Production Notes
Transcription
Production Notes
Production Notes Production Notes For additional publicity materials and artwork, please visit: http://www.lionsgatepublicity.com/theatrical/mockingjaypart2/ Rating: PG-13 for intense sequences of violence and action, and for some thematic material Running Time: 136 minutes U.S. Release Date: November 20, 2015 For more information, please contact: Jennifer Peterson Lionsgate 2700 Colorado Avenue Suite 200 Santa Monica, CA 90404 P: 310-255-5066 E: jpeterson@lionsgate.com Meghann Burns Lionsgate 2700 Colorado Avenue Suite 200 Santa Monica, CA 90404 P: 310-255-3999 E: meburns@lionsgate.com Emily Bear Lionsgate 530 Fifth Avenue 26th Floor New York, New York 10036 P: 212-386-6867 ebear@lionsgate.com Official Site: Publicity Materials: Facebook: Twitter: Instagram: Google+: Pinterest: Hashtags: http://www.TheHungerGamesOfficial.com http://lionsgatepublicity.com/theatrical/mockingjaypart2/ www.facebook.com/thehungergamesmovie www.twitter.com/thehungergames www.instagram.com/thehungergames https://plus.google.com/+TheHungerGamesMovies http://pinterest.com/hungergamesfilm/ #MockingjayPart2 Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Woody Harrelson, Elizabeth Banks, Julianne Moore, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jeffrey Wright, Willow Shields, Sam Claflin, Jena Malone, Natalie Dormer, with Stanley Tucci, and Donald Sutherland Directed by: Screenplay by: Based upon: Produced by: Francis Lawrence Peter Craig and Danny Strong The novel “Mockingjay” by Suzanne Collins Nina Jacobson, Jon Kilik SYNOPSIS The blockbuster Hunger Games franchise has taken audiences by storm around the world, grossing more than $2.3 billion at the global box office. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 now brings the franchise to its powerful final chapter in which Katniss Everdeen [Jennifer Lawrence] realizes the stakes are no longer just for survival – they are for the future. With the nation of Panem in a full scale war, Katniss confronts President Snow [Donald Sutherland] in the final showdown. Teamed with a group of her closest friends – including Gale [Liam Hemsworth], Finnick [Sam Claflin] and Peeta [Josh Hutcherson] – Katniss goes off on a mission with the unit from District 13 as they risk their lives to liberate the citizens of Panem, and stage an assassination attempt on President Snow who has become increasingly obsessed with destroying her. The mortal traps, enemies, and moral choices that await Katniss will challenge her more than any arena she faced in The Hunger Games. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 is directed by Francis Lawrence from a screenplay by Peter Craig and Danny Strong and features an acclaimed cast including Academy Award ®-winner Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Woody Harrelson, Elizabeth Banks, Academy Award ®-winner Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jeffrey Wright, Willow Shields, Sam Claflin, Jena Malone with Stanley Tucci and Donald Sutherland reprising their original roles from The Hunger Games and The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. The impressive lineup is joined by The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 co-stars Academy Award®-winner Julianne Moore, Mahershala Ali, Natalie Dormer, Wes Chatham, Elden Henson and Evan Ross. Lionsgate presents a Color Force / Lionsgate production. 2 The Revolution is About All of Us “Real. Because that’s what you and I do – protect each other.” -- Katniss The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 brings the global motion picture phenomenon to its thrilling and emotionally powerful last chapter as the stakes for Katniss Everdeen escalate from surviving the most deadly games ever devised to setting the course of the future. The story picks up with Katniss (Jennifer Lawrence) back in the bunkers of District 13, still unable to emotionally reach a brainwashed Peeta as she watches the nation of Panem sliding into full-scale apocalyptic war. Though Katniss has warily accepted her role as the Mockingjay symbol of the rebellion, she can see that it is going take more than symbolism to turn the tide against the Capitol. Truly on fire now, she resolves to take action. Joining with Gale (Liam Hemsworth), an unpredictable Peeta (Josh Hutcherson), Finnick (Sam Claflin), and the so-called “Squad 451,” she sets out for the once-glittering Capitol – transformed into a city of mayhem under attack by both rebels and peacekeepers – with a covert mission to assassinate President Snow. Snow still believes he’s playing an obsessive game to outwit and destroy Katniss, but Katniss is no longer anyone’s pawn, and to her, this is no contest. It is a battle for everything she has come to believe in and the people she loves. It is a battle for the final hope of a life of peace. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 builds on the momentum of each previous chapter in the blockbuster series to reach a fever pitch of both emotion and action, bringing Katniss full circle from the dismayed girl caught in a dystopian nightmare to leading the charge to remake her nation. The first film, The Hunger Games, introduced audiences to Katniss, an independent-minded but anonymous 16 year-old girl living in District 12, one of Panem’s enslaved districts, with little future of which to dream. Her life changes instantaneously when she volunteers in her younger sister’s place for the annual Hunger Games, an intense gladiatorial competition of sheer survival between 24 adolescent warriors known as Tributes, broadcast live on national TV. Katniss and District 12’s male Tribute, Peeta Mellark, are soon whisked to the Capitol, the center of tyrannical power, where a glammed-out populace feeds off lurid spectacles. There, separated from her family and best friend Gale, she is thrown into a glitzy makeover and grueling training, before entering the arena as an underdog in the 74 th Annual Hunger Games. Forced to make harrowing decisions spanning life, death, friendship and love, Katniss discovers reserves of strength and willpower she never knew she had, and attains an unsettling new fame as “The Girl on Fire” … but the costs to her spirit are high. The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, rejoins Katniss as a victor of the Hunger Games, but one who is given zero chance to enjoy her promised rewards or to recover from the physical and mental toll of the arena. Instead, haunted by memories and craving her independence, she is compelled into a deceptive “Victor’s Tour” and a public engagement to Peeta. Then she’s told she must do the unthinkable: re- 3 enter the Hunger Games arena in the lauded Quarter Quell games, which President Snow declares will be the ultimate battle between former victors – a move aimed directly at Katniss. The stakes grow higher as Katniss now fights as much for the lives of her friends and family as her own survival. In the junglethemed arena, Katniss makes vital new alliances, even as she becomes the unwitting idol of a rapidly spreading rebellion against the Capitol. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1, begins as Katniss, extracted from the Quarter Quell games while unconscious, awakens in never-before-seen District 13, the dark, regimented underground realm where a plot to take over the Capitol is forming. Here, she is a legend. Yet Katniss feels more alone and uncertain of who to trust than ever. District 12 has been turned to rubble. Peeta is being held and forcibly indoctrinated by President Snow. Under pressure from District 13’s steely leader, President Coin (Julianne Moore), Katniss must embrace a role she never really wanted: to embody the symbol of the Mockingjay, the symbol of hope. Even as she begins to open her wings, her path is unclear, as Peeta is rescued from Snow’s grip in a hate-filled trance, the people of the Districts grow increasingly desperate, and Snow remains as despotically in control as ever. Now, in the final chapter of The Hunger Games, with all the Districts united against the Capitol for the first time, tomorrow itself is on the line. For Katniss to truly be herself, she realizes she must now fully take on the indomitable Mockingjay spirit in a last stand to set things right. Says director Francis Lawrence: “In this film, Katniss takes the action back into her own hands and goes after Snow personally. The movie really opens up as we go deep into the streets of the Capitol, coming full circle from Katniss’s journey there in the first film. There’s more action, more scope, more emotion and most of all, this film brings the story to its moving conclusion.” A Mockingjay’s Last Hope In four increasingly complex film performances, Academy Award ® winner Jennifer Lawrence has taken Katniss Everdeen through a pendulum’s worth of changes. She has metamorphosed from a disarmed girl trying to save herself and then her family to a deeply reluctant rebel hero and now finally, to a sharply-honed, fiercely determined leader determined to shatter a ruthless society for the good of all. Lawrence says she has enjoyed growing with the ever-evolving yet steadfastly true-to-herself character and is thrilled to bring Katniss to her apex in Mockingjay – Part 2. “This is the chapter when Katniss really starts to believe in the impact that she can have,” Lawrence comments. “She’s always been so reluctant and has always found herself in situations where all she can do is try to survive, but now she’s turning the tables. I was excited for her to finally take her place as a leader. At the end of Mockingjay – Part 1, she was kind of numb, and genuinely unsure if she wanted to go on. In Mockingjay – Part 2 she starts seeing the bigger picture. She’s looking beyond her own personal losses and gains to focus on making a better future.” 4 Adds producer Nina Jacobson, who along with producer Jon Kilik, has been there from the start: “For the first three movies, Katniss feels as if someone else is writing the script of her life and she has no choice but to either act or react to that script. In this final film, she makes her decision: that Snow must die and she’s going to get him. You see her character fully in control now, fully realized.” Josh Hutcherson, who as Peeta has also gone through dizzying changes from a baker’s son to Katniss’ closest ally to a tormented instrument of the Capitol, says of Katniss’s journey : “What was a story about a girl who wants to protect her family and survive has now become the story of a girl who creates what once seemed an impossible uprising. It’s the final push that culminates in a new world.” Yet even as she turns towards the future, the past weighs on Katniss. A constant reminder of the high costs of her journey is there in Peeta’s continuing inability to see Katniss for who she really is – and still harboring the relentlessly violent thoughts implanted by the Capitol towards her. Observes Jennifer Lawrence: “Somebody being brainwashed to think that you’re an evil mutt is a hell of a strain to put on a relationship. They have to start over.” Nina Jacobson notes that no matter what terrifying things Peeta says or does, Katniss cannot deny her urge to protect him – nor her hope to reconnect with him. “She has her moments with Gale in this film, but even he can see through her,” Jacobson muses. “Her heart is stuck on Peeta. She can’t let him go, even now, and I think that’s pretty poignant.” All her relationships are still shifting, but Katniss has a newfound clarity, including when it comes to Gale. “It becomes clear between them that no matter what they might have, as long as Peeta is in the state he’s in, Katniss is never going to be able to let Peeta go,” Jennifer Lawrence says. Katniss also begins to see President Coin in a more illuminating light. “Katniss’s relationship with Coin has become a bit more complicated and strained,” Jennifer notes. “Katniss is starting to fear that she’s seeing a lot of similar traits develop in Coin that she’s seen in President Snow.” Now, Katniss’s concerns are being channeled directly into action – taking the character for the first time into all-out combat beyond the controlled confines of an arena. Raising the stakes, Katniss’s little sister Prim, long her motivation to fight against the Capitol, is now a medic in the battle zone. “The action scenes in Mockingjay – Part 2 are incredible,” Jennifer says. “Some of it was difficult – shooting in wet tunnels, in and out of the water and doing fight choreography with 20 pounds of waterlogged gear – but it was totally worth it because it is going to look fantastically real for audiences.” It all brings Katniss to the denouement of her world-changing tale. Concluding the series is bittersweet for Jennifer Lawrence, but she is intrigued to leave Katniss at the most promising juncture of her life. “She’s started to see the beauty in humanity in this film,” Jennifer observes. “In the beginning she had a short view of the way things are because of her upbringing. She did not have much hope then, and she felt alone for a lot of her life. During everything that has happened – in the Games, in District 13, in the Capitol at the end of this story – she found herself more and more connected to people.” 