Reality took its place.

    • @michelleririn5075
      @michelleririn5075 5 месяцев назад

      what do you mean by that ??

    • @GatlingPea32
      @GatlingPea32 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@michelleririn5075 most likely the comment meant two things:
      1. The dystopia genre suddenly died down because in real life, we are already living in a dystopia. (This was true post-2015, when the year this genre died down. This was also when a lot of real-life chaos erupted, such as economic instability, racism, Islamist terrorism and the rise of tech-consumerism and far-right politics in the latter half of the 2010's.)
      2. A lot of young teens who read dystopia novels had already grown up and became mentally mature once that genre died down around 2014. A lot of them have to face the real world, like getting a job, paying rent, marriage and even starting a family.

  • @Igorcastrochucre
    @Igorcastrochucre 2 года назад +3032

    I still can't believe she went this entire video without even mentioning Maze Runner, that series somehow got an entire trilogy of movies and actually finished the story.

    • @savannah9903
      @savannah9903 2 года назад +166

      And imo they did it poorly 😂

    • @AV-uo6qh
      @AV-uo6qh 2 года назад +206

      But not before crashing a car into Dylan O’Brien 🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @llynxfyremusic
      @llynxfyremusic 2 года назад +138

      @@savannah9903 the first film is good but it goes downhill quick

    • @LakeFX
      @LakeFX 2 года назад +46

      0:25

    • @plaecholder
      @plaecholder 2 года назад +52

      @@llynxfyremusic just like the books

  • @evies.1018
    @evies.1018 2 года назад +1505

    The Capital-themed makeup has the same energy as that one “Lorax-approved” car from the Onceler video

    • @evies.1018
      @evies.1018 2 года назад +111

      I think that Subway trailer caused me psychic damage, holy shit-

    • @SuperPal-tr3go
      @SuperPal-tr3go 2 года назад +8

      @@evies.1018 Same.

    • @gargamellenoir8460
      @gargamellenoir8460 2 года назад +7

      @@evies.1018 I physically cringed... Even the voice actor must have wondered where his life had gone.

    • @boxorak
      @boxorak 2 года назад +5

      It's legitimately the sort of thing the Capital would do.

    • @evies.1018
      @evies.1018 2 года назад +3

      @@boxorak it’s like something that Snow would have suggested in The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes to make the games more “engaging”. Straight-up child murder not going it for you? Try some of this special Hunger Games branded makeup :)!

  • @finch4309
    @finch4309 Год назад +25

    i think my favorite part about divergent is how it was such a genre staple to make all these cool dystopian names for your countries and settings, and like you have that with the factions, but the city itself is literally just chicago.

  • @whatthehelliot
    @whatthehelliot 2 года назад +787

    I, as a little disabled kid, was heartbroken when I realised they took out all the disability from the hunger games, especially katniss' hearing loss

    • @TheLastSane1
      @TheLastSane1 2 года назад +202

      Or Peeta being an amputee

    • @Amsayy
      @Amsayy 2 года назад +15

      It was surgically repaired, though

    • @dragames
      @dragames 2 года назад +38

      but they kept Rue being living impaired!

    • @dragames
      @dragames 2 года назад +24

      @VioletNuisance sorry. Impaled*

    • @TenkDD
      @TenkDD 2 года назад +3

      Did you manage to develop a personality since then?

  • @acecat2798
    @acecat2798 2 года назад +8137

    I feel like you learn everything you need to know about the disconnect between YA dystopia as a literary genre and as a pop cultural phenomenon by comparing the actual text of "The Hunger Games" with the marketing for the movies and the deluge of knock-offs that didn't have anything to actually say with their dystopia (I'm looking at you, Divergent). "The Hunger Games" criticizes everything from the exploitation of the working poor, the sexualization of teens for mass-consumption, the nature of propaganda and the illusion of equal risk (one ticket for everyone, except you can put in more tickets for much-needed rations). It also contains strikingly realistic portrayals of depression and PTSD, among other things. The movies had a tie-in website where you took quizzes like "what's your district," like it was a "What's your ATLA element" or "What's your Hogwarts house?" and not "are you a malnourished agricultural laborer or a member of the petty bourgeoisie?"

    • @yookee13
      @yookee13 2 года назад +5

      nuj

    • @Flameclaw123
      @Flameclaw123 2 года назад +848

      Remember when they turned The Hanging Tree into like, an upbeat pop song??? And then played it on the radio? Or when they made tie-in makeup products literally called the Capitol Beauty Collection??? The marketing for the movies was absolutely wild, it genuinely feels like a parody of itself
      Edit: these are literally mentioned in the video, I forgor 💀

    • @primitiverobot
      @primitiverobot 2 года назад +484

      god, yes, the dissonance between the actual content of the books and the marketing of the films was WILD. i was a bit outside the intended age range for the novels when they came out- i think i read the first book when i was about 19-20, and was 23 when the first film was released- which i think made me a little more able to notice that mismatch in real time, not just in retrospect, and i remember being startled by it back then too. truly bleak stuff

    • @pascaleand0r
      @pascaleand0r 2 года назад +175

      @@onibeebee i spent all of allegiant enraged at how everyone was so fucking dumb except tris and then mad at myself for wasting 30 bucks and 3 days of my life on that stupid book.

