Skip to main content

The 10 best characters in the Hunger Games movies, ranked

he Hunger Games has remained a surprisingly powerful force in modern pop culture despite the fact that until just recently, there hadn’t been a new movie in the franchise in almost a decade. Thanks to a few great slogans (“I volunteer as tribute,” “May the odds be ever in your favor,” etc.) and a compelling premise, the series still lives on in the imaginations of many people who loved the books and movies when they were initially a phenomenon.

With a new entry, The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, now in theaters, the franchise is now back in the zeitgeist. In addition, a recent surge in viewing on streaming platforms like Netflix and now Peacock makes this an ideal time to look back at The Hunger Games and remember the indelible characters that made this franchise so fascinating and moving.

10. Beetee Latier

Beetee Latier Hunger Games
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Every franchise needs a tech expert, but not every tech expert has the kinds of quirks that make Beetee so instantly lovable. Beetee’s plan is crucial to the end of Catching Fire, and it’s in that book that we best understand how he thinks and why he’s so opposed to the Capitol.

Jeffrey Wright’s performance as Beetee only heightens many of the compelling things about Beetee in the books, turning him into someone who is both deeply awkward and a genius.

9. Cinna

Cinna in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Image used with permission by copyright holder

So much of Katniss’s initial success can be chalked up to Cinna, a brilliant stylist who knows how to sell both Katniss and Peeta to the citizens of the Capitol. Cinna’s acts of defiance and his quiet alliance with the rebels ultimately get him killed, but it’s clear that it’s a sacrifice he’s more than willing to make.

Even before Haymitch, Cinna believed in Katniss, and it was Cinna’s belief in her that ultimately drove her to become the symbol of the rebellion that she ultimately was.

8. Rue

Rue in The Hunger Games
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Both Katniss’ and the viewers first palpable sense of just how cruel the Hunger Games are comes when Rue dies. Katniss, who befriends her in the arena, is both mournful and furious that such an innocent, small, beautiful person has died for the entertainment of a bunch of people she’s never met.

Rue’s innocence is so key to her appeal as a character, and her death is also one of our first tastes of exactly how rebellious Katniss can be. She decorates Rue’s grave, forcing everyone watching to remember that this child who has died is real and deserves to be honored.

7. Plutarch Heavensbee

The Hunger Games Catching Fire
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The head gamemaker who changes teams, Plutarch Heavensbee believes in the rebellion and understands how to sell it to the masses. Plutarch may not have made this list if it weren’t for the speech he delivers near the end of Mockingjay, in which he acknowledges that all they’ve been fighting for may eventually be in vain.

It’s a reminder that revolutions are important, even if their impacts don’t last forever. It’s also a signal that Plutarch, as smart as he is, is distanced from the kinds of traumas that many of the other characters in this story experience.

6. Joanna Mason

Joanna Mason in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Joanna is angry, and that’s what makes her so memorable. She exists as a version of Katniss who has already lost everything. Everyone she cared about is dead, and so all she can do is scream at the world and then try to numb the pain.

Jena Malone delivers an incredible performance in this role, especially in Catching Fire. She also has an iconic scene in which she completely strips in an elevator with Katniss, Peeta, and Haymitch. It’s the best character introduction of the entire series, and an obvious signal that Joanna is not like the rest of the victors Katniss and Peeta will meet.

5. Haymitch Abernathy

The Hunger Games Catching Fire
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Katniss and Peeta’s mentor is a jaded, cynical man who finds himself thawed by his twin tributes. Of all the characters that Katniss meets over the course of her journey, Haymitch is the one she is most like. He’s used to drinking himself into a stupor as his tributes die every year at the games, and Peeta and Katniss spend much of their initial time with him trying to prove that they’re different.

Haymitch may not always have the words to express it, but he cares deeply about both Katniss and Peeta, and becomes close to a father figure for both of them over the course of this story.

4. Finnick Odair

The Hunger Games Catching Fire
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Like so many of the characters we meet in this series, Finnick presents as one thing and is actually something else entirely. He seems like a charming, sleazy pretty boy who has his way with every woman he meets, when he’s actually a caring, devoted partner who is also a puppet of his country.