5 Jennifer has tremendous gratitude for being granted the chance to embody Katniss. “I have loved being a part of a film that sparks some really cool conversations,” she concludes. “It’s been an incredible chapter in my life, and the way the films have resonated with people has been amazing.” For director Francis Lawrence, part of the beauty of Katniss is that no matter how much her world – and her responsibilities – have changed, her fundamental values have never budged. “At her core, a part of Katniss has remained the same,” he observes. “Each of the movies has presented a complex character journey, with very different complications, but she is that same very real girl who still just wants to protect her loved ones.” That has come alive through Jennifer’s almost supernatural channeling of the character, says the director. “All along, Jennifer has had amazing instincts and on each film, it’s been surprising to see what she does. This final journey is no different,” he explains. “It is a new kind of emotional journey for Katniss. She is determined to rectify what was done to Peeta, what was done to her personally, and what was done to the people of the Districts – and Jennifer dives into that.” Nina Jacobson sums up: “Jen has always brought a grounded emotional honesty to the role. But now she shifts, turning defiance, grief and rage into action and leadership. She does that extraordinarily well. Her performance in this film shows the complexity of a character who is searching for peace and happiness, but will always carry the scars of what we’ve seen her experience.” The Cast Speaks About The Closing Moments The final chapter of The Hunger Games brings the film’s expansive cast together one last time, with a team headed by Jennifer Lawrence and including Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Woody Harrelson, Elizabeth Banks, Julianne Moore, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jeffrey Wright, Stanley Tucci, Donald Sutherland, Willow Shields, Sam Claflin, Jena Malone, Mahershala Ali and Natalie Dormer. The lineup for Mockingjay – Part 2 also includes Wes Chatham (Castor), Elden Henson (Pollux), Patina Miller (Commander Baylor), Evan Ross (Messalla), , Gwendoline Christie (Commander Lyme), and Stef Dawson (Annie Cresta). Especially bittersweet for the filmmakers was the chance to incorporate Philip Seymour Hoffman’s final performance as Plutarch Heavensbee – the Head Gamemaker who appears to be a power player in the Capitol until he proves to be a mastermind behind the rebellion. Says Francis Lawrence: “Collaborating with Phil on the Hunger Games movies was a fantastic experience for all of us – just to have the chance to watch him work and to learn from him – and his portrait of Plutarch is very moving.” PEETA/JOSH HUTCHERSON: Mockingjay – Part 2 sees Peeta Mellark – the former victor who was to marry Katniss in a Capitol spectacle – still in a haunting, dangerous fugue state after being brainwashed by President Snow during 6 his captivity. Though his body has been freed, his mind struggles against nightmarish, instilled thoughts to kill Katniss, the very same person he once most trusted in the world. Francis Lawrence says Josh Hutcherson’s willingness to go the edge in this new incarnation of Peeta was impressive. “He really blew me away in this film because he was so incredible at showing how tormented Peeta is in his current state. I know Josh so well, but watching him in these scenes, I didn’t recognize any part of him,” remarks the director. Hutcherson sums up where the film finds Peeta: “Peeta’s going through a kind of rehabilitation process, trying to get back to his old self. He’s being held in District 13, but he’s still violently psychotic and his recovery is clearly going to be a very long, hard road. He has moments of clarity but he kind of goes in and out. With all these memories that were implanted in his mind by the Capitol, he has to constantly try to decipher what is real and what has been fed to him – and he has to rely on his peers to help him find that truth.” Peeta might be constantly asking “real or not real” about things he suddenly remembers and feels, but Nina Jacobson notes that Hutcherson’s performance leaves no such doubts. “The humanity that he brings to this role and the realness that he brings is extraordinary,” she says. “In this film, on the one hand, Peeta is completely lost in a hypnotic state of rage, but on the other, he starts reconnecting with Katniss, step by tiny step, is, in a way that is very touching. Your heart breaks for him, but you see that he has a chance to return to who he was, even if nothing will ever be the same.” For Hutcherson, the film required a 180 from how he normally approaches the character. “Peeta’s always been known as being the down-to-earth, grounded, honest guy. But now he’s out of his mind, I had to turn that inside out,” he says. “It shows a lot about the real feelings that Katniss has for Peeta that she still fights for him and believes in him even in this state.” When Peeta is sent by President Coin to join Squad 451 – consisting of Katniss, Gale, Finnick, Boggs, Cressida, Messalla, Castor and Pollux – it endangers everyone, but helps Katniss break through to him. “Really, he should not be in this environment,” Hutcherson admits. “It has tons of triggers that could cause him to explode and, and lose control again, which actually happens multiple times.” Throughout, Peeta’s true feelings for Katniss keep surfacing in ways that keep him bonded to her at an unspoken level. For Hutcherson finding those breakthrough moments with Jennifer Lawrence after the three previous films came organically. “Jennifer has this quiet strength about her,” he says. “A lot of people might have tried to play up the rebellious side of Katniss, but Jennifer saw from the start that’s not who Katniss is. Jen has played Katniss’ reluctance and groundedness so well, it always feels very real to me. It’s one of the reasons why I think Peeta connects with her and why so many people have connected with The Hunger Games.” As for how Peeta has evolved since he first left to represent District 12 in The Hunger Games, Hutcherson concludes, “Peeta always had a very realistic view of what was happening around him. He’s more haunted now from having experienced The Hunger Games first-hand, and from witnessing the 7 destruction that Snow’s dictatorship can cause. But deep within, his mentality has always been you have to not let yourself be a piece in the game; you have to try to be yourself even as you fight to survive. That’s still what he would say to this day.” Like Jennifer Lawrence, Hutcherson says he will miss his character, but he will take a lot from the long and rich experience of playing Peeta. “I definitely will take away great friendships and memories from The Hunger Games,” he says. “I also hope I take away some of Peeta’s values. When you do a project like this, people can get certain ideas about who you should be – and Peeta is a reminder that it’s best to kind of break those expectations and simply be true to yourself.” GALE/LIAM HEMSWORTH: While Peeta is lost, Gale Hawthorne has found himself in the beginning of Mockingjay – Part 2 – and become one of Panem’s most uncompromising warriors. Says Liam Hemsworth, who has taken his character from Katniss’s boyish best friend and hunting partner in District 12 to a rebellious coal miner to a major force in the rebellion: “Gale is more part of the action in this film and really gets his chance to make a difference to Panem. He has built up so much anger at President Snow and at the Capitol that he is ready to go to war at any cost.” The more Gale solidifies his philosophy that the ends justify the means in war, the more he finds a wall between himself and Katniss. “Gale has a very different view from Katniss about what’s acceptable in war and how far to go. Katniss cannot accept the risk of killing innocent people. Gale is prepared to have casualties if it means winning. He just wants to end all of this, whatever it takes,” Hemsworth explains. At the same time, Gale’s personal feelings for Katniss, kept under wraps since she was first whisked to the Capitol, remain unresolved…and perhaps forever unresolvable given the circumstances. Hemsworth says no matter what is in Gale’s soul, everything seems to be conspiring to keep them apart. “This chapter is where you really see that Gale and Katniss have developed very different ideas about the world. Gale has come to the conclusion at this point that Katniss truly loves Peeta, and the more Peeta needs her, the more Gale can feel her slipping away day by day,” Hemsworth says, adding, “And yet, Gale still deeply loves Katniss and he is still driven to look after her and protect her. That’s what he’s always been about.” Unexpectedly, Peeta’s confusion and uncontrollable impulses even draw Gale’s empathy. “Gale knows that Peeta’s not in control of himself,” Hemsworth observes. “Gale’s still wary of him, but for the first time in this film, we actually get to see Gale and Peeta have a friendly conversation with each other – and connect around their mutual feelings for Katniss.” For now, however, it is Gale taking the lead in the action, and Hemsworth relished the chance to explore his character’s pent-up physicality. He especially enjoyed leading the battle against the mutant “lizard mutts” in the sewer tunnels of the Capitol. “It was very physical, tough work, hunching through 8 these dark tunnels, in freezing cold water. It’s such a great fight scene and I love doing stunts so that was a true highlight for me.” Hemsworth, too, finds it difficult to believe the story is coming to a close and even more unsettling that he won’t be returning to work with Jennifer Lawrence in the indelible role of Katniss. “Working with Jennifer on this is something wonderful I’ll always carry,” he says. “She’s an incredible actress, but also so much fun. I’ll miss her and all the cast and crew.” For Nina Jacobson, Hemsworth’s rapport with Lawrence has been at the core of a star-crossed relationship that might have been, but never had a chance in the world Katniss, Gale and Peeta live in. “Liam does a great job of representing Gale’s revolutionary spirit, his belief in fighting fire-withfire, in a very relatable way,” she sums up. “He reveals Gale as someone who has become comfortable with the costs of war in a way that Katniss nor Peeta never could, and he brings real depth to that. When it comes to Katniss, you really feel for him. You can tell he’s in love with her, and may always be in love with her, but he knows there’s no way now to win her back.” HAYMITCH/WOODY HARRELSON: The former victor who became Katniss’ savvy mentor remains as fiery as ever, even as the rebellion he’s long awaited comes to its climax. For Woody Harrelson, who has taken Haymitch Abernathy from intoxicated cynic to realist to steadfast believer in the Mockingjay, it was a challenge to face up to the story’s conclusion. “I really don’t want to be done with The Hunger Games,” he admits. “I wish it didn’t have to end ever. The characters in the film have formed a kind of patchwork family – and that was equally true for us as actors in real life.” He adds: “What’s been so exciting is that each installment of The Hunger Games has been equally great. This last chapter, though, is absolutely the biggest in terms of scale and in terms of the lasting consequences for Katniss and everyone around her, including Haymitch.” Harrelson has especially welcomed the chance to get so close to Jennifer Lawrence over the course of the series. “Haymitch comes to care deeply about Katniss in a way that maybe surprises him and shakes him up, and it’s easy to get to that place with Jennifer,” he says. “She’s so much fun to work with, but also so honest and true in her performance. You’re always working at a high level with her.” As for Haymitch, Harrelson concludes: “He’s known a lot of tragedy and he’s struggled with his own vices and addictions. I think he’ll always have that sharp attitude towards life, but he also dreams of peace.” EFFIE/ELIZABETH BANKS: The outrageously fashionable and flitty social climber who Katniss first met as her 74 th Hunger Games escort has undergone her own transformation throughout the series. Tough times have lent Effie Trinket more grit and guile, but she’s never lost an ounce of her exuberant spirit or loyalty to Katniss. 