    • @jacquelinealbin7712
      @jacquelinealbin7712 2 года назад +260

      The plot of Divergent was just "what if the SATs, but too much?"

  • @thornels
    @thornels 11 месяцев назад +31

    I like pretending video essays like this are just me mentioning a subject and the essayist sitting down opposite me and just.. monologuing about it off the top of their head. I listen with enthusiasm

  • @SingingDragons11
    @SingingDragons11 Год назад +24

    The Divergent human engineering plot just screams “I didn’t think this world through and now I need fix it!”

  • @natkatmac
    @natkatmac 2 года назад +3212

    The most wild thing to me was Lawrence being criticized for looking "too healthy" to play a main character that had grown up struggling for food.
    They wanted her to starve herself to look more gaunt and realistic. Translation: they wanted to create suffering for the sake of entertainment.
    The irony.

    • @jaycievictory8461
      @jaycievictory8461 2 года назад +289

      Good point. Though I do kinda wish they had CGIed Katniss during the flashback to her first interaction with Peeta where he gave her bread and she's pretty much at death's door from starvation. Like they CGIed him to look utterly gaunt after his torture in the Capitol. Didn't need to be that much, but maybe a little to make that feel more urgent.

    • @roelin360
      @roelin360 2 года назад +412

      They could have done it without actually making her unhealthy, mainly via makeup. They could have given her dark circles and desaturated her skin colour slightly, for instance. They could have made her lips look chapped and given her skin conditions that occur from malnutrition. They could have used minor sculpting to give her prominent cheekbones to create a gaunt appearance, alongside minor computer effects/filters to make it look more realistic.

    • @casie6609
      @casie6609 2 года назад +95

      Don't they just mean make her look unhealthy? With makeup etc. Why'd you come to that horrible conclusion lol

    • @natkatmac
      @natkatmac 2 года назад +83

      @@casie6609 Because makeup and special effects can only do so much. Actors starving themselves for specific roles is way more common than you think. Ex: Bale in the Machinist, McConaughey AND Leto in Dallas Buyer's Club, etc etc. The practice is as old as Hollywood itself.

    • @casie6609
      @casie6609 2 года назад +80

      @@natkatmac I do know about it and it's horrible. I was just thinking about it because the stuff they can do with makeup is crazy nowadays. Especially with the face, making people look like they're literally dying. It seems like they could do it

  • @roguerambles4387
    @roguerambles4387 2 года назад +901

    “This was one of the only other dystopian YA series to be anyway close to the popularity of the Hunger Games which is quite an impressive feat because Divergent is terrible.” The delivery of this line cracked me up for some reason 😂

    • @nm9688
      @nm9688 2 года назад +6

      It really is

    • @roguerambles4387
      @roguerambles4387 2 года назад +1

      @@nm9688 Oh I know 😂 a friend tried to get me into it when it first came out and I just could not see the appeal whatsoever 😅

  • @quinnie_here
    @quinnie_here Год назад +15

    Catching Fire tugged at my heart a lot more than the first movie did-the death of Katniss’ outfit designer (I sadly forget his name), and the scene where Peetah comforts that girl in the water as they stare at the sky both actively got me invested in the movie. It was really good!
    Edit: FUCK I FORGOT THE TRIBUTE SCENE. THE SILENCE OF EVERYONE AS EFFIE IS SELECTING AND ITS ONLY THE FOUR OF THEM. OH MY GOD-

  • @fishcakepro
    @fishcakepro Год назад +39

    The level of research and bridging everything together, the way you tell the narrative of the trends. Super impressive. Thank you so much.

  • @cucuserpent4
    @cucuserpent4 2 года назад +2556

    Oh god. The amount of old I felt hearing someone “had to read the hunger games for school” is ASTRONOMICAL

    • @who_the_fuck_is_riley5813
      @who_the_fuck_is_riley5813 2 года назад +30

      I had to do that as a sophomore in high school

    • @flaisy5070
      @flaisy5070 2 года назад +28

      nah, don't; we read it in english class while the hype was still running and the films were not all released yet. No indication of being old because of that. We ain't old. 😶

    • @vincenthagood349
      @vincenthagood349 2 года назад +43

      I think that means the three of you are decidedly not all that old then. No one I'm aware of who is 30 or older would have been assigned these books in high school as they were barely even released at that time.

    • @iloveyourunclebob
      @iloveyourunclebob 2 года назад +10

      @@vincenthagood349 yeah, I graduated 4 years prior to the book's release. The most modern book we read in school was The Joy Luck Club.

