Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Woody Harrelson (Flashback), Hunter Schafer, Peter Dinklage
The Mockingjay rises from the ashes—fiercer, colder, and more iconic than ever. The Hunger Games: Resurrection shatters the fragile, hard-won peace of Panem, dragging Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) back into the spotlight fifteen years after the revolution. But this time, the narrative has shifted: she is no longer a pawn in a game she didn’t choose; she is the hunter coming to burn the board.

Jennifer Lawrence returns with a vengeance, delivering a raw and visceral performance. Gone is the rustic hunting gear of District 12; Katniss is now clad in sleek, tactical armor designed for urban warfare, redefining combat elegance. Living a quiet life of anonymity with Peeta (Josh Hutcherson) and their children, her world is upended when a secret faction known as “The Architects” emerges from the shadows. Led by a mysterious figure connected to the Snow bloodline—the enigmatic fashion-historian Tigris (Hunter Schafer)—this group believes that order can only be restored through a “Resurrection” of the Games.

However, the arena has evolved. The new Games aren’t fought in forests or deserts, but in a “Psychological Biosphere”—a neon-lit, digital nightmare where reality is manipulated through neural-links. The tributes aren’t just killed physically; they are broken mentally, forced to fight their own traumas and hallucinations while the world watches. When Katniss’s own family is threatened to legitimize this new era, she volunteers not as a tribute, but as an executioner.

With Peeta by her side—battling the lingering “hijacking” flashbacks to serve as the voice of reason and strategy—Katniss infiltrates the high-tech Capitol. Guided by the memory of Haymitch (Woody Harrelson, appearing in poignant flashbacks that reveal the final secrets of the rebellion), she navigates a labyrinth of deception. Explosive, emotional, and visually breathtaking, Resurrection blends high-stakes political intrigue with heart-stopping action. In a world desperate to bury its bloody past, Katniss Everdeen proves that the fire never truly dies—and this time, the Girl on Fire isn’t playing to survive. She is playing to end it all.