Forgive me, I had not heard of The Hunger Games before I posted an item about Canabaltâs creator and mentioned he was making an iPhone game coinciding with the filmâs release. That was a week ago. Since then, I could not avoid the topic if I tried, and not just because of its understandable appeal to video gamers.
https://lastchance.cc/canabalt-runs-onto-playstation-platforms-this-week-5894324%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
That kind of saturation-induced weariness is evident in this public radio editoralistâs bemoaning of âinevitableâ video game spinoffs of The Hunger Games, and the potentially disturbing effects they could have on adolescent kids, for whom this series is written. It is, after all, a story centered on children hunting each other (in a dystopian future).
To that I say, âinevitableâ?
If the kind of full-bore âsingle-shooterâ (does he mean âfirst-personâ?) experience that KPCC-FMâs Matthew DeBord describes was being developed under a Hunger Games license, a) it probably would have released concurrently with the film, and none has. B) Even the most slapped-together movie adaptation is probably going to take a year to bring to market. Letâs say some shovelware publisher is already all over this and Scholastic and author Suzanne Collins do the deed. When that game arrives, is it really going to exploit the kind of interest that DeBord imagines?
Yes, there will be sequels to this film. I donât think itâs a fait accompli that one of them gets the full-size video game adaptation treatment. Who knows, maybe Scholastic and Collins understand the potential damage that could be done when their story is now the interactive hunting and killing of children, instead of the (somewhat) sanitized presentation of it. Perhaps they donât want their names on or their franchise harmed by something that could be so easily reduced in a mainstream news controversy and utterly misunderstood.
DeBord himself concedes that the browser-based games and Hunger Games: Girl on FireâAdam Saltsmanâs adaptation for mobile devicesâare ârelatively mildâ and, in the case of Girl on Fire âkiddie friendly.â Still, DeBord says, âThe bottom line is that money will be made on stuff that isnât the movie. And that raises some real issues about whether that money is being made on follow-on entertainment that really good for kids.â I think heâs gone up the stair to meet a man who isnât there.
https://lastchance.cc/before-you-watch-the-movie-play-hunger-games-girl-on-5895541%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E