Daily Dispatch

‘Hunger Games’ goes on without Hoffman

- By ROLLO ROSS

THE death of actor Philip Seymour Hoffman by an accidental drug overdose in February has not sidelined production of the latest instalment of Hunger Games, its director said.

Director Francis Lawrence and the stars of the blockbuste­r franchise, including Oscar-winning actress Jennifer Lawrence (no relation), spoke to media at the Cannes Film Festival.

Seymour Hoffman’s sudden death in New York occurred while the latest instalment in the blockbuste­r series, Mockingjay Part 1 was still being shot. He played a central role in the film as Plutarch Heavensbee, the Head Gamemaker controllin­g the annual televised fight to the death between boys and girls in the post-apocalypti­c nation of Panem.

Rather than recasting the role, director Francis Lawrence chose to work on script rewrites to get around the loss of his character.

Seymour Hoffman – who won a best actor Oscar in 2005 for his role as Truman Capote in Capote – had shot the bulk of his part before his death, Lawrence said. “He was scheduled for 50 days or so and he had shot about 42 or 43 of those days,” Lawrence said.

“He had about eight days left but the meat of his performanc­e was already finished.

“There were a couple of scenes that were pretty substantia­l which we ended up giving to other actors to take over and, although no one is a replacemen­t for Phil, the story still works.”

Big-budget movies that are not competing in the prestigiou­s film festival, such as Hunger Games, often come to Cannes with their stars to drum up publicity.

The previous two Hunger Games films grossed more than $400-million (R4-billion) in worldwide box office receipts on their theatrical releases.

The books by Suzanne Collins on which the films are based have sold more than 65 million copies in the US alone. — Reuters

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? STAR POWER: Actor Philip Seymour Hoffman before he died in February of a drug overdose
Picture: GETTY IMAGES STAR POWER: Actor Philip Seymour Hoffman before he died in February of a drug overdose

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