9 Says Elizabeth Banks who has always adored playing the character to the hilt: “Effie has progressed so much over the course of these films, although she was never truly a rebel. As always, she is self-preserving but supports Katniss above anyone else.” In Mockingjay – Part 1, Effie was adjusting to life amid the gray conformity of District 13 but in Part 2, she gets to return to the Capitol in typical style. “She’s come to feel more free to express herself in District 13 which has become a 2nd home to her,” Banks explains. “But when Effie finally returns to the Capitol, her looks are as eccentric and beautiful as ever … yet more befitting of the official she has become.” After years of donning Effie’s glam makeup and architectural gowns, Banks says she will miss not only the fashion but the people who helped bring Effie to life. “I will miss collaborating with Ve Neill, Linda Flowers, Camille Friend, Judianna Makovsky, Trish Summerville and Kurt and Bart. These hair, make-up and costume designers were essential partners to me in creating the iconic Effie Trinket.” She will also miss Jennifer Lawrence and the thrill of being Katniss’s confidante. “Jennifer has shown such range across all four of the films. She's our leader and has always made going to work something fun I looked forward to every day,” the actress says. As for Effie’s future, Banks sums up: “Effie is a survivor. She will be fine. She's inspired by Katniss who will not only survive but thrive.” PRESIDENT SNOW/DONALD SUTHERLAND: In Mockingjay – Part 2, the battle between President Snow and Katniss Everdeen approaches a final reckoning. An increasingly cynical tyrant, Snow has become almost madly obsessed with destroying Katniss and, in his obsession, turns the entire Capitol into a Hunger Games arena of dirty tricks. Having been part of the franchise from the start, Donald Sutherland relished exposing Snow’s contradictions right up to the very end. “Snow’s an old man and he sees this as a final, thrilling game of chess with a competitor who’s up to everything he can handle,” Sutherland comments. “He is torn in a way, because he loves Katniss’s spirit but of course he doesn’t want her to actually succeed. Yet, he doesn’t really want to murder her either. It was that complexity that interested me about Snow in the first place and now it comes to its climax. I’ve loved having a role that I could commit to passionately.” Says Francis Lawrence: “Donald Sutherland brings the story of President Snow to a fitting ending. He has embodied this character with such wit and power throughout, and here you get to see Katniss gain the upper hand on him.” FINNICK/SAM CLAFLIN: After facing the darkest moments of his life, in Mockingjay – Part 2 Finnick O’Dair is reunited with his one true love – Annie Cresta – but remains committed to the rebellion, joining with Katniss, Peeta and 10 Gale in Squad 451’s perilous trip to the Capitol. Sam Claflin, who has taken the sly but emotional character to heart, says of where the final chapters finds him: “Finnick is really a new person after he reunites with Annie. He has a new lease on life and a newfound freedom. He sees their engagement as a chance to allow their love to be a powerful new symbol for the rebellion.” Love also leads Claflin back into war. “This newfound passion drives Finnick to get back out there and do what's right for Panem,” says Claflin. “This is a different chapter for everyone. The stakes are a lot higher, the characters have more than ever to lose and it’s much more real. It isn’t a game anymore, even if the games were deadly. This is the future and they all have a lot to fight for.” For Finnick, helping to forge the future also means helping Katniss reconcile with Peeta, no matter how savage his brainwashing might appear. “Finnick knows that Katniss loves Peeta, even if she is still unsure,” says Claflin. “That's the beauty of Finnick: he observes things that other people can't, and that comes out of the horrible experiences that he has been through himself.” Claflin had a chance to wield Finnick’s famed trident in battle, a skill he has been honing since he first took the role, but that he had to take to the next level against the Capitol’s mutant lizard mutts. “I’ve spent hours and hours with broomsticks,” he muses. “I also had an incredible team of people helping me to get adept and I learned that you have to make the trident work as if it was an additional limb.” Although Finnick was a master of the games, this was Claflin’s most physically challenging outing. “It felt like we were running marathons every single day – whether it be sprinting away from oil or through hordes of lizard mutts,” he recalls. “What was inspiring is that every single actor was raring to go, wanting to make these incredibly well-designed sequences the best they could be.” Still, he says perhaps the biggest challenge of all was having to dance at Finnick’s glamorous wedding. “I hate dancing with a passion,” Claflin laughingly confesses. “It was tough, maybe even tougher than the sewers! But it was also beautiful and I tried to make the most of it.” That sentiment of making the most of everything was true for Claflin right up to his final scenes. “This whole series has been incredible,” he concludes. “I feel so honored and blessed to have been a part of it, as a fan and for the fans.” PRESIDENT COIN/JULIANNE MOORE: With the Capitol’s citizens under fire and President Snow on the defensive, it seems that District 13’s rebel leader, President Coin, is getting everything she wanted. Coin also remains suspicious of Katniss’s growing power, and prefers that the Mockingjay stay more passive symbol than active participant in the battle. Returning for a second time in the role, Academy Award ® winner Julianne Moore says: “Coin wants to keep Katniss as a powerless figurehead, as the emotional, intellectual momentum behind the revolution. This is also the point where Coin starts to see Katniss as a serious potential threat to her own leadership.” 11 Coin’s personal agenda as a rebel leader has always been slippery, but Moore’s aim was to keep the character balanced on that razor-thin line between savior and villain. “I tried to give her a kind of evolution,” she explains. “She’s very inscrutable in the book, but I saw her as being a political animal. She’s someone who thought she was one thing in the beginning, fighting for the people, but became something else, as the war progressed, something not necessarily positive. Despite having seen all the destruction Snow has set in motion, Coin herself becomes infatuated with the possibility of authoritarian power and might. As they say, power corrupts … and we’ve seen throughout history that bold leaders can often later become despots.” She continues: “I also always saw the story of The Hunger Games as being about growing up; about Katniss figuring out what her own moral responsibilities are and making her own choices. So one of the things that happens as you grow up is disillusionment with the people who you once believed were doing the right thing. Coin plays that role in Katniss’s life.” After seeing an early cut of Mockingjay – Part 2, Moore was deeply moved. “I think the whole series is amazing,” she concludes. “It’s a wonderful entertainment, with great young actors, and it’s been something everyone can relate to. This last film is very much about the costs of warfare – what it does to families and communities and ordinary people. That is something voiced in the books and it comes across very powerfully in this film. I’ve found all of the movies to have emotional endings, but this one might be the most touching.” JOHANNA/JENA MALONE: In the final moments of Mockingjay – Part 1, Gale and Boggs lead a siege in the Capitol, rescuing former victors Johanna and Annie Cresta, who have been held by Snow since the Quarter Quell games. In Mockingjay – Part 2, Johanna, scarred by her experiences, scarcely resembles the woman who brazenly removed her clothes in front of Peeta and Katniss in Catching Fire. Jena Malone explains that Johanna is now in the throes of a post-traumatic confusion, and learning to embrace her unexpected freedom. “This is the first time in her entire life that she hasn’t been asked to be something that she’s not,” points out Malone. “Johanna was forced to be a Tribute and learned to use her sexuality, but now she’s been stripped of all of those devices of manipulation. She’s a little bit deranged by this lack of awareness of what she should be doing, so she’s barely holding on. She’s reaching out to dangerous outlets and anything that might make her emotions disappear.” For Malone the challenges of portraying this broken version of Johanna were also physical – requiring 3 hours daily in the makeup chair. “It was a feat,” she recalls. “We had these genius prosthetic artists doing their thing. They would bring down my hair, then put the bald cap on and then do all of the flesh toning and prosthetic work around the neck, adding cuts and bruises.” 12 The effect was staggering for Malone. “I really think this is the first time in her life that Johanna isn’t about looking pretty,” Malone points out. “That was kind of liberating as an actress, but it’s definitely a whole different side to Johanna.” Though Johanna is going through a dark time, Malone notes that her light has not gone out. “The Capitol wanted to break our spirits, really turn us over, and make us mutts”, Malone summarizes. “They did a hell of a job on Peeta, and they tried on Johanna, but I think it was impossible.” Malone is also thrilled to see Katniss coming full circle in Mockingjay – Part 2. “I believe that all Katniss ever wanted was to go back to District 12, and live her own life in her own way – and I think her journey is really beautiful in this film. She learns to listen to her own voice.” PRIMROSE/WILLOW SHIELDS: From the opening moments of The Hunger Games franchise Katniss Everdeen has been driven by her deep love for and desire to protect her younger sister, Primrose. It was Prim who was originally meant to compete in the 74th Hunger Games until Katniss volunteered to take her place. Since then, young Prim has grown into a strong, compassionate young woman. She and Katniss are quite different, but as sisters so often are, they are connected so deeply that one is in trouble, the other knows it. As Mockingjay – Part 2 kicks off Prim has become a full-fledge wartime medic, but Katniss knows the danger for her sister is growing and would do anything she could to keep her safe, even if might be impossible. Willow Shields has played the role since she was 12, and has literally grown up with the character. She says that in this precarious moment of Prim’s life, she feels that Prim has at least become who she wanted to be. “Prim has grown up immensely by Part 2,” Shields observes. “She is training to become a doctor, fulfilling her destiny. As a medic, she can finally contribute to the rebellion herself. This is her role in the fight, one that she is good at, and one that shows what a brave young person she has become. She sees the consequences of war all around her, but she believes in the fight, what its value is, and she believes in her sister as a leader.” She also enjoys that she has slowly but surely earned something beyond Katniss’s love: her admiration. “In the first Hunger Games Katniss protects Prim from their harsh world – but now the relationship has shifted,” Shields points out. “Katniss is still protective of Prim, but now she has come to respect Prim’s abilities, awareness and wisdom. They are much more equal in Mockingjay – Part 2.” Katniss will always be inspired by Primrose says Shields. “They have really had little else they could count on but each other. It’s no wonder they were so close,” she notes. “Katniss saw qualities in Prim that help propel her forward. Prim has an inner strength that is used to heal and nurture others – and these qualities help Katniss aspire to a future that is kinder and more nurturing for everyone.” The future for Shields is wide open, but she is grateful for the extraordinary experience of portraying Prim. “I have spent a third of my life making these films,” she muses. “It has been a very personal experience, going so far beyond the job of making films. I am thrilled to have been a part of 13 Suzanne Collins’ amazing creation – and part of a fanbase that is so inspiring and loving. I was also a part of a cast that has all of Prim’s greatest traits: loving, kind, nurturing and supportive. In other words: The Hunger Games Family. It’s been an amazing family to be a part of and I will never forget any of it.” CRESSIDA/NATALIE DORMER: The guerrilla filmmaker Cressida faces the biggest challenge of her offbeat career in Mockingjay – Part 2: returning to the Capitol with Squad 451 to advance the rebellion, and realizing that Katniss aims to go far beyond her symbolic role and assassinate President Snow. For Natalie Dormer, who first took on the indelibly defiant character in Mockingjay – Part 1, it was a thrilling chance to show her character’s mettle. “Mockingjay – Part 1 introduced Cressida and her camera team. But in Part 2 we get to see her and her team really push Katniss because the revolution is in process and it’s time to consolidate the message to the masses,” says Dormer. “Of course, Katniss has no intention of simply being a poster girl, and Cressida and everyone else on the Squad gets drawn into her mission.” That mission meant Dormer finding herself at the forefront of major action sequences. “Me and my camera crew really become warriors with the Star Squad down in the sewers,” she explains. “It was very physically demanding work. But we all kept each other going morale-wise and it was rewarding, too, because the payoff was being part of this very exciting climax to the story.” The film’s atmospheric European sets further inspired Dormer. “The level of detail in the art design on this movie is so incredible,” she muses. “Whether it’s massive architecture or the pitch black of the sewers, the audience will be fully absorbed into it.” Dormer also loved watching Jennifer Lawrence up her game again. “Jennifer brings a new layer to Katniss every time she plays her. In this movie she goes to even deeper psychological depths. You see Katniss acting on the idea that it is time to finish this story and time to end the violence in Panem.” Endings are never easy, but Dormer was thrilled to be in on bringing The Hunger Games saga full circle. “This is what we’ve all been waiting for,” she sums up. “This film is the culmination of everything that has happened so far, and it lives up to that scale. It has everything that the books were about: the galvanized passion of people fighting against tyranny along with the fine-tuned details of the personal relationships that mean so much to Katniss. I’m proud of the way the film has found that balance.” BOGGS/MAHERSHALA ALI: As the action picks up in Mockingjay – Part 2, Katniss, Peeta and Gale are under the command of President Coin’s right-hand man, Boggs. Though he is the head of Squad 