    • @satandie3405
      @satandie3405 2 года назад +1

      i read it freshman year in hs

  • @abdulmasaiev9024
    @abdulmasaiev9024 2 года назад +542

    Ah yes the 5 basic human emotions
    bravery
    selflessness
    honesty
    intelligence
    farming

    • @savsav.
      @savsav. 2 года назад +32

      Farmers were the unique ones all along

    • @thanatoast
      @thanatoast 2 года назад +63

      Honestly it's disgusting that Farming got cut from Inside Out

    • @PortiaDDoesStyle
      @PortiaDDoesStyle 2 года назад +8

      The farmers are “kindness”. Abnegation isn’t kindness, it’s selflessness

    • @jesm9776
      @jesm9776 2 года назад +1

      farming and Drugs

    • @pepi7404
      @pepi7404 2 года назад +3

      And magic makes it all complete.

  • @sarahmckinnell8435
    @sarahmckinnell8435 Год назад +22

    This feels so wild watching now, seeing as we've entered/ are entering another recession, and the Hunger Games are going through a massive Renaissance

  • @LoreSeamstress
    @LoreSeamstress Год назад +72

    I think iron widow by Xiran Jay Zhao has potential to spark a renaissance, assuming it can reach a wide enough audience. It's a good dystopia, with a lot of ya hallmarks, although possibly too gruesome to be fully oriented at ya audiences, but with a lot of twists on the premise that really solidify it as *good.* My personal favorite is that the mc takes the first shot. She isn't reacting to the government wanting her dead, she would have been perfectly safe if she didn't take action, but she chose to take action because she believed that the world needed to be fixed, and by extension it forces the story to directly confront exactly what is wrong with the existing status quo. So good.

    • @screamingbegins4688
      @screamingbegins4688 Год назад +13

      I fucking love iron widow, it's honestly incredible

    • @kawaiiconcept7479
      @kawaiiconcept7479 Год назад +11

      also does away with the love triangle by making it poly!

    • @_Unoffical_Norahhh_
      @_Unoffical_Norahhh_ 5 месяцев назад +4

      That non binary’s amazing

    • @orangeants
      @orangeants 5 месяцев назад +3

      Are they the author that's just rightfully destroyed that weirdo writer who was putting down the competition on goodreads
      **Edited because I didn't realize the author is nonbinary!**

    • @LoreSeamstress
      @LoreSeamstress 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@orangeants I don't know if Zhao was involved in all that? They're the Chinese person who kick-started their career by making fun of the Mulan remake

  • @KieraWaffles
    @KieraWaffles 2 года назад +671

    "a dangerous dystopian city known as chicago" killed me, that delivery was so good

    • @armleg
      @armleg 2 года назад +33

      But would you be laughing if she called it "The Chicago" instead? I don't think so.

    • @8Bitnoobgamer
      @8Bitnoobgamer 2 года назад +17

      @@armleg "Be careful out there. You don't want 'The Raiders' to catch you past curfew, or you'll be sent to 'The Chicago' to be sold into slavery"

    • @evies.1018
      @evies.1018 2 года назад +8

      “You better be careful out there in The Chicago. If they catch you out after The Curfew, they’ll feed you to The Bears and then thrown your remains onto The Bean.”

    • @samt3412
      @samt3412 2 года назад +2

      Does that make Detroit a super-dystopia?

    • @Flying-Maytree
      @Flying-Maytree 2 года назад +3

      @@samt3412 THE Detroit. Yes.

  • @tesso.6193
    @tesso.6193 2 года назад +918

    As a teen I thought the hunger game's ending was anti-climactic but revisiting it as an adult I thought it was pretty subservice and brilliant. I wanted a singular "chose one" saviour trope, the more realistic idea of a revolution being a long battle with thousands of moving pieces in which you're but a small gear didn't occur to me.
    The fragility of a traumatized 17 years old's psyche, suffering through PTSD, didn't occur to me. Not until I was an adult and my perspective on 16 years old moved on to "oh my god, they're just kids".
    The Hunger Games stood out in that it was way more mature, realistic and well developed than all the other YA dystopias combined. Even the "boring" stuff like agitating and creating propaganda (in the value-neutral sense of the term), breaking dictatorial censorship to cover abuses in the revolution is crucial. It subverted the rugged individualism of the genre for collective struggle.
    It's successors tried to capture it's charm but never had that maturity.

    • @asha80801
      @asha80801 2 года назад +73

      honestly, the propaganda manufacturing is the thing that i remember the most vividly about mockingjay. i legitimately believe that that fucked up my young, bright eyed, ideastic teenage self and made me doubt a lot of shit over the years lmao. as an adult it still hits too close to home

    • @tesso.6193
      @tesso.6193 2 года назад +46

      @@asha80801 That did really stand out to me too. Now that I'm more into activism I realized how crucial propaganda is. Even the correct idea needs propagandising or you're not getting anywhere, because the mainstream media is inherently pro-status quo and will use propaganda against you anyway. It will be used to separate you from your natural allies through misinformation so you have to counter it. Just see how BLM was depicted for example.

