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Entries in Catching Fire (447)

Friday
Aug092013

100 Day Countdown To The 'Catching Fire' Premiere Starts Next Week 

Lionsgate CEO Jon Feltheimer said this morning that the announcement of Coldplay's new Song "ATLAS" on the Catching Fire soundtrack was only the first of several announcements promoting the movie with a "100-day Countdown" to the release starting next week. 

Feltheimer touted the announcement Friday morning during a call with analysts following the release of better-than-expected earnings for the studio’s first quarter ended June 30. 

What can we expect for the 100-day Countdown? Definitely more announcements about artists included on the Catching Fire soundtrack. And we know Capitol Couture launches their new edition, Zoetic Sol next week. With the new edition, the new feature "Game Faces" begins, but there's no indication whether we're getting NEW portraits of the victors or if they're using the Quarter Quell portraits:

Over the next few weeks, a Capitol Couture style jury will evaluate the portraits of our victors for their allure and polish. Our judges include a makeup artist, hair stylist and physical trainer. No doubt, each victor’s prep team will anxiously await the scores. Victors will be ranked from one to ten, based on their coifs, pouts and poise.

Maybe a puzzle hunt like last year? Be prepared for the madness to start on Tuesday, August 10th when we'll officially be at 100 days to the Catching Fire premiere! 

Stay Tuned!

P.S. Coldplay's song, “Atlas,” will be available through iTunes and other digital retailers through Republic Records. Lionsgate is releasing the film amid sky-high expectations on Nov. 22. Click HERE for more details on the Coldplay collab, including song lyrics.

via Variety

Friday
Aug092013

Coldplay Will Contribute a New Song "ATLAS" To The 'Catching Fire' Soundtrack

Coldplay tweeted the lyrics to "ATLAS"

There's some exciting Catching Fire news this morning! Coldplay is the first official artist attached to the upcoming Catching Fire soundtrack. They'll contribute a new song called "ATLAS" that will be available for download on 8/26. This is the first time Coldplay has ever recorded an original song for a motion picture. And lead singer Chris Martin is a fan of the books!

Francis Lawrence says,

“I have great respect and admiration for Coldplay, and we are thrilled with how well they have connected to the themes and ideas within the film. Their unwavering passion and excitement for the project elevated the collaboration even further, and we can’t wait to share this music with audiences around the world.”

This is the first in a series of highly anticipated announcements of the new artists to be revealed in the coming weeks.

 

The full official press release after the jump:

Click to read more ...

Thursday
Aug082013

More on 'Catching Fire' From EW: Peeta Can Swim! 

Now HERE'S the new information (along with some old information) we were looking for last night when we cracked the digital edition of EW. Just posted to EW's Inside Movies Blog is an interview with Francis Lawrence and producer Nina Jacobson:

First off, let Catching Fire director Frances Lawrence assure the ardent fans of Suzanne Collins Hunger Games series that their sacred text will always be honored: “The movie is very, very true to the book,” he says. But when he first met Collins last spring, the two hunkered down and hammered out a new beat sheet for the sequel. And together they were merciless about what wouldn’t serve the screenplay adaptation. Here’s three changes readers should expect in the film (in theaters November 22):

1) “We made some changes to Peeta’s narrative,” says Lawrence. “We manned him up a little. And by the way it didn’t take a lot, just little choices to make here and there. The story doesn’t really change, his relationship with Katniss doesn’t change, he’s just a different kind of character.” For instance, in the book, the Hunger Games kicks off and Peeta is paralyzed when the other all-star tributes dive into the water. “The option is for either me drowning or sitting there like a cat batting my paw into the water,” says Josh Hutcherson with a laugh. “Either way the visual is horrible.” Easy fix: Let Peeta swim.

2) Goodbye Bonnie and Twill. In the book, Katniss stumbles upon the District 8 refugees in her father’s hunting cabin. There they reveal to a stunned Katniss the existence of District 13 and news of the spreading revolution our hero unintentionally sparked with her act of rebellion at the end of The Hunger Games. So the movie had to find a new way to introduce the news of District 13. “That’s fun,” says Lawrence, “figuring out new ways around things and new ways of doing things.”

