Screenwriting Tricks for Authors

Screenwriting Tricks for Authors

Share this post

Screenwriting Tricks for Authors
Screenwriting Tricks for Authors
The Hunger Games, Act II, Part 2
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More

The Hunger Games, Act II, Part 2

Alexandra Sokoloff's avatar
Alexandra Sokoloff
Dec 21, 2022
∙ Paid
1

Share this post

Screenwriting Tricks for Authors
Screenwriting Tricks for Authors
The Hunger Games, Act II, Part 2
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Share

Two notes before we launch into the Act II:2 breakdown:

What’s the real Midpoint?

Now, I’ve said that the end of Act II:1 is that moment of betrayal: Katniss finding out Peeta is in an alliance with the Careers, and that her SECONDARY OPPONENT, Cato, has a PLAN to use Peeta to find Katniss and kill her. [1 hour 16 minutes in]

But maybe you thought the end of Act II:1 and the Midpoint Climax was the battle at the Cornucopia and Act II:2 starts when Katniss runs into the forest—or maybe when the butterfly lands on her hand to give her a moment of hope and then she starts the survival montage…

So which is right?

Whatever feels right to you!

A Midpoint is often a whole progression of scenes like this. Maybe we should even say that there are more than Eight Sequences in this movie, and there are two or three short sequences right around the Midpoint that make up the Midpoint Climax.

Whatever’s most useful to your writing process.

The Dark Forest

There’s often a scene in this Act that takes the Hero/ine into a Dark Forest or equivalent symbolic location of the unconscious, where important new revelations can occur. You’ll usually find it in the second sequence of II:2 — Sequence 6— but sometimes it’s earlier, in Sequence 5.

(The Dark Forest is actually such an important element of Act II, Part 2 that I’ve done a whole separate post on it.)

Keep reading with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to Screenwriting Tricks for Authors to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Alexandra Sokoloff
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share

Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More