    • @li0nna
      @li0nna 2 года назад +16

      @@asha80801 yup, I've read the series in elementary school, and although at the time i didn't understand some concepts (i was in fucking elementary school), it really shaped the way i view certain things, one of them being if i remember correctly the cat faced capitol citizen and other capitol citizens as well, who despite being well off were also deeply harmed by the system, that made me think a lot as a kid

    • @jwm1444
      @jwm1444 2 года назад +5

      Its been a long time since ive read them, but I think my problem is it wasn't written in an interesting way. Like all of that sounds cool described on paper but once you get to the actual writing of the book it felt like Katniss was a zombie. If it wasn't told explicitly from her perspective all of that could be really cool to read about but Katniss didn't give a fuck about it so why should I?

  • @f0ry0u81
    @f0ry0u81 6 месяцев назад +7

    I love seeing the daylight slowly fade away in the background as the video progresses.

  • @DavidProv
    @DavidProv 2 года назад +44

    I remember when I first read the series (I was in my late 20s at the time) someone on Facebook asked me if I was team Gale or Team Peta and I was like "there are romance teams in a book about a dystopian future?"

  • @celie1527
    @celie1527 2 года назад +2541

    i read the “barcode tattoo” series around middle school and the big twist was that the main girl was a bird hybrid and the catalyst for her realizing this was remembering how her mom used to sing “fly away” by nelly furtado and looking back it was. yeah

    • @Keznen
      @Keznen 2 года назад +329

      Was the author high when writing that or something?

    • @242nicolas
      @242nicolas 2 года назад +152

      What was the point of the barcodes

    • @NotEntirelyCalm
      @NotEntirelyCalm 2 года назад +203

      I read it in middle school too and I completely forgot this twist. As in, I literally can't remember it even after reading about it now. I guess it was so ridiculous that I blocked it out.

    • @OWnIshiiTrolling
      @OWnIshiiTrolling 2 года назад +76

      From the short description, I thought that it would technically be possible to actually make a decent book out of that idea. I'm not surprised to hear that that didn't happen.

    • @abigailpulliam6996
      @abigailpulliam6996 2 года назад +19

      I'm gonna be honest, I never read more than the first book, and think I am gonna keep it that way

  • @PunkExMachina
    @PunkExMachina 2 года назад +471

    Divirgent would’ve been a 12 season hit on the CW

    • @rosenberg2497
      @rosenberg2497 2 года назад +41

      Oh god you’re right

    • @KariTalks
      @KariTalks 2 года назад +33

      I hate how right you are

    • @m00nrac00n
      @m00nrac00n 2 года назад +26

      I agree, the material is more suited for straight-to-Tv.

    • @lukajackson2339
      @lukajackson2339 2 года назад +8

      I hate how correct you are

  • @elihilbert1258
    @elihilbert1258 Год назад +36

    I think it’s also worth saying that maybe YA dystopia might have come back after Trump, but then one of the major plot points of actual YA dystopias happened, and I cannot think of anything I want to read about less right now than a “killer disease taking over”

    • @noizepusher7594
      @noizepusher7594 Год назад +12

      Like, we’re literally using the “The (Proper Noun)” format to talk about life these days. Like for example: during The Quarantine caused by The Pandemic I caught The Virus before The Vaccine was ready. That was a completely valid sentence that you could hear about the COVID 19 pandemic!

  • @JaydonTobler
    @JaydonTobler Год назад +10

    Those marketing campaigns and collaborations might be the best piece of marketing I’ve ever seen.
    The products are marketed with this self-awareness that shields the brutality of the content from the audience and sells a sanitized version to the public.
    They literally made marketing campaigns that wouldn’t be out of place in the in-universe Capitol.

  • @mentallyunstable1926
    @mentallyunstable1926 2 года назад +980

    the owl house did a better job at critiquing the sorting people into factions thing in a single 20 minute episode than divergent did in three several hundred page books.

    • @thecolourfulpill
      @thecolourfulpill 2 года назад +36

      Honestly, that comment is relevant for most failed fiction, isn't it?

    • @kumatorahaltmanndreemurr
      @kumatorahaltmanndreemurr 2 года назад +105

      The choosy hat! It broke free!

    • @liamshanley4920
      @liamshanley4920 2 года назад +99

      The Owl House flips so many tired young adult tropes into compelling worldbuilding tools and arcs. It’s honestly brilliant.

    • @mentallyunstable1926
      @mentallyunstable1926 2 года назад +51

      @@liamshanley4920 the magic system and world building is one of my favorite parts of the show it’s amazing. hoping disney will come to their senses and give them a full season 3 and hopefully renew them for more

    • @rambo4916
      @rambo4916 2 года назад +33

      To be fair The Owl House is an amazing show with some of the best worldbuilding in recent times, so most shows are gonna struggle doing as good as TOH in this field.