3) Darius, we hardly know ye. District 12′s youngest peacekeeper, who pays dearly for intervening during that terrible scene of Gale’s public whipping, didn’t make the jump from page to screen. It’s another instance of storytellers having to drown one of their kittens. “It’s as agonizing for us to lose things from the book as it is for a fan,” says producer Nina Jacobson. “I want every single thing in there. But you know what? If you have to give up something in order to give more time to Katniss and Gale or to Effie as she starts to feel a conscience, you make the sacrifices in order to serve the characters and themes that are more essential.”

Thursday
Aug082013

AUDIO: Josh Hutcherson Interview on Power 106 LA

Thanks to our friends at QuarterQuell.org, we have the audio from Josh Hutcherson's interview this morning on Power106LA.

 

We cannot believe they went THERE at the end. Wow. 

Thursday
Aug082013

Scans From The 'Catching Fire' Article in EW's "Fall Movie Preview"

Sadly, there are no new stills in the new Catching Fire article from Entertainment Weekly's Fall Movie Preview Issue. But we've got the scans for you!

The most interesting bit is an elaboration on what we already knew - that parts would be cut out of the movie (ahem, Bonnie and Twill). It sounds like the first part of the film will be condensed and more time will be spent in the Capitol and arena. We are nervous and very excited to see how it all plays out.


Tuesday
Aug062013

Liam Hemsworth-Palooza: More From His Appearances This Week

If you are a Liam Hemsworth lover, this is YOUR week. The boy is all over New York City promoting his upcoming movie Paranoia. Lucky for us, everyone is asking him about Catching Fire!

He called into Seacrest Monday and talked a little bit about Catching Fire at the 5:35 mark. Liam didn’t divulge much, but he did admit: “It’s developing more, but it’s also still very confusing. Gale is trying to work out what’s going on and [Katniss is] trying to stay alive still. You get to see a bit more of the fight inside Gale come out.

"Suzanne Collins said to me once on-set…’You know after the first movie I really wanted to have more of Gale in the movies. I love the character and love what you’ve done with him’."

He also rang the NASDAQ closing bell on Tuesday, August 6th:

Liam was a guest on The Daily Show in Tuesday, Aug 6th:

He appeared on Fox 5 Vegas to discuss Paranoia:

FOX5 Vegas - KVVU

And dropped by Morning Joe:

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

You can see video from his GMA appearance on Monday 8/5 HERE

Tuesday
Aug062013

'Catching Fire' Will Be Featured in the Fall Movie Preview Issue of EW

 

We can look forward to at least ONE new Catching Fire still in the upcoming Fall Movie Preview Issue of EW! Katniss looks to be going back into the arena in the hovercraft in the exclusive still from Entertainment Weekly

Monday
Aug052013

'Catching Fire' Costume Designer Trish Summerville Talks Making The Peacekeepers "More Menacing"

Image Credit: Murray Close; (inset) Larry Busacca/Getty ImagesCatching Fire costume designer Trish Summerville talked with EW about everything from her influences and start in the biz to "bumping up" the Peacekeepers uniforms in Catching Fire.

From EW:

Having made a name for herself as a celebrity stylist for artists like Christina Aguilera and Pink, Summerville transitioned in costume design in 1996, working as an assistant on films like The Long Kiss Goodnight and the David Fincher thriller The Game. In 2011 Summerville got her big break when Fincher chose her to head up the wardrobe department on The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo — a job that led to a deal with Swedish retailer H&M for a clothing collection based on the look of female protagonist Lisbeth Salander.

Most recently, Summerville created the wardrobe for Showtime’s Ray Donovan and took on the task of pulling together the couture-inspired costumes for The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. EW sat down with the designer to ask her about what’s on her inspiration board, her favorite Catching Fire costume, and the look that launched her career.

Entertainment Weekly: How have the past 18 months or so been for you?

