Director, Gary Ross gives exclusive commentary on the first Hunger Games trailer.
Fan-made Hunger Games trailer.
Mockingjay [Original Hunger Games Song] - Rachel Macwhirter
GET THE MP3 HERE: http://www.box.net/RachelsMusicBox
And remember to send it to everyone you know! Telling Lionsgate you want it in the movie would be an awesome idea, too. Check out this page and send it any way you can (including e-mail):http://corporate.lionsgate.com/Contact.asp
Check out her Youtube channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/RachMacwhirter
Source: youtube.com
THE HUNGER GAMES SCORES T BONE BURNETT AND DANNY ELFMAN
Santa Monica, CA, June 28, 2011– LIONSGATE® (NYSE: LGF), a leading global entertainment company, today announced an unprecedented film music collaboration between Academy Award® winner and two time nominee T Bone Burnett (CRAZY HEART, COLD MOUNTAIN) and four time Academy Award® nominated composer Danny Elfman (ALICE IN WONDERLAND, SPIDER-MAN) on the music for the highly anticipated film adaptation of THE HUNGER GAMES, based on the first in Suzanne Collins’s runaway bestselling book trilogy. The announcement was made by Lionsgate’s Motion Picture Group President Joe Drake.
Elfman and Burnett will be collaborating on the film score, with Burnett also serving as the film’s Executive Music Producer, producing songs for the film and soundtrack.
Said Lionsgate’s Head of Film Music Tracy McKnight of the musical dream team assembled on behalf of the film, “THE HUNGER GAMES is such a special property – it has worldwide mass appeal, but it’s also sophisticated, cerebral, soulful, and rebellious. We needed a composer who can translate these qualities musically, and we have not one but two incredible artists in an absolutely thrilling first time ever collaboration.”
Production president Alli Shearmur is overseeing the production for the studio, and the deals for both artists were negotiated by McKnight with Lenny Wohl, EVP Business Affairs Music & Publishing, on behalf of Lionsgate.
Elfman is represented by Richard Kraft and Laura Engel of Kraft-Engel Management, who negotiated the deal on his behalf. Larry Jenkins manages Burnett and negotiated the deal with Jason Karlov of Barnes & Thornburg LLP on his behalf. Burnett is also represented by Brian Siberell at CAA.
About T Bone Burnett
T Bone Burnett’s 40 years of experience in music and entertainment have earned him an unparalleled reputation as a first-rate innovative artist, songwriter, producer, performer, concert producer, record company owner and artist advocate.
He is a 12-time Grammy® Award winner, earning numerous statues in 2009 — including Album of the Year and Record of the Year — for his production work on Raising Sand, the worldwide smash album from Robert Plant and Alison Krauss. That same year, he was also awarded a Grammy® for Best Traditional Blues Album for his work on B.B. King’s One Kind Favor. He received two Grammys® in 2011 for his work on the music for the film Crazy Heart. He previously earned five Grammys® for his work on the 8-times Platinum release, O Brother Where Art Thou?, which also spawned two highly successful national concert tours. Further Grammys® followed for his work on the platinum soundtrack to the Johnny Cash biopic, Walk The Line, and the platinum Tony Bennett / k.d. lang duets album, A Wonderful World.
T Bone produced the critically acclaimed hit film Crazy Heart. He also composed the film’s score and co-wrote many of its original songs, including “The Weary Kind,” which earned T Bone and co-writer, Ryan Bingham, an Academy Award®, a Golden Globe® Award and a Grammy® Award (plus an additional Grammy® for Crazy Heart as Best Compilation Soundtrack album). T Bone’s work on that film also garnered him awards from the Broadcast Film Critics Association, as well as numerous other critics organizations throughout the U.S.
He was nominated for an Academy Award® in 2004, along with Elvis Costello in the category of Best Original Song for “The Scarlet Tide” from the film, Cold Mountain. For his work on that film, Burnett also earned the BAFTAs Anthony Asquith Award for Achievement in Film Music.
Burnett’s work as an in-demand music producer spans three decades and has resulted in some of music’s biggest-selling and most critically-lauded releases. He is currently producing album projects for Lisa Marie Presley and Jeff Bridges, which will be released in the second half of 2011. Burnett is also collaborating with Mellencamp and author Stephen King on the music for the play Ghost Brothers Of Darkland County. Other major productions include best-selling albums from Counting Crows, The Wallflowers, Los Lobos, Cassandra Wilson, Roy Orbison and Ralph Stanley.
T Bone’s first major foray into film was his 1999 collaboration with the Coen Brothers on The Big Lebowski, for which he served as “Musical Archivist.” He has since served as Executive Music Producer on numerous additional films, including Across The Universe, the aforementioned Walk The Line (for which he also composed the score) and The Divine Secrets Of The Ya-Ya Sisterhood.