  • @kinkin8948
    @kinkin8948 2 года назад +2805

    Ill never forget after seeing the first movie my roommate was so disappointed Rue & Thrash were Black. When the rest of us pointed out that in the book they were described as “dark skinned” she said she thought they meant “olive toned”. Our relationship never recovered.

    • @witchplease9695
      @witchplease9695 2 года назад +146

      She and many others exposed their own racism. They refused to believe that a character they liked and sympathizes with was Black..

    • @lomp87
      @lomp87 2 года назад +506

      As a kid I think I read the books after the movies so I pictured the movie. But I remember vividly that Katniss was olive toned, she was described like that. Whereas Rue and Thrash were described as having dark skin. I’m pretty sure Rue’s hair is also described as textured? It’s crazy to me that people would read it and picture all of the districts, that represent North America, as Caucasian? It’s mad

    • @lomp87
      @lomp87 2 года назад +524

      @@witchplease9695 I feel like many also refused to believe that Rue, a black girl, could be portrayed as completely innocent, and flawless, which is to get across how cruel the games are ofc. I just think it’s not even empathy, they refuse to see black people as being wholly innocent

    • @skylarjohnson7779
      @skylarjohnson7779 2 года назад +327

      I was so confused when people were weirded out by Rue being black in the movie. I was like "You read this book, right?"

    • @vivian-sasha-taylor
      @vivian-sasha-taylor 2 года назад +4

      you don't need that shit in your life tbh!

  • @sparrowhawk_lastname
    @sparrowhawk_lastname Год назад +43

    I wasn't expecting to see the Barcode Tattoo series mentioned in this video! Personally I'd argue that it's more than just a trend-chasing YA dystopia, but that could be just nostalgia tinting things. However, I will point out that it's got a nonverbal autistic character who is written pretty well and actually treated like a person, which is something of a rarity in media. It's one of my childhood favorites and ended up indirectly sparking my obsession with birds, years down the line.

    • @CaelTheWaxAngel
      @CaelTheWaxAngel Год назад

      Agreed! The Barcode Tattoo had a GRIP on me when I was 15.

    • @celesteweidner8644
      @celesteweidner8644 9 месяцев назад +1

      right yeah and it came out in 2004. Tried re-reading during the pandemic and couldn't though lol it reminded me way too much of anti-vaccine people then

    • @sparrowhawk_lastname
      @sparrowhawk_lastname 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@celesteweidner8644 Oh man I can totally see that. Sometimes scifi ends up predicting reality and sometimes it just ends up predicting conspiracy theorists...

  • @dani-dt8ef
    @dani-dt8ef Год назад +37

    the "gale is the obvious choice" made me spit out the imaginary water in my mouth, sarah usually has such right opinions, but not this time ig

    • @anzaia2164
      @anzaia2164 6 месяцев назад +4

      Made me feel like when Jenny Nicholson said that VPD is better than Buffy... ToT

    • @orangeants
      @orangeants 5 месяцев назад +8

      Ngl Peeta is kind of a Mary Sue in hindsight but I literally could not care less he's the obvious right choice and Gale can drown

  • @nocturnalanimals5884
    @nocturnalanimals5884 2 года назад +645

    “even though gale is the obvious choice” my peeta mellark loving ass got so offended hearing that.

    • @emably
      @emably 2 года назад +230

      Gale “war criminal, sister murderer” Hawthorne is absolutely NOT the obvious choice

    • @faithmoir1637
      @faithmoir1637 2 года назад +76

      i actually gasped and had to take a lap around my room before continuing when i heard it

    • @carlavsouza
      @carlavsouza 2 года назад +6

      !!!!!!

    • @emmabrandel9870
      @emmabrandel9870 2 года назад +61

      the way i almost stopped watching... sarah what was the REASON

    • @Jerthanis
      @Jerthanis 2 года назад +77

      I legit think she misspoke here. Gale is barely in the books at all, and is always an asshole to her, specifically. Whether you like Peeta or not, Gale was never even in the running, and it's bizarre she says this as part of the "it's not really a love triangle story" point when in the books she ends up with Peeta. If Gale is the obvious choice, it basically by definition is a love triangle story.

  • @thomasdegroat6039
    @thomasdegroat6039 2 года назад +925

    It's sad that "I hate this book because they made me read it in school" is such a common thing. Some of my favorite books (Grendel, Invisible Man, Persepolis) I only ever read because of a class. It sucks that English classes are so bad that it makes great books feel awful.

    • @Minam0
      @Minam0 2 года назад +50

      Same. I had a really positive experience with the required reading. It probably helps that my teachers were really intelligent and entertaining.