451, he is not fully aware of the secret plan to subvert the propaganda operation into an assassination. Returning to take the role to its conclusion is Mahershala Ali who sees Boggs as torn in his shifting relationship with Katniss. “On the one hand, Boggs feels a kind of paternal connection to her where he wants to protect her and make sure she’s OK,” Ali explains. “But now he also is developing a new respect for her. He 14 sees how selfless she has become, how willing she is to put herself on the line for other people. It makes him want to look out for her even more – but maybe also to trust her more.” As the war against the Capitol escalates, Boggs can’t help but think of Katniss’s future. “He’s become loyal to her to the point that he truly wants to see her accomplish her task. Ultimately, he realizes taking down Snow is something she has to do on a personal level,” Ali observes. For Ali, the spirit of Squad 451 is built on the close connection forged between the actors. “We were able to bring that great camaraderie that is part of the spirit of The Hunger Games – one that starts with Jennifer and Francis, who bring so much passion to it,” he says. “All of us on Squad 451 spent a lot of time together so that made it feel completely real to us. We laughed a lot but we also were motivated by how big and important this final chapter will be to the audience.” Ali especially enjoyed the all-out action in the film. “This was different because we were dealing a lot more with weapons, tactical armor, gas masks… even rappelling down a building. There was a lot of training to learn to move in a coordinated manner and that stuff is really fun,” he comments. Yet, there was also a sense of authentic change come to Panem. “This chapter is completely unique,” Ali concludes. “There’s always been oppression in The Hunger Games but Mockingjay – Part 2 is a true story of war. Freedom is right there on the cusp and they can taste it. It’s really exciting to not just bring these characters to an end but to also see how that leads up to a new beginning.” The Capitol On Fire Mockingjay – Part 2 unveils the Capitol as it has never been seen before in The Hunger Games franchise – entering the city’s once lavishly glittering streets amid the erupting chaos of wartime. The whole metropolis transforms into an arena more real than any before as Snow attacks Katniss and the Squad 451 in some of his most epic and creative ways yet. The result as Jennifer Lawrence says is “sets that are absolutely insane. The spectacle of this film is really incredible.” Nina Jacobson observes: “In this final movie, you get the epic scale of Katniss’s return to the streets of the Capitol, which has great power to it. Francis has brought to life the Capitol sequences in a way that is truly something, and will be incredibly exciting in the immersive experience of IMAX ®. It’s everything that you hope to accomplish on a big screen – something that is emotionally and thematically powerful, but also cinematically enormous. “ Adds Sam Claflin: “On a film set in another world you might expect to have to do a lot of imagining as an actor. Yet the team managed to find these incredible locations and build amazing sets that literally transport you and take your breath away. That really adds to the flavor of the piece.” For Julianne Moore, the new Capitol sets were an eye-opening change. “After being in District 13’s gloomy, claustrophobic underground, it was so fun to come up into the grand scope of the Capitol.” 15 To fully bring the Capitol to life in a new way, Francis Lawrence and production designer Philip Messina knew they would have to look beyond Atlanta, home to much of the production. They took advantage of historic and futurist locations in France and Germany that could be found nowhere else. “We really wanted to capture the feel of being on the ground in the Capitol and we needed the kind of backdrops that lend themselves to pretty epic action scenes,” says the director. “Phil and I wanted to keep the idea of the Brutalist/Classical architecture that makes the Capitol so imposing but shooting at real locations allowed us to do that in a more immersive way. Phil found some amazing places in Paris and Berlin that were a phenomenal match with the story,” says the director. Adds producer Jon Kilik: “Shooting the Capitol scenes in Europe allowed us all the size and scale that we envisioned. The team was able to create a look that is both very layered and gigantic.” Just outside Paris, near Versailles, the production set up camp at Château de Voisins, a stunningly aristocratic 1903 estate, which stands in for portions of President Snow’s mansion. The Chateau served as home to some of the film’s most vital scenes, including a major turning point involving a meeting of former Hunger Games’ victors. Messina envisioned a spare but power-laden set for President Snow’s office. “For the office, we used a mausoleum-style room clad in stone. Phil was very inspired by that room because it was so cold, harsh and dictatorial,” says set decorator Larry Dias. “I had a 45-foot long rug loomed in China that had the Capitol on it and we used this crazy desk at the end of the room. It’s a really bold, amazing set.” One of the most remarkable sets in France was created from the wildly post-modern apartment buildings in Noisy-Le-Grand known as “L’espace Abraxas.” Built in the 50s, 60s and 70s, these massive, square, stone structures surrounded by pillars, plazas and triumphal arches hearken back to the Greek Empire but, at the same time, they also nod to a future of immaculately planned cities. This is where Katniss, Gale, Peeta and Squad 451 are inundated with a deadly, towering tidal wave of “goo” in another twisted attempt by President Snow to stop them. The cast was in awe of Abraxas. “In IMAX®, it’s going to look so crazy ‘cause you’re going to be able to see up and down these huge structures,” says Josh Hutcherson. Says Liam Hemsworth: “It’s very Panem-looking – it’s everything you imagine the Capitol to be, and it felt like the perfect place for us to shoot these street scenes.” For the exterior of Tigris’s shop, Messina turned to another French public housing project: Jean Renaudie and Renee Gailhoustet’s series of eight concrete, triangular buildings in Ivry sur-Seine. Moving on to Germany, the production took over an abandoned factory in Rudersdorf, which serves as the backdrop for Katniss and Gale’s attack on a Capitol hovercraft. Berlin’s locations include a return to Tempelhof Airport, one of the world’s oldest surviving airports and the former core of Nazi air power in WWII, also seen in Mockingjay – Part 1. 16 “Francis and I were drawn to Tempelhof because of the impressive scale of it,” Messina explains. “The size of the structure was perfect for many of Mockingjay – Part 2’s most exciting locations including the rebel encampment in District 2, Commander Lyme’s control center and the train station.” For the cast, Tempelhof was transporting. “Berlin is architecturally one of the most interesting cities in the world,” Jeffrey Wright says. “There is a very powerful, complicated history expressed through these buildings – and I found it really inspiring to shape these historical places for the purposes we have for the film. The train station scene reminded me of something out of a Cecil B. De Mille movie. It was operatic even, and wildly exciting and impressive.” From Tempelhof, the production moved to an abandoned Russian military facility in Krampnitz, which was formerly in East Berlin. This was rejiggered into the bombed out Capitol building where Katniss and her Star Squad team are waylaid. Messina recalls the first time he scouted the location, which had was overgrown with greenery. “When we first saw pictures of it, it had been abandoned for a couple of decades. It looked like these buildings were coming out of the forest. Francis and I went and blocked it out and laid out the pieces to turn it into a city street. It was an amazing transformation.” But Messina’s biggest challenge of all was constructing Mockingjay – Part 2’s most complicated set: the dark, sodden network of tunnels where Squad 451 comes face-to-face with an army of “lizard mutts,” mutated reptiles that can take down enemies in a single chomp. Described in the book as “a mix of lizard and human and who knows what else,” the mutts are brought to life via a mix of actors and CGI. “The lizard sequence evolved between Francis, visual effects, stunts and myself coming up with how to lay it all out,” Messina describes. “We started out with larger-scaled sewers but Francis said ‘No, I want them really small. I want them compact.’ So we made all the ceilings about five feet tall. It looks amazing, but I want to write an open letter to the crew formally apologizing for all the bumped heads!” Last Looks: Hair and Make-Up Throughout The Hunger Games, the look of the characters has gone through many incarnations, from humble and raw to the most outrageously ostentatious. Now that the Capitol and all of Panem are in the throes of all-out battle, the look is new once again in Mockingjay – Part 2, brought to life by costume designers Kurt and Bart; makeup designer Ve Neill and co-department head Nikoletta Skarlats; along with key team members Glenn Hetrick, who has done the film’s prosthetics from the beginning, key makeup artist Conor McCullagh and hair designer Camille Friend and co-department head Kim Santantonio. From the start of the epic series, Academy Award ® winning makeup designer Ve Neill has been a major force behind the creative design and evolution of the character’s visages. For Mockingjay – Part 2 she kept many of the whimsical elements that have always been part of the Panem universe, but brought them down to earth as reality descends on the Capitol. 17 “It’s not as fantasy-oriented as the earlier films because now we’re down to the nitty-gritty,” she observes. “Now we’re fully into wartime and this is really different for all the characters. You also start to see the people in the Capitol in a way you haven’t seen them before. Of course, you always want the look to be very cool, but at the same time to me this chapter is really a tear-jerker.” It’s also set amid battles. “In this film, Katniss, Peeta and Gale are now soldiers trying to get to the Capitol and kill Snow so we see them in a new way and we also see the Capitol in a new way,” says Neill. “One of the most interesting things about shooting the Capitol scenes in Europe, is that we used German and French makeup artists who bring a whole different style and flavor that really gives the Capitol a fresh look. There is glamour and finery, but in a way we haven’t seen before.” Several characters also get a fresh take in Mockingjay – Part 2. To switch-up the ever-changing Effie’s appearance, Neill gave her makeup design to partner Nikoletta Skarlatos. “It was a sure way to get something different from the earlier films,” Neill explains. “Nikoletta’s Effie is still very stylized but she’s more down to earth, more mature and elegant – it’s really cool to see her in this new styling.” Meanwhile, Neill transformed Julianne Moore’s look as the pressures of Coin’s ambitions catch up with her. “Her character is really changing in this film so her look also starts to progress. It’s very subtle, but it’s also very striking. Julianne is so beautiful but you see her with a more fierce look here.” As for Jennifer Lawrence’s Katniss, Neill says: “In Mockingjay – Part 1 she was in trauma, but now she has found her own natural strength as a leader. When you see her in this film in the Mockingjay costume you see that she’s grown so much, she’s really matured emotionally. So the makeup is not really high-fashion but emphasizes the womanly strength to her face. She looks fierce and beautiful yet relatable. Jennifer is so stunning you only need a little bit of makeup to do that.” Neill admits she already misses the close rapport with Jennifer and the rest of the cast. “I feel like I’ve watched them all grow up over the years,” she reflects. “We’re all still in touch and good friends, but I miss them so much. This was such a unique series of movies. For me it was a chance to do every kind of makeup – from battle wounds to high glamour to fantasy – but it’s also been about friendships.” Upping The Action To The Very End With Squad 451 headed to the Capitol determined to stop President Snow for good, Mockingjay – Part 2 brings Katniss into epic, full-scale action on a level beyond the cleverly manufactured sieges of the Hunger Games arenas seen in the first two Hunger Games films or the early rumblings of war in Mockingjay – Part 1. “In Mockingjay – Part 2, the action is based in reality as Katniss and her team move to the Capitol,” stunt coordinator Sam Hargrave says. “Because of the intense action, it required a lot more out of all of our actors. It’s chaos, so they had to be really ‘on it’ physically.” Fortunately, by the time cameras rolled on Mockingjay – Part 2, Jennifer Lawrence had become highly skilled in the ancient art of the bow and arrow, Katniss’ iconic weaponry. “This character has 18 become such a part of Jennifer that our training process was much narrower,” Hargrave comments. “She knew what was expected of her, and whatever we asked of her she was gung-ho to try it.” Mockingjay – Part 2 also gave Liam Hemsworth more of an opportunity to show off his capabilities as an action star. “Liam is a very talented guy. He kickboxes and trains on his own so he brought in a lot of physical assets before we even began the specific training,” Hargraves