Trish Summerville: [It's] been a little hectic. I guess I kind of went from Dragon, which I was on from start to finish — including the H&M line — almost 18 months, and from that right into doing the pilot for the Showtime show Ray Donovan, which I just got to see. They had a screening and a premiere, and it was a great time. It looks really good. I’m really excited. And I kind of went from that into Catching Fire. It’s been great, it’s been a lot of work but I like to work a lot, so it’s been really nice. It’s been a really great whirlwind and I feel really, really fortunate because the last few projects that I’ve been on, even though they’ve been a bit challenging at times, I feel really fulfilled, and I’ve gotten to work with such a great group of people. Especially when you look at all of the directors and actors involved.

Who are your inspirations these days?

There are some designers that I really, really love and am inspired by, and aren’t always applicable for things. For the last, I guess it’s almost two years, I’ve been really obsessed with Iris van Herpen. The stuff she does is so groundbreaking and technical, and architectural, that she really just blows my mind. And she’s so young. The techniques she comes up with and all this 3-D fabrication she’s doing, and holograms, and just the materials that she’s using, and the structure that she does, the applications, and the shoes. I just think she’s really phenomenal. She did a pair of shoes she called the Fang Shoe, which I was obsessed with. I know she just did a water dress, but there was quite a bit before that.

Was there one look you created that you would say changed everything for you?

One of the funny ones, I guess, that got talked about was the David LaChapelle video for Christina Aguilera’s ”Dirty.” [The chaps] got a lot of attention. And it was just so funny because everyone kept calling them “ass-less chaps,” but in general, chaps don’t have a bum. Good or for bad, that definitely got a lot of attention. When I look at what I think was kind of pivotal, it’s Lisbeth Salander’s look from The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. I wanted it to be really authentic and it was very genuine, as opposed to when you do a lot of music stuff it has a lot of flash, it has to make a statement and be bold. Whereas what I really enjoy about film is that you have this character development. It’s about those authenticities of what that character would really do and how they function every day in life. It’s not just about fashion. Like with Lisbeth, we went fully for function, the function of her clothes and what she could find, and how she would really wear it in her life. You know, the drop-crotch pants with the tight-fitted leather jacket, the fingerless gloves, and the taped-up combat boots. I think was a really iconic look.

What was the last look that you designed?

The last thing I designed would have been, I guess in Catching Fire, some of the looks in that are pretty intense, very colorful, so that was great fun because it took me completely into another world that’s not particularly my aesthetic. I like a lot of muted tones and unsaturated, washed out… and that was great because it propelled my mind to think in a really different manner because it is quite over the top. It’s kind of futuristic, but it’s not sci-fi on any level. It’s really bold and really colorful and quite campy at times, then it gets really serious. I tried to bring a little bit of darkness to it, you’re seeing a world that was already created in a book. You want to try to be really respectful to the writers, and you want to be respectful to the fan base, but then you also have to figure out what works visually and what you can bring to it as well. [And] I did the second installation so there’s certain things you want to be respectful about for the characters from the first one, but then also show a period of growth and transition.

I love the Peacekeepers that I did. I wanted to make them look a little more menacing, kind of insect-like. I draw a lot in my inspiration boards from different projects, a lot from nature, and animals, and insects. I just think that there’s so much there, in silhouettes and colors. The colors, they’re amazing, when you look in the insect world, and at in animals and nature. I wanted to make these Peacekeepers… after the first film, I felt like they needed to be bumped up a bit, because of what was going on in the second film with the rebellion that’s starting. I felt that we needed to show a transition, that the Capitol is stepping up its forces and making it much more intimidating and fearsome. So I went for this sort of spiny, praying mantis sort of look for them.

About your inspiration board, can you tell me what kinds of things are on it and how they inspire you?

For each project I do a new inspiration board. For Catching Fire I think we had probably 30, 40, 60 inspiration boards, because I did them for every district and every kind of character we had. On my personal board I have some photographs of native Americans, the Maasai tribe up, which I love, the east Indian painted elephants used for weddings and ceremonies.

 

What are you working on next?

I’m working on a movie, hopefully next year. It’s under wraps still. I’m crossing my fingers it’s shooting in [Los Angeles], which would be amazing. I live in Los Angeles. I hear the talk of Old Hollywood and how everything was shot here, but now so much stuff is shot outside of town.

Read the rest of the article at EntertainmentWeekly.com