    • @thomasdegroat6039
      @thomasdegroat6039 2 года назад +39

      @@Minam0 Yeah, I think the teachers may be a big factor. For example, I don't like "Walden; or, Life in the Woods", but I have such fond memories of discussing it for English class that I don't think I could ever throw away my annotated copy.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 2 года назад +92

      It will ruin any book if you are reading it at the pace of one chapter a week, pulling apart every word. That isn't how books are made to be read.

    • @AleTitan
      @AleTitan 2 года назад +9

      Yep. That's why I loathe Great Expectations by Charles Dickens. Most boring book ever.

    • @AleTitan
      @AleTitan 2 года назад +28

      @@vylbird8014 exactly not every book is filled with analogies and philosophical symbolism

  • @amandi5969
    @amandi5969 Год назад +26

    27:37 it’s really interesting that you view the marketing like this because I always thought it was kind of genius lol. Like I always assumed that the marketing team was in on the joke and that they were purposely marketing it like the capitol would. Because this is exactly the kind of thing the capitol would do to defang a movement and it almost felt like the team was holding up a mirror to America and saying “you are the capitol.” Overall it felt like a great extension of the themes of the story and how panem was an allegory for modern day America. I also feel like this was the only logical way to market such an anti capitalist story and to earnestly market it would have betrayed everything the story stood for.

    • @anzaia2164
      @anzaia2164 6 месяцев назад +3

      I think both are true; the marketing was perfect for the reasons you described, but I do believe that was on accident

  • @biggestastiest
    @biggestastiest Год назад +7

    the hunger games: oligarchy is bad
    capitalism: lol thats great you wanna buy the rich people makeup

  • @cactusbrandon440
    @cactusbrandon440 2 года назад +700

    Something I heard that feels relevant to this conversation is the story of how the 'uglies' series was never able to get a movie adaptation- it's a series with a main theme of dismantling beauty standards after all, and Hollywood just couldn't figure out how to market it, despite trying several times

    • @KaiInMotion
      @KaiInMotion 2 года назад +73

      I think the problem with Uglies from an adaptation perspective is both how expensive it would be, and also how hard all the constant detailed character transformations per book. Certain details and transformations might be hard to pull off even with today's special effects. I think they could do it but it would take the perfect studio and the perfect budget.

    • @theladynim2
      @theladynim2 2 года назад +96

      @@KaiInMotion I always thought it would make an incredible animated film or series (which would solve many of these issues) but back then (and even now tbh) adult animation wasn't much of thing in Western media.

    • @SP3CTR0L1T3
      @SP3CTR0L1T3 2 года назад +44

      Uglies was one of my favourite series as a preteen. I theorised that they might cast a different actress for Tally as an ugly, a pretty and a special, but that would probably result in the character feeling like three different people. And SFX would probably end up in Uncanny Valley territory.
      At least if there is no adaptation, there is no *bad* adaptation.

    • @shinyskunk
      @shinyskunk 2 года назад +5

      Were there attempts to adapt it? I didn't know that.

    • @abbyl4621
      @abbyl4621 2 года назад +6

      I was waiting for a mention of this series. I was obsessed with this as a teen and let all my friends borrow my copies since I had the whole set. I still reread it every once in a while

  • @SpyroTheFox
    @SpyroTheFox 2 года назад +2072

    I'll always hate how Mockingjay was split into two movies. Collins wrote all of the books with the same structure she used with writing television with a clear 3 act structure and nine chapters in each act (hell she makes this even clearer by purposefully putting in the part breaks). I honestly think that's part of the reason why the first two movies were able to be adapted well because it already had a strong structure to them that made it easier to adapt.

    • @bellac6311
      @bellac6311 2 года назад +212

      Yes!! She literally couldnt have made it easier for screenwriters! And they STILL split it into two because thats what Harry Potter did and it made them good money

    • @nailinthefashion
      @nailinthefashion 2 года назад +17

      i would agree with you if i didn't like both films, but i did, and think that it greatly benefitted the relationships and character interplay. i think the same of dune. it ends on me opening my mouth for another bite, i'm not still chewing but at the same time i'm not full.
      the writing was sooooooo glaringly obviously made for a paint by numbers adaptation though, like maze runner hahaha.

    • @witchfynder_finder
      @witchfynder_finder 2 года назад +48

      @@nailinthefashion The difference is that Dune is over 700 pages long

    • @nailinthefashion
      @nailinthefashion 2 года назад +4

      @@witchfynder_finder a lot of it is philosophical musings, and it's the main reason why it's been so hard to adapt. It's been a balance btwn Lynch's stripped down action flick vs Villeneuve's more breathy take.
      I'll always prefer if a book gets multiple adaptations, it's just the kind of long winded story telling I like, so mockingbird didn't feel exhausting 🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @pooblo
      @pooblo 2 года назад +1

      Yea but epic two part finale 🤪

  • @Idontexisthihi001
    @Idontexisthihi001 Год назад +17

    I wish I was a teenager when the YA Dystopian was on fire. I had a dystopian phase when I just ate all that up (Hunger Games, 3 percent, Autodale, Maze Runner) and it’s hard to imagine it being so popular.