observes. Perhaps the most ambitious action sequence of the entire franchise is the film’s harrowing battle against the gnashing teeth and the talons of the supernaturally fast lizard mutts in the claustrophobic sewer tunnels. “The whole scene was very complicated, so we had to storyboard it all and get all the fight choreography established long before we went in,” explains Francis Lawrence. “There was a lot of technical difficulty – we were dealing with real fire and real water – and it was quite honestly a miserable set for the actors and crew. But it’s a scene I’m really proud of. It’s a very cool sequence.” For the cast, the experience was a taste of what their characters are going through as they reach the Capitol at the height of the rebellion. “The sewer tunnels were tough for everyone, being wet and cold all day long,” says Josh Hutcherson. “But the results are there in one of the coolest scenes in the whole Hunger Games story.” Yet for all the film’s high adrenaline and suspense, the director says it is the emotions of the film’s stirring, hard-won final moments that will linger most of all. “One of the things that I’m most excited about is the film’s final scene,” says Francis Lawrence. “There was a really strong feeling on the set when we got to the scene – a feeling that all the history of all these characters through the course of these four movies had built up to this singular moment. I hope audiences really feel that history and also a sense of the future. Everything that has happened to Katniss and all the themes of the story have wound together to come down to this final glimpse of her world, so it was very important that we really get to live inside it.” The ending remains as faithful to Suzanne Collins’ phenomenon-creating books as the beginning. As the journey comes to a close, one of the greatest satisfactions for Nina Jacobson is that the film franchise never strayed, the whole way through, from her promise to follow Collins’ vision. “I have such profound respect for Suzanne and I love the books so much and understand how fans feel about them,” Jacobson closes. “So from the start, we had a total commitment to do right by the books and deliver cinematic storytelling at the highest level. That was a huge thing to aspire to do, but I never could have forgiven myself if we’d gotten it wrong. We had an obligation to come through for people and it’s been an incredible experience. I hope we will continue to talk about all the incredibly relevant things this entire story is about: human society, the costs of war, the exploitation of tragedy for entertainment and the dangers of losing our individual narratives in tyrannical times. It’s a story for the ages.” ##### 19 CAST BIOS A natural talent, with a striking presence and undeniable energy, Academy Award ® winner JENNIFER LAWRENCE [Katniss Everdeen] is one of Hollywood's most gifted actresses. Lawrence recently wrapped production on David O. Russell's biopic, Joy; Joy is based on the life of a struggling Long Island single mom who became one of the country's most successful entrepreneurs with her invention of the Miracle Mop. Lawrence will co-star alongside Bradley Cooper and Robert de Niro, and Twentieth Century Fox is set to release the film December 25, 2015. Last year, Lawrence was seen in Bryan Singer’s X-Men: Days of Future Past, reprising her role as ‘Raven’ and ‘Mystique,’ opposite Hugh Jackman, Michael Fassbender, James McAvoy, Halle Berry, Anna Paquin, Ellen Page, and Nicholas Hoult. She will also appear in Singer's next chapter of the franchise, X-Men: Apocalypse, set to be released May 27, 2016. Lawrence made her X-Men debut in Matthew Vaughn’s XMen: First Class, opposite Jackman, Fassbender and McAvoy, as well as Rose Byrne, January Jones, Nicholas Hoult, Zoë Kravitz and Kevin Bacon. In 2016, Lawrence will be seen as ‘Aurora’ in Sony Pictures’ Passengers opposite Chris Pratt and Michael Sheen. The film is about a spacecraft travelling to a distant colony planet that is transporting thousands of people which suffers a malfunction in one of its sleep chambers. As a result, a single passenger is awakened 60 years early. Faced with the prospect of growing old and dying alone, he eventually decides to wake up a second passenger. Also upcoming, Lawrence will soon begin production on an adaptation of Graeme Simsion’s novel, The Rosie Project as ‘’Rosie Jarman’. The film is being produced by Sony-based producers Matt Tolmach and Michael Costigan. The Rosie Project is about an unlucky-in-love university professor who creates an elaborate questionnaire in an effort to find a wife, and meets an unconventional woman who doesn't match any of his "requirements", but might be the perfect woman for him. Lawrence is also attached to star as ‘Cathy Ames’ in Gary Ross’ adaptation of the classic John Steinbeck novel, East of Eden, for Universal Pictures. The film takes place in the farmlands of the Salinas Valley in California, where successive generations of two families, the Trasks and the Hamiltons, are destined to reenact the fateful story of Cain and Abel. Lawrence also recently co-starred alongside Bradley cooper in Magnolia Pictures’ Serena, which was released in the spring of 2015; based upon the novel by Ron Rash, the depression-era story focused on a newlywed couple and their timber empire during that time. Lawrence’s critically acclaimed performances include David O. Russell’s American Hustle, co-starring opposite Christian Bale, Amy Adams and Bradley Cooper in her portrayal of Roslyn, a contentious suburban housewife to a con-artist husband. Her first collaboration with David O. Russell was on Silver Linings Playbook where she starred alongside Bradley Cooper, Robert De Niro and Jacki Weaver as Tiffany, a young widow suffering from depression. Her breakthrough performance came in Debra Granik’s Winter’s Bone in which Lawrence starred as ‘Ree’, a young girl facing a dangerous social terrain as she hunts down her drug-dealing father while trying to keep her family intact. To date, those three film credits have garnered Lawrence an Academy Award® for Best Actress, with two additional Academy Award® nominations for Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress. In addition, Lawrence has received a BAFTA Award for Best Actress and an additional BAFTA Best Supporting Actress nomination; two Golden Globe Awards® for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture Comedy or Musical and Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role Motion Picture Drama, as well as a Golden Globe Award® nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture Drama; a Screen Actors Guild Award ® for Lead Role, as well two Screen Actors Guild Award ® nominations for Lead Actress and Supporting Actress. 20 Additional film credits include Mark Tonderai’s House at the End of The Street opposite Elisabeth Shue and Max Thieriot; Jodie Foster’s The Beaver opposite Mel Gibson and Anton Yelchin; Drake Doremus' Like Crazy opposite Anton Yelchin and Felicity Jones; Lori Petty's Poker House opposite Selma Blair and Bokeem Woodbine, for which she was awarded the prize of Outstanding Performance in the Narrative Competition at the 2008 Los Angeles Film Festival; and Guillermo Arriaga's directorial debut The Burning Plain, opposite Charlize Theron and Kim Basinger. The film premiered at the 2008 Venice Film Festival where Lawrence won the Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best Young Actor. On television, Lawrence’s credits include three seasons of the TBS series “The Bill Engvall Show.” The comedy, written and created by Bill Engvall and Michael Leeson, follows the life of Bill Pearson (Engvall), a Denver suburban family counselor whose own family could use a little dose of counseling. Reigning from Louisville, Kentucky with a childhood of local theatre experience to her credit, Lawrence traveled to New York at age fourteen to explore a professional career in acting. At 23 years old, JOSH HUTCHERSON [Peeta Mellark] has quickly become one of Hollywood's most accomplished young actors. Hutcherson has already received many accolades throughout his career including the 2012 CinemaCon award for Breakthrough Actor, MTV Movie Award for Best Male Performance, the Teen Choice Award for Best Actor: Sci-Fi/Fantasy and Logo’s New Now Next Award for the Next Mega Star. Hutcherson can currently be seen starring alongside Benicio Del Toro in Escobar: Paradise Lost, a drama about the notorious kingpin, Pablo Escobar which premiered at 2014 Toronto Film Festival. Hutcherson is currently filming the James Franco directed drama, The Long Home. Based on the novel by William Gay, the film is set in the 1940’s in rural Tennessee where a young man goes to work for a bootlegger unaware that he had murdered his father 10 years prior. Additional film credits include the animated film Epic, Red Dawn, a remake of the 1984 classic about a group of teenagers trying to save their town from foreign soldiers, Journey 2: Mysterious Island alongside Michael Caine and Dwayne Johnson, the independent feature film Detention, in which Hutcherson also served as Executive Producer, and an omnibus film entitled Seven Days in Havana, which features 7 shorts directed by 7 different directors. In 2010, Hutcherson co-starred alongside Annette Bening and Julianne Moore in Lisa Cholodenko’s Academy Award® nominated feature film The Kids are All Right. The film debuted at that year’s Sundance Film Festival, where it was acquired by Focus Features in one of the festival’s biggest deals and premiered to rave reviews. The film went on to garner the feature film prize at the Berlin International Film Festival’s Teddy Awards in addition to Screen Actors Guild Awards ®, Independent Spirit Awards® and Golden Globe® nominations. Prior to that, he starred in The Vampire’s Assistant, opposite John C. Reilly and Salma Hayek, Carmel, Journey to the Center of the Earth 3-D, the first ever high definition 3-D live performance feature, Bridge To Terabithia, Winged Creatures, Firehouse Dog, RV, Little Manhattan, Zathura, Kicking and Screaming, Howl's Moving Castle and The Polar Express. Hutcherson won Young Artist Awards for Leading Young Actor for his roles in Zathura and Bridge to Terebithia. In addition to acting, Hutcherson is extremely involved with his charity organization, Straight But Not Narrow (SBNN). SBNN is an ally organization that prepares and trains young adults on how to become allies of their LGBT peer. For the past three years, Hutcherson has hosted a basketball tournament to raise funds and awareness for the organization. In 2012, he was honored with GLAAD’s Vanguard Award for his work with the LGBT community. Hutcherson currently resides in Los Angeles. 21 LIAM HEMSWORTH [Gale Hawthorne] has a quiet intensity that transcends the big screen. Demonstrating versatility and skill in a range of performances, Hemsworth has proven to be one of the most sought after actors of his generation. Hemsworth recently completed filming the lead role in Roland Emmerich’s Independence Day: Resurgence, starring opposite Jeff Goldblum & Bill Pullman. He also completed starring roles in the revenge western thriller By Way of Helena, opposite Woody Harrelson and The Dressmaker, opposite Kate Winslet. Born in Melbourne, Australia, Hemsworth grew up surfing on Phillip Island. The youngest of three boys, Hemsworth always loved movies. Though he never dreamed of becoming an actor as a young kid, he would sit down and watch movies all day long. At the age of 17, having observed his two older brothers Luke and Chris do television shows in Australia, Hemsworth decided he too wanted to pursue acting seriously. He enrolled in acting classes, got an agent and started auditioning. Hemsworth quickly landed his first big acting job on Australia’s popular TV series Home and Away and from there went on to book a role on Australia’s most successful TV show Neighbors. Landing his first film role in the feature film Triangle, Hemsworth discovered that his true passion was in making movies. “It’s something new and fresh and it’s just a different energy to what I’d worked on before, says Hemsworth. Knowing Los Angeles was the center of movie making, Hemsworth began sending audition tapes to the states. He sent a tape to Sylvester Stallone who within a week of receiving the tape asked Hemsworth to come to Hollywood immediately to play the part of his son in the feature film The Expendables. Shortly before he was to depart for Los Angeles, Hemsworth learned that the part of Stallone’s son had been written out of the script. However, within hours of learning he was no longer working on The Expendables he received a call that Marvel wanted to screen test him for Thor. Though he ended up losing the role of ‘Thor’ to his older brother Chris, it was this audition for Marvel that got Hemsworth to Los Angeles. Hemsworth soon began to gain attention throughout Hollywood and, while living with his brother Chris in their manager Will Ward’s guest cottage, Liam beat out hundreds of actors for the part of ‘Will Blakelee’ in the film adaptation of Nicholas Spark’s The Last Song, co-starring Greg Kinnear and Miley Cyrus. Hemsworth then went onto star in two of 2012’s biggest box office hits—The Hunger Games, directed by Gary Ross, and Expendables 2, directed by Simon West. He’s since starred opposite Harrison Ford and Gary Oldman in the high stakes thriller Paranoia, directed by Robert Luketic and Empire State, directed by Dito Montiel and co-starring Dwayne Johnson and Emma Roberts. He also reprised his role