About Danny Elfman
Danny Elfman has earned numerous honors, including a Grammy Award®, an Emmy Award®, three Golden Globe® nominations, and four Academy Award® nominations. In 1998, he was honored with dual Oscar® nominations for Best Original Score for his work on Barry Sonnenfeld’s “Men in Black” and Gus Van Sant’s “Good Will Hunting.” He received his third Oscar® nomination for the score for Tim Burton’s acclaimed fantasy “Big Fish.” Elfman earned his most recent Oscar® nomination for his score for the acclaimed biopic “Milk,” directed by Gus Van Sant and his most recent Golden Globe® nomination for his score to Tim Burton’s “Alice in Wonderland.”
In all, Elfman has composed more than 60 motion-picture scores of every genre, including “Spider-Man (1&2),” “Batman” and “Batman Returns” “Men In Black (1&2),” “Edward Scissorhands,” “Beetlejuice,” “To Die For,” “A Simple Plan,” “Mission: Impossible,” “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” “Family Man,” “Wanted,” “Taking Woodstock,” “Dick Tracy,” “Darkman,” and “Chicago.”
For 17 years he wrote and performed with rock band Oingo Boingo, producing such hits as “Weird Science” and “Dead Man’s Party.”
Elfman’s first full-length orchestral commission, Serenada Schizophrana premiered at Carnegie Hall. His first composition for ballet “Rabbit and Rogue” had its American Ballet Theatre (ABT) World Premiere at The Metropolitan Opera House at New York’s Lincoln Center in June 2008. The ballet was choreographed by Twyla Tharp and commissioned by ABT.
Elfman’s most recent film credits include the smash hit, “Alice In Wonderland,” and the upcoming “Reel Steel,” directed by Shawn Levy, Gus Van Sant’s “Restless”, “Frankenweenie”, and ”Dark Shadows.”
His Cirque du Soleil show, “Iris” opens as a permanent show at Hollywood’s Kodak Theater in 2011.
Source: themockingjay.livejournal.com
MEET DANA SCHNEIDER, ‘HUNGER GAMES’ MOVIE MOCKINGJAY PIN DESIGNER
Schneider was hired to craft the iconic Mockingjay pin for the sci-fi film “The Hunger Games,” due next March. Not Schneider’s original design, the pin replicates the illustration on the cover of the “Hunger Games” novel, the first of a trilogy.
“I was thrilled to be asked to make it. It’s integral to all three books,” she says. “It was actually very difficult to make. I’m quite proud of how it came out.”
Schneider’s other creations appear in two of Hollywood’s big-budget summer extravaganzas — “The Green Lantern,” which opened last Friday, and “Transformers: Dark Side of the Moon,” opening Wednesday. And she has made jewelry for two of the most anticipated films on the horizon, “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” and “The Hunger Games.”
Her past movie credits include “Green Hornet,” “Tron Legacy,” “X-Men 3,” “Fantastic Four,” “Wolverine,” “Planet of the Apes,” “Terminator III,” “The Fast and the Furious,” “Hannibal,” “From Hell” and “Elektra,” more than 40 features in all.
She’s also made custom jewelry for Cher and fellow Canton native Marilyn Manson. But more on them later.
Source: mockingjay.net
NO official confirmation or denial from Lionsgate, but here’s the word:
Madge Undersee, the mayor’s daughter and Katniss Everdeen‘s friend, does not appear in the 137 page draft of the script we have. Madge is most notably remembered for being one of Katniss’s only friends other than Gale. In the beginning of the book Gale is rude to her on the day of the reaping because she is very dressed up with her expensive mockingjay pin, and it reminds him she’s never had to enter her name for tesserae (food in exchange for more name entries into the yearly reaping). Madge is one of Katniss’s visitors after she volunteers in place of Prim at the reaping, and she insists Katniss wear the mockingjay pin as her District 12 token.
In the film, we first see the pin when Katniss pulls it out and gives it to Prim as they are getting dressed for the reaping. Prim gives it back to Katniss right before she leaves. Katniss then leaves Rue’s body with it after she covers her with flowers. At the end of the script she is gifted with an entirely new mockingjay pin as a present from her own district (12).
the first bit sounds okay I suppose. I don’t like how she’s supposedly giving it to Rue later though. “o here u go rue u r da mockingjay!”
I can deal with those changes… but I don’t want her to give it to Rue… but I can def deal with it. I don’t see Madge as that necessary anyway.
……..I liked Madge.
(via greatesthungergamesfans)
Source: hunger-games.net