Finnick’s journey doesn’t end well, but he’s one of the most instantly charming characters we meet in this franchise, and he turns out to be an intensely loyal friend. There’s a reason fans have always been in love with him.

3. Peeta Mellark

The Hunger Games Catching Fire
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The brilliance of Peeta Mellark is that, like Katniss, he goes through severe trauma. He is brainwashed, forced to fight through two Hunger Games, and holds only a fragile grasp on his own humanity as a result. Even so, Peeta is good. He’s kind and warm and decent, and he’s a reminder that people are possible of being all of those things.

Peeta is not a fighter or a survivor, at least not the way that most of the other victors are. Instead, he’s something better. He’s a reminder of all the things that you survive for. He’s a reminder that the world can be good.

2. Coriolanus Snow

The Hunger Games Catching Fire
Image used with permission by copyright holder

A morally repugnant man who nevertheless believed he was good, Coriolanus Snow is fascinating in part because he seems to have genuine respect for Katniss. He is aware of the position he’s in, and of the inhumanity of the Hunger Games, but he believes that all of this is worth it for the order that it provides.

He has a code, and although it is not one that the average person would share, it helps us to understand exactly what lurks inside his sinister heart.

1. Katniss Everdeen

The Hunger Games Catching Fire
Image used with permission by copyright holder

It’s often the case that the main character of a story like this is not the most interesting one, but not here. Katniss Everdeen is the beating heart of this series. She’s a morally gray, distrustful figure who becomes a symbol of rebellion even though she’s not sure she believes in it herself. She’s deeply traumatized by her experiences in the Hunger Games, and often acts out of love or spite instead of virtue.

Thanks to a stellar performance from Jennifer Lawrence, many of Katniss’s messiest qualities made it to the big screen, and created an action hero worth celebrating not because she’s noble, but because she’s complicated.

The first four Hunger Games movies are streaming on Peacock. The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes is now in theaters.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Joe Allen
Joe Allen is a freelance writer based in upstate New York focused on movies and TV.
10 best movies based on true stories, ranked
The girl in the red coat in Schindler's List.

Some of the best movies ever made are based on true stories. These films have brought to life some of the most extraordinary moments in history, making excellent use of real-life inspiration to craft compelling narratives spanning a variety of genres. When considering their impact, authenticity, and artistic merit, which movies based on real events come out on top?

From the stirring heroism portrayed in Schindler's List to the gripping chronicle of a gangster's life in Goodfellas, numerous movies offer a unique reimagining of true stories. Knowing that they're rooted in facts makes every twist and turn all the more riveting, even if filmmakers tend to embellish for the sake of entertainment.
10. Spotlight (2015)

Read more
The best sci-fi movies on Max right now
Christian Bale in Terminator Salvation.

There were only two notable sci-fi additions to Max in April: Terminator Salvation and Source Code. Both are very good movies, but it's been clear for months that Max is coasting on its sci-fi lineup. It's not enough to just have great films to watch, especially if they're on loan from other studios with an expiration date at some point in the future. Once films like Alien, Avatar, and all of the classic Star Trek films leave, Max's sci-fi library is going to look pretty weak.

For now, we're just going to have to live with the available selection for the best sci-fi movies on Max. But we also added Escape From L.A. just to give you more than two options that weren't on this list last month. If you want to see the rest of the films, just keep scrolling down.

Read more
10 best movies set in L.A., ranked
Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling dancing in La La Land.

One of the great ironies of Hollywood – that self-celebrating monstrosity – is that it is reflexively embarrassed by itself. Most movies that are set in Los Angeles or are about the film industry either actually endeavor to spend most of their time outside L.A., like Preston Sturges’ peripatetic movie-biz satire Sullivan’s Travels or, if they must stand pat in the City of Angels, resign themselves either to conspicuous grime (á la Training Day) or conspicuous kitsch (á la Clueless).

Filmmakers often shy away from truly incarnating L.A., which makes sense for a town that is comprised largely of strivers from elsewhere who are there not by preference for the locale, but due to deep-seated inclination toward stardom. But despite themselves, the great L.A. movies often end up glorifying that flat-top land of pavement and promise, thereby creating the legend that has supplanted the reality in the world’s estimation of California’s most populous city. Here is a list of 10 of the best L.A.-set films, limited to one film per director.
10. La La Land (2016)

Read more