  • @a3vus
    @a3vus 6 месяцев назад +3

    I was in my shower, absolutely screaming "THIS CAN'T BE REAL" over and over at that subway ad. Holy hell.

  • @geosustento8894
    @geosustento8894 2 года назад +235

    I agree with most of the things you said, however, I don't think The Hunger Games' final message was "both sides bad" rather, it's "be careful who you help put in power." It's not that the rebellion was just as bad as the capitol, but that there are members of the rebellion who use its just cause to fuel their bloodlust and thirst for power

    • @enzoniaf3863
      @enzoniaf3863 2 года назад +50

      I 100% agree. There are lots of historical revolutions that have been hijacked by charismatic leaders who claim to be fighting for the cause then turn to authoritarianism when they get power.

    • @emiliobustamante2401
      @emiliobustamante2401 2 года назад +21

      And, I think this a point in Mockingjays favor, the revolution does end up turning out well in the end because the people that take over after Coin dont establish a dictatorship

    • @MilenaHdez
      @MilenaHdez 2 года назад +21

      @@enzoniaf3863 I'm Cuban and can tell you, that's exactly what happened in Cuba after the Revolution with Fidel Castro. It is very difficult to criticize the people who "gave you your freedom" once you realize things turned out for the worst. I have always thought Hunger Games had a very realistic and thoughtful ending because of it.

    • @panzy7871
      @panzy7871 2 года назад +15

      100%, it's honestly one of the most striking parts of the story. Coin co-opts the revolution for her own benefit. Tale as old as time, but the fact that Katniss sees thru that shit is what makes the end feel genuinely revolutionary

    • @andrewward4386
      @andrewward4386 2 года назад +2

      @Enzonia F Like how the US bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki to bring "a speedy end to a war" that was going to be over soon anyway, much like District 13 bombing the capital children for the same reason

  • @Sootielove
    @Sootielove 2 года назад +596

    It's a small thing, but it does always frustrate me when people discuss the Hunger Games around the romance and violence. It was a big part of the themes and story that Katniss didn't want to be involved with any of it. Even in the final book her choice between Gale and Peeta was more about what they represented about her trauma and future rather than any romance. It's one of the best books I've ever seen which highlights what pressures and a lack of agency feels like, especially as a girl.
    It's a reason why I don't think the final book ended in a "both sides are bad" thesis. Killing Coin was the one choice Katniss felt like she could make to stop more children like her sister dying, even if it was flawed. Katniss was extremely traumatised, lashed out, and was a teenage girl who shouldn't have been forced to do the things she did

    • @barbarasusej
      @barbarasusej 2 года назад +37

      I loved THG ending, I had to explain to a few people it wasn't about romance at all.

    • @alyssinclair8598
      @alyssinclair8598 2 года назад +61

      I think a lot of people miss that she was forced to be a figureheard for the revolution while just wanting to like, hunt and shiz. from memory after a while she only really seems comfortable in the hunger games, because that's where she gets any amount of agency

    • @NoBodyToDanceWithMe
      @NoBodyToDanceWithMe 2 года назад +40

      That's definitely one of the worse side effects of having to censor the series for the movies because there's a lot a lot of stuff that has to get ignored to even explain how genuinely fucked up katniss was by the end of the story. And why the ending with her trying to feel ok about having children is just a great demonstration that she not only has healed a bit but also that *she was traumatized for life*

    • @roseclouds5838
      @roseclouds5838 2 года назад +7

      she was exploited for her aesthetics emphasising why basing politics and movements on them is flawed
      everything turned into being aesthetically motivating or moving. (cough cough neoliberal commentary)

    • @Marveryn
      @Marveryn 2 года назад +4

      the ending made it clear Katniss suffer from ptsd

  • @judeconnor-macintyre9874
    @judeconnor-macintyre9874 6 месяцев назад +7

    "Gale is the obvious choice"
    No. Wrong. Incorrect.

  • @Vector_Dash
    @Vector_Dash 6 месяцев назад +6

    "That would kill her for a COOKIE" 😭

  • @Hexagonal_Goblin
    @Hexagonal_Goblin 2 года назад +912

    Wildly off topic but every time anyone mentions Josh Hucherson I chuckle because I think of Trapped in a island with Josh Hucherson. What a literary work of art.

    • @voidify3
      @voidify3 2 года назад +99

      oh 100%, i'm surprised this doesn't have more likes, the venn diagram for sarah and jenny is a circle
      (For the record I posted this reply when the OP had 22 likes)

    • @joxclever
      @joxclever 2 года назад +74

      There make be snakes.

    • @danielac2285
      @danielac2285 2 года назад +2

      omg same !!