as Gale Hawthorne in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire and The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1, directed by Francis Lawrence. Most recently, he starred opposite Billy Bob Thornton, Bruce Dern & John Malkovich in the crime thriller Cut Bank. Hemsworth eagerly looks forward to more film work with quality actors and directors. He says, “I love acting and I love movies. At the moment, I’m just trying to find people who are doing something different and meet people who are as passionate as I am. I have learned the majority of what I know on set, working. You learn from watching people with experience.” WOODY HARRELSON’s [Haymitch Abernathy] rare mix of intensity and charisma consistently surprises and delights audiences and critics alike in both mainstream and independent projects. His portrayal of a casualty notification officer, opposite Ben Foster, in Oren Moverman’s The Messenger garnered him a 2010 Academy Award® nomination for Best Supporting Actor. He was previously nominated by the Academy, the Golden Globes® and SAG Awards® in the category of Best Actor for his portrayal of controversial magazine publisher Larry Flynt in Milos Forman’s The People vs. Larry Flynt. Harrelson recently completed filming on Lionsgate’s Now You See Me 2 for director Jon Chu. He was last seen reprising his role of Haymitch Abernathy in HBO’s True Detective co-starring Matthew 22 McConaughey for director Cary Fukunaga for which he was nominated for Emmy and SAG Awards in the lead actor category and a Golden Globes Award for lead actor in a Mini Series. He can next be seen in Triple Nine for director John Hillcoat, due out in Spring 2016. In 2013, Harrelson appeared in writer/director Scott Cooper’s Out of the Furnace starring opposite Christian Bale and Casey Affleck, Relativity’s animated film, Free Birds with Owen Wilson, Louis Leterrier’s Now You See Me and The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. In 2012 Harrelson starred opposite Julianne Moore and Ed Harris in the HBO film Game Change for director Jay Roach, for which he earned Primetime Emmy®, SAG Awards®, and Golden Globe® nominations for his role as Steve Schmidt, and Martin McDonagh’s Seven Psychopaths, alongside Sam Rockwell, Colin Farrell and Christopher Walken. Other highlights from Harrelson’s film career include Rampart, which reunited him with director Oren Moverman, Ruben Fleischer’s box office hit Zombieland; Friends with Benefits; 2012; Semi-Pro; The Grand; No Country For Old Men; A Scanner Darkly; A Prairie Home Companion; Defendor; Seven Pounds; The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio; North Country; The Big White; After The Sunset; Play It To The Bone; Battle In Seattle; EDtv; The Hi-Lo County; Transsiberian; The Thin Red Line; Wag The Dog; Welcome To Sarajevo; Kingpin; Natural Born Killers; Indecent Proposal; White Men Can’t Jump and was recently seen as the on screen host for director Pete McGrain’s powerful political documentary Ethos. Harrelson first endeared himself to millions of viewers as a member of the ensemble cast of NBC's longrunning hit comedy, Cheers. For his work as the affable bartender ‘Woody Boyd,’ he won a Primetime Emmy® in 1988 and was nominated four additional times during his eight-year run on the show. In 1999, he gained another Primetime Emmy® nomination when he reprised the role in a guest appearance on the spin-off series Frasier. He later made a return to television with a recurring guest role on the hit NBC series, Will and Grace. Balancing his film and television work, in 1999 Harrelson directed his own play, Furthest From The Sun at the Theatre de la Juene Lune in Minneapolis. He followed next with the Roundabout's Broadway revival of The Rainmaker; Sam Shepherd’s The Late Henry Moss, and John Kolvenbach's On An Average Day opposite Kyle MacLachlan at London’s West End. Harrelson directed the Toronto premiere of Kenneth Lonergan's This Is Our Youth at Toronto’s Berkeley Street Theatre. In the winter of 2005 Harrelson returned to London's West End, starring in Tennessee Williams' Night of the Iguana at the Lyric Theatre. In 2011, Harrelson co-wrote and directed the semi-autobiographical comedy Bullet for Adolf at Hart House Theatre in Toronto. In the summer of 2012 Bullet for Adolf made its Off-Broadway debut at New World Stages. Emmy® nominated actress, producer and director ELIZABETH BANKS [Effie Trinket] has become one of Hollywood’s most sought after and versatile actresses, easily navigating between stage and screen, comedy and drama. In addition to acting, Banks had her feature directorial debut with Pitch Perfect 2, the sequel to Pitch Perfect about a women’s college acapella group where she reprised her role as commentator Gail. She also produced the film along with her husband, Max Handelman, through their company, Brownstone Productions. Banks has recently appeared in Magic Mike XXL opposite Channing Tatum. In 2014, she lent her voice to the global hit The Lego Movie. Following The Lego Movie, she appeared in Love & Mercy directed by Bill Pohlad which takes an unconventional look at the life of the celebrated leader of The Beach Boys, Brian Wilson, and his legendary battle with mental illness. The film recently premiered at the 2014 Toronto Film Festival and was released by Roadside Attractions in June of 2015. She also played Detective Nancy Porter in Every Secret Thing (2014) directed by Amy Berg and based on the best-selling novel by Laura Lippman. The story follows a detective who looks to unravel a mystery surrounding missing children and the two young women who are prime suspects. 23 Banks’ additional feature credits include her breakthrough roles in the Academy Award ® winning films Seabiscuit, in which she starred as Marcela Howard opposite Jeff Bridges and Tobey Maguire, and in Steven Spielberg’s Catch Me If You Can. She has also appeared in Walk of Shame, Little Accidents, Our Idiot Brother, The Details, Zack and Miri Make a Porno, What to Expect When You’re Expecting, People Like Us, Man on a Ledge, The Next Three Days, Role Models, Meet Dave, Invincible, The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Fred Claus, Sisters, Slither, Heights, The Baxter, The Trade, Ordinary Sinner, The Uninvited, Daltry Calhoun, Sexual Life, John Singleton’s Shaft with Samuel L. Jackson and the cult hit Wet Hot American Summer starring Janeane Garofalo and David Hyde Pierce. She also appeared as journalist Betty Brant, a role that director Sam Raimi created for her, in Columbia Pictures’ three blockbuster Spider-Man films with Tobey Maguire as the title character. On the small screen, Banks earned a Primetime Emmy® Award nomination in 2011 for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for her performance as ‘Avery Jessup’ on “30 Rock.” She has also appeared on ABC’s “Modern Family” and in a recurring role as Dr. Kim Porter on NBC’s “Scrubs.” In 2007 she appeared in the CBS miniseries “Comanche Moon,” Larry McMurtry’s prequel to “Lonesome Dove.” Her production company Brownstone Productions’ upcoming projects include White Girl Problems, Tink, a Disney live-action romantic comedy in which Banks will star as Tinkerbell and RA's with Paramount Digital. She has also produced the global hit Pitch Perfect and Disney’s 2009 sci-fi thriller The Surrogates, which starred Bruce Willis. Her extensive theater credits include many roles in American Conservatory Theatre productions, as well as the Guthrie Theater’s production of Summer and Smoke directed by David Esbjornson. In 2006 Banks played ‘Cherie’, the female lead in William Inge’s comedy Bus Stop, as part of the Williamstown Theater Festival. Originally from Massachusetts, Banks received her Bachelor’s Degree from the University of Pennsylvania and her Graduate Degree at the American Conservatory Theater. She is involved with many charities which include: LA’s Best, Planned Parenthood®, and Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund. She currently resides in Los Angeles. One of today’s most versatile and charismatic actresses, Academy Award® winner JULIANNE MOORE [President Alma Coin] is known for her breadth of work with many memorable performances in everything from comedy to drama, blockbusters to art house fare, and from the big to the small screen. Moore will next be seen in Lionsgate’s indie drama Freeheld opposite Ellen Page and Michael Shannon, and Rebecca Miller’s upcoming romantic comedy Maggie’s Plan, both set to premiere at the Toronto Film Festival this year. She will also be seen in the fourth installment of the popular Hunger Games franchise Mockingjay – Part 2 as President Coin. Most recently, Moore won an Academy Award ®, Golden Globe®, BAFTA, and SAG Award®, among others, for her role in Still Alice with Kristen Stewart, Alec Baldwin and Kate Bosworth. Moore is the ninth person in Academy history to receive two acting Oscar® nominations in the same year for her performances in Far From Heaven (Best Actress nomination) and The Hours (Best Supporting Actress nomination), after receiving many critics’ awards as well as SAG Award ® and Golden Globe® nominations for both. Moore is a four-time Academy Award® nominee, eight-time Golden Globe® nominee, six-time SAG Award® nominee, four-time BAFTA nominee, and a three-time Independent Spirit Award® nominee winning in 2003 for Far From Heaven. In 2012, she won the Primetime Emmy ® award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie for her role as Alaska Governor Sarah Palin in the HBO original movie Game Change. This role also garnered wins at the 2013 SAG Awards ® and Golden Globe Awards®. Her additional honors include the Excellence in Media Award at the 2004 GLAAD Media Awards, the Silver Bear Award at the 2003 Berlin International Film Festival, the 2002 Copa Volti as Best Actress at the Venice Film Festival, the Actor Award at the 2002 Gotham Awards and the “Tribute to Independent Vision” at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival. 24 Moore’s notable films include The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1; Maps to the Stars; The Seventh Son; Non-Stop; Crazy, Stupid, Love; The Kids Are All Right; A Single Man; The Forgotten; What Massie Knew; The English Teacher; Laws of Attraction; Chloe; 6 Souls; Blindness; Savage Grace; I’m Not There; Children of Men; Hannibal; Jurassic Park: The Lost World; The Fugitive; Nine Months; Benny & Joon; The Hand That Rocks the Cradle; The End of the Affair; Boogie Nights; Magnolia; Cookie’s Fortune; Short Cuts; Don Jon; Gus Van Sant’s re-make of Psycho; Safe; Vanya on 42nd Street; Surviving Picasso, and The Big Lebowski. An accomplished author, Moore recently released her fourth book My Mother is a Foreigner, But Not to Me, based on her experiences growing up with a mother from Scotland. Her previous work includes the successful children’s book series– Freckleface Strawberry, Freckleface Strawberry and the Dodgeball Bully, and Freckleface Strawberry: Best Friends Forever. Inspired by the book’s main character, ‘Freckleface Strawberry’, in 2013 Moore released her Monster Maker ® app via iTunes® which allows users to make their own monster to send to family and friends. Moore most recently unveiled her second app Dreamtime Playtime®, an app that encourages math skills at a very early age. The original book was also adapted into a successful off-Broadway musical. After earning her B.F.A. from Boston University for the Performing Arts, Moore starred in a number of offBroadway productions, including Caryl Churchill’s Serious Money and Ice Cream/Hot Fudge at the Public Theater. She appeared in Minneapolis in the Guthrie Theater’s Hamlet, and participated in workshop productions of Strindberg’s The Father with Al Pacino and Wendy Wasserstein’s An American Daughter with Meryl Streep. Moore made her Broadway debut in 2006 in the Sam Mendes production of The Vertical Hour, an original play written by David Hare. Moore and her family reside in New York City. PHILIP SEYMOUR HOFFMAN [Plutarch Heavensbee] was last seen starring in Anton Corbijn’s A Most Wanted Man, John Slattery’s feature directorial debut, God’s Pocket and The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. Previously he appeared in Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master, A Late Quartet with Christopher Walken and Catherine Keener, The Ides of March, directed by George Clooney and in Moneyball with Brad Pitt, directed by Bennett Miller. Hoffman made his feature directorial debut with Jack Goes Boating, which was produced by Cooper’s Town Productions and based on the play of the same name. Other past film credits include Synecdoche, NY; Doubt; The Savages; Charlie Wilson’s War and Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead. It was Hoffman’s performance in Capote, also directed by Bennett Miller and produced through his company, Cooper’s Town Productions, for which he earned an Academy Award®. As an actor, his theater credits include the Broadway revival of Death of a Salesman, a limited run in Othello, LAByrinth’s production of Jack Goes Boating, Long Day’s Journey Into Night, The Seagull, True West, Defying Gravity, The Merchant of Venice, Shopping and F*cking and The Author’s Voice. His theater directing credits include the world premieres of The Last Days of Judas Iscariot, Our Lady of 121st Street, Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train, In Arabia We’d All Be Kings and The Little Flower of East Orange all written by Stephen Adly Guirgis and produced by LAByrinth. Also produced by LAByrinth, Hoffman directed A Family for All Occasions written by Bob Glaudini. Additionally he directed Rebecca Gilman’s The Glory of Living at MCC Theater. He traveled to Australia to direct Andrew Upton’s Riflemind at the famed Sydney Theater Company and later mounted the play in London. He also directed Brett C. Leonard’s The Long Red Road for the Goodman Theater in Chicago and returned to the Sydney Theater Company to direct True West. Hoffman passed away in February of 2014 in New York City. Tony®, Emmy®, AFI and Golden Globe Award®-winning actor JEFFREY WRIGHT [Beetee] has enjoyed an illustrious career that has spanned the worlds of theatre, film and television. 25 Wright will soon be seen playing ‘Bernard Lowe’, in HBO’s reimagining of Michael Crichton’s 1973 film, Westworld. The TV-series will explore the infamous futuristic theme park where the rich flock to fulfill their wildest fantasies and the perils that ensue when illusions become realities. In addition to that, Wright will also be seen playing Harvard Law professor, Charles Ogletree in HBO’s upcoming CONFIRMATION; a film that chronicles Anita Hill’s sexual harassment testimony in Clarence Thomas’ 1991 Supreme Court hearings. Wright’s recent television appearances include his portrayal of Dr. Valentin Narcisse in HBO's critically acclaimed series “Boardwalk Empire.” Wright was nominated for Critics Choice Television Award in the category of Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of Narcisse, as well as a Screen Actors Guild Award® in the category of Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series on behalf of the show. On the big screen, Wright can next be seen in two features: Pixar's animated film The Good Dinosaur, where Wright will voice the role of Poppa Henry and The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2, which will be released on November 20, 2015. He will reprise his role as Beetee, the electronics and wiring expert from District 3 and leader amongst the rebellion. Wright previously starred in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1, and The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. A gifted theater actor, Wright was most recently on stage as the lead in John Guare's A Free Man of Color at Lincoln Center, directed by George C. Wolfe, a frequent collaborator. In 2001 and 2002 respectively, he earned an Obie award and a Tony® nomination for his work in the play Topdog/Underdog. Wright garnered a Tony® Award in 1994 for his portrayal in Tony Kushner's Pulitzer Prize-winning epic Angels in America, also directed by George C. Wolfe. Wright reprised his Angels role in HBO's 2003 mini-series adaption of the play, earning both a Golden Globe® and an Emmy® for his groundbreaking performance. On film, Wright has portrayed a stunning array of icons and iconoclasts. His brilliant portrayal of the renowned and controversial graffiti artist, Jean Michel Basquiat, in the 1996 film BASQUIAT, received widespread praise from critics and earned him an Independent Spirit Award ® nomination. On the other end of the spectrum, Wright has taken on roles in the 2006 and 2008 James Bond films, Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace and also in 2008, starred as ‘Muddy Waters’ in Cadillac Records and as Colin Powell in Oliver Stone's W. In 2005, he co-starred in the award-winning film Syriana, and his other credits include Stephen Daldry's Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close; Jonathan Demme's remake of The Manchurian Candidate; Jim Jarmusch's Only Lovers Left Alive and Broken Flowers, earning him another Independent Spirit Award® nomination; Ang Lee's Ride with the Devil ; Allen Hughes' political thriller Broken City; George Clooney's The Ides of March; and Shaft. In addition to acting, Wright is founded and Vice Chairman of Taia Lion Resources and co-founder and Chairman of Taia Peace Foundation. He is the co-founder of the Ebola Survival Fund and is on the advisory board of the United Nations Democracy Fund (UNDEF). He also serves on the boards of directors of the Tribeca Film Institute and Resolve. Wright was named by the Government of Sierra Leone as the “Peace by Piece” Ambassador for that country's 2011 50th Anniversary Independence Celebration, and in 2011, Wright was named honorary Paramount Chief of Penguia Chiefdom, Sierra Leone. Born in Washington, D.C., Wright graduated from Amherst College, receiving a B.A. in political science in 1987 and earned a doctorate of humane letters from his alma mater in 2004. Wright resides in Brooklyn, NY with his family. Academy Award® nominee STANLEY TUCCI [Caesar Flickerman] has appeared in over 50 films and countless television shows. He has appeared in more than a dozen plays, on and off Broadway, and has been behind the camera working as a writer, director, and producer. Tucci recently completed production of Bill Condon’s Beauty and The Beast, alongside Emma Watson, Ewan McGregor, Luke Evans, Dan Stevens, Emma Thompson and Ian McKellen, set for release in 2017. Other upcoming projects for Tucci include Peter & Wendy, a two-hour drama 26 where he will play ‘Captain Hook’ alongside Laura Fraser and Paloma Faith, set to release on ITV in 2015; and Patient Zero alongside Natalie Dormer, set to release in 2016. Tucci was most recently seen in Spotlight, directed by Tom McCarthy, alongside Rachel McAdams, Live Schreiber, Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton and Billy Crudup. Spotlight premiered at the Venice Film Festival on September 3, 2015 and is set to release in the U.S. on November 6, 2015. Tucci can also be seen in the television show “Fortitude” alongside Richard Dormer, Christopher Eccleston and Sofie Grabol. A British psychological thriller set in Norway, Tucci plays an American detective hired to solve a murder case. “Fortitude” premiered on Pivot in the U.S. on January 29, 2015. Tucci was nominated for an Academy Award®, Golden Globe Award®, BAFTA Award, SAG Award® and received a Broadcast Film Critics nomination for his performance in Peter Jackson’s The Lovely Bones. Furthermore, Tucci won an Emmy® and a Golden Globe® for his role in the TV movie Winchell. His performance as the fast-talking tattler, who exposed secrets and scandals, left audiences and critics alike singing his praises. Winchell, directed by Paul Mazursky, provided Tucci with one of the juiciest roles of his diverse career. He received a Golden Globe® for his role in HBO’s Conspiracy. His brilliant portrayal of Lt. Colonel Adolf Eichmann delivered a truly petrifying experience, where he often deceived others with his all but friendly smile. Tucci is also a writer, director and producer. He is the Producer for The Canal, set to release in 2015; Executive Producer for the upcoming TV/movie drama Behind the Sun; and Director/Writer for Final Portrait. He premiered the film Blind Date at The Sundance Film Festival -- directing, starring, and co-writing this Van Gogh remake. Another directorial endeavor was USA Films’ Joe Gould’s Secret, which starred Ian Holm as bohemian writer ‘Joe Gould’ and Tucci as ‘Joseph Mitchell,’ the famed writer for The New Yorker. The film, set in New York’s Greenwich Village in the 1940s, tells the story of the strange meeting and long lasting friendship between Gould and Mitchell, as well as the stories Mitchell wrote about Gould and his life. Big Night, Tucci’s first effort as co-director, co-screenwriter, and actor on the same film, earned him numerous accolades, including the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival, a recognition of Excellence by the National Board of Review, an Independent Spirit Award®, The Critics Prize at the 1996 Deauville Film Festival, and honors from the New York Film Critics and the Boston Society of Film Critics. His second project, The Imposters, a film which he wrote, directed, co-produced, and starred in, was an Official Selection at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival and was acquired by Fox Searchlight Pictures later that year. The 1930’s farce starred Tucci and Oliver Platt as a pair of out-of-work actors who find themselves aboard a cruise ship passengered by Steve Buscemi, Alfred Molina, Lili Taylor and Hope Davis. His work on television includes “Fortitude,” “Bull,” “Equal Justice,” “Wiseguy,” “The Equalizer,” “thirtysomething,” and “The Street.” Tucci received Emmy® nominations for his work in “Murder One” and “ER,” and an Emmy® Award in the category of Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series for “Monk. Tucci’s theater work includes Frankie & Johnny in the Claire de Lune, Execution of Hope, The Iceman Cometh, Brighton Beach Memoirs and The Misanthrope. He has also performed in a number of off-Broadway plays, at Yale Repertory Theater and SUNY Purchase, where he first studied acting. Tucci made his directorial debut on Broadway with a revival of Ken Ludwig’s Lend Me a Tenor starring Tony Shalhoub. The production received a Tony® Award nomination for Best Revival of a Play. Tucci’s additional film credits include Transformers: Age of Extinction, Wild Card, Muppets Most Wanted, Mr. Peabody & Sherman, Some Velvet Morning, The Fifth Estate, Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters, The Company You Keep, Jack The Giant Slayer, Captain America; The First Avenger, Margin Call, Burlesque, Easy A, Julie & Julia, The Tale of Despereaux, ,Kit Kitteredge: An 27 American Girl. Swing Vote, What Just Happened, The Devil Wears Prada, Shall We Dance, The Terminal The Life and Death of Peter Sellers, Spin, Road to Perdition, America’s Sweethearts, Sidewalks of New York, A Mid Summer Night’s Dream, The Alarmist, Deconstructing Harry, The Daytrippers, Big Trouble, A Life Less Ordinary, Kiss of Death, Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle, It Could Happen to You, The Pelican Brief, Prelude to a Kiss, In the Soup, Billy Bathgate and Slaves of New York. The Tucci Cookbook was released in October of 2012 where it reached the New York Times Best Sellers List. Tucci released his 2nd cookbook, The Tucci Table: Cooking With Family and Friends, on October 28, 2014. The family-focused cookbook includes recipes from Tucci’s traditional Italian roots as well as those of his British wife, Felicity Blunt’s. Tucci serves on the Board of Directors of The Food Bank for New York City. Tucci resides in London. DONALD SUTHERLAND [President Snow] is one of the most respected, prolific and versatile of motion picture actors, with an astonishing resume of well over one hundred and fifty films, including such classics as Robert Aldrich’s The Dirty Dozen; Robert Altman's M*A*S*H; John Schlesinger’s The Day of the Locust; Robert Redford's Ordinary People; Bernardo Bertolucci’s 1900; Philip Kaufman’s Invasion of the Body Snatchers; Nicolas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now with Julie Christie; Alan Pakula's Klute with Jane Fonda; Federico Fellini's Fellini’s Casanova; and in Brian Hutton’s Kelly’s Heroes with Clint Eastwood, who later directed him in Space Cowboys. Sutherland stars at ‘President Snow’ in the enormously popular film adaptation series of The Hunger Games, including the upcoming finale Mockingjay – Part 2. Sutherland was producer, screenwriter and star (voicing the lead character, ‘Captain Johnson’) of Pirate’s Passage, an animated movie based on William Gilkerson’s acclaimed novel, winner of Canada’s Governor General's Award for Children's Literature in 2006. He stars opposite his son, Kiefer, in Forsaken, a period Western set in Canada, which recently had its world premiere as a Gala presentation at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival. Other films which he has completed this year are Measure of a Man, adapted from Robert Lipsyte’s YA novel One Fat Summer, and Milton’s Secret, based on Eckhart Tolle’s beloved children’s book. Sutherland’s film credits include Paul Mazursky’s Alex in Wonderland; Dalton Trumbo’s Johnny Got His Gun; Bud Yorkin’s Start the Revolution Without Me; John Sturges’ The Eagle Has Landed; Herbert Ross’ Max Dugan Returns; Louis Malle’s Crackers; Phillip Borsos’ Bethune; Oliver Stone’s JFK; Ron Howard’s Backdraft; Richard Marquand’s Eye of the Needle; Euzhan Palcy’s A Dry White Season; Richard Pearce’s Threshold (for which he won the 1983 Genie Award as Best Actor); Fred Schepisi’s film adaptation of John Guare’s Six Degrees of Separation; Robert Towne’s Without Limits; and John Landis’ National Lampoon’s Animal House, in which he made a memorable cameo appearance; in Andy Tennant’s Fool’s Gold; in Griffin Dunne’s Fierce People with Diane Lane; in Robert Towne’s Ask the Dust with Salma Hayek and Colin Farrell; in American Gun with Forrest Whitaker; in An American Haunting with Sissy Spacek; in Land of the Blind with Ralph Fiennes; in Aurora Borealis with Louise Fletcher and Juliette Lewis; with Channing Tatum in The Eagle; in Simon West’s The Mechanic; in Seth Gordon’s Horrible Bosses as Colin Farrell’s father and in Mary McGuckian’s Man on the Train with U2’s Larry Mullen, Jr. He has appeared as Nicole Kidman’s father in Anthony Minghella’s Cold Mountain; as Charlize Theron’s father in F. Gary Gray’s The Italian Job and as Mr. Bennett, Keira Knightley’s father, in Pride and Prejudice. For the latter he received a Chicago Film Critics nomination. He is part of a sterling ensemble of on-camera readers in the biographical feature on the life of Dalton Trumbo, Trumbo. In television, Sutherland won both Primetime Emmy ® and Golden Globe® awards as Best Supporting Actor for his performance in the HBO film Citizen X and he won a Golden Globe® for his portrayal of