    • @riley8385
      @riley8385 2 года назад +35

      we stared at each other for 10 minutes

    • @idek7438
      @idek7438 2 года назад +31

      Jenny Nicholson's impact as an influencer in full display

  • @erintoohey6257
    @erintoohey6257 2 года назад +666

    Watching Domino’s make Squid Games promo material has been giving me serious flashbacks to that ‘brands trying to capitalise on an anti-capitalist story’ of the HG era

    • @dc98424
      @dc98424 2 года назад +9

      I need to google this immediately brb

    • @Wizuu0274
      @Wizuu0274 2 года назад +91

      As a wise man once said, 'capitalism doesn't care if you hate it, in fact it can repackage your hate for it and sell it back to you wrapped in neon chrome for 60 dollars', or something along those lines.

    • @EvoluteCreator
      @EvoluteCreator 2 года назад +1

      @@Wizuu0274 do you know ow who said that

    • @zipzapzipzap6859
      @zipzapzipzap6859 2 года назад +22

      @@EvoluteCreator I don't know who said that specific quote but Mark Fisher expressed similar sentiment in his book "Capitalist Realism"..
      this is taken from wikipedia :
      "According to Fisher, capitalist realism has so captured public thought that the idea of anti-capitalism no longer acts as the antithesis to capitalism. Instead, it is deployed as a means for reinforcing capitalism. This is done through media which aims to provide a safe means of consuming anti-capitalist ideas without actually challenging the system."

    • @tl8911
      @tl8911 2 года назад +1

      @@EvoluteCreator Noah Caldwell gervais said that line in his cyberpunk 2077 video. not sure if it's from somewhere else though

  • @kaitoyuuki525
    @kaitoyuuki525 6 месяцев назад +6

    The ballad of songbirds and snakes brought you back to this video didn't it

  • @kristinalfc5846
    @kristinalfc5846 Год назад +7

    I agree with most of this but saying that the Hunger Games ending portrayed both sides as 'equally bad' or saying that violence is not the answer is a gross oversimplification, what I will say is I think Collins was trying to tackle ideas that were too ambitious for a YA novel with only one character's perspective

  • @disdainbrook
    @disdainbrook 2 года назад +987

    I still remember walking into a Barnes & Noble during Hunger Games Hype and they had a special Capitol face-painting activity to celebrate some HG book/movie release. Basically: children, come get your face painted like the fascists in this dystopian book series! It was the weirdest disconnect between source material and Fun Marketing Ploy.

    • @patrickryan7829
      @patrickryan7829 2 года назад +83

      You mean like everyone's Darth Vader masks? Hey kids dress up as someone who would have killed you if you were special in this world.

    • @indoor_vaping
      @indoor_vaping 2 года назад +74

      The Lorax-branded SUV from a previous video still destroys my brain thinking about it

    • @patrickryan7829
      @patrickryan7829 2 года назад +8

      @@indoor_vaping dreamcatchers in cars have my mixed ass asking when you lost your home.

    • @NiftySquares
      @NiftySquares Год назад

      That's similar to the Simpsons episode with the Watchmen Babies

  • @Narokkurai
    @Narokkurai 2 года назад +395

    One of my favorite anecdotes from college was a writing professor and mentor sitting me down after a very harsh editing session and saying, "Look, I mentored this one girl a few years ago. Her book was terrible. I worked with her for months and months and months and it never got better, it only got worse. Now it's a best-selling Dystopian YA series with a movie on the way. You're going to be just fine."

    • @chloe._.
      @chloe._. 2 года назад +2

      Which college was it??

    • @Narokkurai
      @Narokkurai 2 года назад +66

      @@chloe._. I don't want to say too much for fear of bringing the internet down on a professor for something he said candidly to me, in private, but you can probably guess the author and school from context clues in this video and a little wikipedia investigation.

    • @chloe._.
      @chloe._. 2 года назад +32

      @@Narokkurai Ah yeah, I get it. Sorry, I didn't mean to be intrusive like that. I was already 99% sure you were talking about Roth and was hoping for confirmation, but you needn't say more.

    • @tatehildyard5332
      @tatehildyard5332 2 года назад +6

      @@chloe._. Respecting privacy. Love to see it.

    • @arandomcomment1092
      @arandomcomment1092 2 года назад +5

      Holy shit your professor is my personal hero

  • @Guguchina
    @Guguchina Год назад +13

    For a great dystopia that tackles current injustices, you have to read Octavia E. Butler's Parable of the Sower. It has the best female lead (who is black) and deals with issues of resource scarcity (like water) and what that might look like in society. The graphic novel is amazing too.

  • @seniorjohnl
    @seniorjohnl Год назад +2

    Have this on in the background while doing chores. Blows me away how much you are able to speak about concepts that aren't based in anything anchored in reality. Would be curious as to the word count. Not meaning to insult, just find it amazing, I struggle to put together enough words to convince ppl I'm alive and paying attention.