Clark Clifford, advisor to President Lyndon B. Johnson, in the HBO historical drama Path to War, directed by the late John Frankenheimer. Also on television, Sutherland stars alongside an international cast in Tandem’s international action crime series, “Crossing Lines,” which recently completed filming on its third season in Prague. He starred in the long form adaptation of Ken Follett’s best-seller, “The Pillars of the Earth.” He co-starred with Peter Krause in the ABC-TV series “Dirty Sexy Money,” for which he was nominated for a 2007 Golden Globe® 28 as Best Supporting Actor. Prior to that, he co-starred with Geena Davis in the ABC drama series “Commander-in-Chief,” and was nominated for a Golden Globe® as Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of House Speaker, Nathan Templeton. At the same time, he was nominated for a Golden Globe® as Best Actor for his performance opposite Mira Sorvino in Lifetime Television’s much-lauded miniseries, “Human Trafficking.” On stage, Sutherland starred with Justin Kirk and Julianna Margulies in a sold-out, critically acclaimed, Lincoln Center engagement of Jon Robin Baitz’s Ten Unknowns. For that performance he received an Outer Critics Circle Award nomination for Best Actor. He also starred in the London, Toronto and Los Angeles productions of Enigmatic Variations, an English language translation (by his son Roeg Sutherland) of Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt’s French play. Donald Sutherland was appointed an officer of the Order of Canada in 1978 and a Chevalier des Arts et Lettres in France five years later. In 2012, he was awarded the highest French honor, the Officier des Arts et Lettres. WILLOW SHIELDS [Primrose Everdeen] born and raised in New Mexico, is most notably recognized for her role as ‘Primrose Everdeen’ in the epic portrayal of the fan favorite book series The Hunger Games. Shields began acting at the age of seven years old and thanks to her unique look, down-to-earth personality and easy to work with demeanor, she has quickly caught the eye of Hollywood big wigs. Shields became interested in acting when she followed her brother to a handful of auditions and her passion and drive quickly shined through. She booked her first guest starring role as ‘Liza Rogan’ on USA’s In Plain Sight. She continued onto roles in the Hallmark Hall of Fame movie Beyond the Blackboard alongside Emily VanCamp as ‘Grace,’ and R.L. Stine’s The Haunting Hour as ‘Eve.’ Shields caught the eye of world famous fashion designer Marc Jacobs who was adamant on dressing the young starlet for a variety of events and award shows, even coining her as his muse in Nylon magazine. Shields grew up with her older brother River and fraternal twin sister Autumn in an animal loving home with their four dogs (Jude, Arizona, Polly and Neo) and one pet cat named Clue. During her downtime she enjoys photography, dance and spending time with her family and friends. She dreams of one day learning how to design and create her own clothing—everything from drawing to assembly of the garments. A charity that she holds near and dear to her heart is Operation Smile, which gives children a new lease on life by providing pro-bono surgeries to fix cleft palate, cleft lip and other facial deformities across the globe. Since graduating from LAMDA in 2009 SAM CLAFLIN [Finnick Odair] has worked on a number of prestigious projects. Claflin has recently begun filming Lone Scherfig’s Their Finest Hour and a Half where he will be seen starring alongside Gemma Arterton and Bill Nighy. The romantic comedy follows a British film crew as they attempt to create a morale boosting film during the Blitz. 2015 will also see Claflin film the title role in Robin Friday charting the life of the enigmatic British footballer. Claflin has recently finished filming the role of Will opposite Emilia Clarke in the adaption of Jojo Moyes bestselling book Me Before You. In the film Claflin plays a recently paralyzed man whose life is turned upside down by the arrival of Louisa to care for him. 2014 was a huge year for Claflin with a number of projects out in cinemas. Claflin starred in Lone Scherfig’s film The Riot Club, based on the London stage play Posh alongside Max Irons, Douglas Booth and Holliday Grainger. The film follows students at Oxford University as they join he infamous Riot Club, and premiered at the Toronto Film Festival. Also out last year was Love, Rosie. This film version of Cecilia Ahern’s novel Where Rainbows End sees Claflin star with Lily Collins as friends and lovers in this romantic comedy drama set in Dublin and Toronto. Earlier in the year Claflin appeared opposite Jarred Harris in Hammer Horror film The Quiet Ones. In 2012 Claflin played the role Prince William alongside Kristen Stewart, Charlize Theron and Chris Hemsworth in box office hit Snow White and the Huntsman, which he will follow up with a small role in 29 the forthcoming The Huntsman. The previous year Claflin made a name for himself as youthful missionary, Philip, the romantic lead in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides. Claflin has also starred in a number of outstanding television projects. In 2013 he was seen on screens opposite Hilary Swank in Richard Curtis’ BBC One drama Mary & Martha, which was shown to coincide with Red Nose Day and to raise awareness about malaria in Africa. In 2012 Claflin played Jack in White Heat, an epic drama for the BBC charting the lives of seven friends from 1965 to the present day. He starred in United alongside David Tennant, Dougray Scott and Jack O'Connell. In this one off film for the BBC, Claflin played the talented footballer ‘Duncan Edwards’ in the tragic story of the Munich Air Crash of 1958, which killed and injured a number of members of the Manchester United team. In 2010 Claflin was seen in the hit Channel 4 mini-series “Pillars of the Earth” based on Ken Follett’s novel of the same name. In this drama Claflin played ‘Richard’, alongside Eddie Redmayne, Hayley Atwell and Ian McShane. Claflin also starred in the critically acclaimed adaptation of William Boyd’s “Any Human Heart” for Channel 4 which won a BAFTA Award for Best Drama Serial. Claflin played the younger years of lead character, Logan, sharing the role with Jim Broadbent and Matthew Macfadyen. The same year Claflin also appeared in The Lost Future, a sci-fi adventure in which he played Kaleb, alongside Sean Bean and Annabelle Wallis. As a rising actress distinguished by her versatility and multidimensional roles, JENA MALONE [Johanna Mason] continues to evolve with each new project. Malone recently wrapped production on Nicolas Winding Refn’s The Neon Demon, in which she stars opposite Elle Fanning. The LA-based thriller, co-written by Winding Refn, follows an aspiring model who moves to Los Angeles and has her youth and vitality devoured by a group of beauty-obsessed women who will take any means necessary to get what she has. Malone recently starred in Oren Moverman's Time Out of Mind alongside Richard Gere. The film is about a New Yorker (Gere) who enters a shelter when he runs out of housing options, then struggles to put the pieces of his life back together and fix a troubled relationship with his estranged daughter (Malone). The film premiered at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival and was released by IFC on September 11, 2015. She also recently starred in Paul Thomas Anderson's Inherent Vice. Warner Brothers released the film on December 12, 2014. The film co-stars Reese Witherspoon, Owen Wilson, Joaquin Phoenix and Josh Brolin. The film premiered at the New York Film Festival. Additionally, Malone recently wrapped production on Mitchell Lichtenstein's Angelica, a psychological thriller set in 1880s London based on the novel of the same name by bestselling author Arthur Phillips (Prague,The Egyptologist). Malone will play ‘Constance’, a young shop girl who falls for and marries Dr. Joseph Barton. After the difficult childbirth of their daughter Angelica, doctor-ordered celibacy creates a rift in the Bartons' marriage and a ghostly force enters their home. The film premiered at the 2015 Mill Valley Film Festival. Malone was cast to play the lead role in Dori Oskowitz's Claire. The American remake of Eric Rohmer's 1982 French pic Le Beau Mariage, follows an eccentric young woman in her twenties living in Long Island with her aunt and teenage cousin. Fed up with her married painter lover, Claire sets her sights on a man she barely knows with aims to get herself married. Malone starred opposite Kevin Costner and Bill Paxton in the History Channel's mini-series Hatfields & McCoys which is based on a true story, and chronicles the bloody hostilities between two clans that escalated to the point of near war between two states. The mini-series broke cable records and became 30 the new most-watched entertainment telecast of all time on cable and also earned an Emmy® Nomination for Outstanding Mini-Series and a Golden Globe® Nomination for Best Mini-Series. Previously, Malone starred in Zack Snyder’s Sucker Punch, Ami Mann's Dakota, Oren Moverman's The Messenger, Sean Penn's Into the Wild, Anthony Minghella's Cold Mountain, Brian Dannelly's Saved!, Joe Wright's Pride and Prejudice, M. Blash’s The Wait, and Brian Savelson’s In Our Nature. As a young actress, Malone starred opposite Julia Roberts and Susan Sarandon in Stepmom, the cult classic, Donnie Darko and her very first role in the independent film Bastard Out of Carolina which earned her an Independent Spirit Award® nomination for “Best Debut Performance.” Malone has guest starred on several television series including “Law & Order” and “Chicago Hope”, and her performance in the TV film Hope earned Malone a Golden Globe ® nomination for “Best Performance by an Actress in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for TV.” In Spring 2013, Malone directed her first music video for the band Lavender Diamond. The video for "The Incorruptible Heart" was released exclusively on MTV Buzzworthy. Malone recently toured with her band, The Shoe. Malone and her bandmate, Lem Jay Ignacio, met in 2008 and shortly after started recording together. Malone built an instrument she plays called “The Shoe” which includes an old steamer trunk with a plethora of electronic instruments inside. Their first EP "At Lem Jay's Garage" came out in 2009 under Jena's label There Was An Old Woman Records. Their full length album “I'm Okay” was released in Spring 2014. Malone currently resides in Los Angeles MAHERSHALA ALI [Boggs] is fast becoming one of the freshest and most in-demand faces in Hollywood with his extraordinarily diverse skill set and wide-ranging background in film, television, and theater. Ali will next star in Gary Ross’s civil war era drama The Free State of Jones opposite Matthew McConaughey, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, and Keri Russell. STX Entertainment will release the film on March 11, 2016. On television, Ali was recently cast in Netflix and Marvel Entertainment’s “Luke Cage” in the role of Cornell ‘Cottonmouth’ Stokes. A Harlem nightclub owner, Stokes will become an unexpected foe in Luke’s life when Stokes’ criminal activities threaten Luke’s world. Ali stars alongside Mike Colter, Rosario Dawson, and Alfre Woodard. The series will premiere on Netflix in 2016. Ali can currently be seen on the award-winning Netflix original series “House of Cards,” where he will reprise his fan-favorite role as lobbyist and former press secretary Remy Danton for a fourth season in February 2016. Ali’s previous feature film credits include Derek Cianfrance’s The Place Beyond the Pines, opposite Ryan Gosling and Bradley Cooper, Wayne Kramer’s Crossing Over starring Harrison Ford, John Sayles’ Go For Sisters, and David Fincher’s The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. On television, he appeared opposite Julia Ormond in Lifetime’s The Wronged Man, for which he subsequently received a NAACP Nomination for Best Actor. Ali also had a large recurring role on Syfy’s “Alphas”, as well as the role of Richard Tyler, a Korean War pilot, on the critically acclaimed drama “The 4400” for three seasons. On the stage, Ali appeared in productions of Blues for an Alabama Sky, The School for Scandal, A Lie of the Mind, A Doll’s House, Monkey in the Middle, The Merchant of Venice, The New Place and Secret 31 Injury, Secret Revenge. His additional stage credits include appearing in Washington, D.C. at the Arena Stage in the title role of The Great White Hope, and in The Long Walk and Jack and Jill. Originally from Hayward, California, Ali received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Mass Communications at St. Mary’s College. He made his professional debut performing with the California Shakespeare Festival in Orinda, California. Soon after, he earned his Master’s degree in acting from New York University’s prestigious graduate program. WES CHATHAM [Castor] was born and raised in North Georgia. At the age of 13, Wes attended the Gift Center in Lawrencville, GA and while attending classes here, a professional theater company out of Atlanta started a mentoring program with the school and Wes was chosen to write a play that was later performed by his classmates. It was from this experience that Wes found his passion for the arts. After high school, Wes joined the military as an aviation firefighter on the flight deck of the USS Essex, working in crash and salvage for four years. Wes's first break came just three months before his tour was finished when Denzel Washington chose his ship to shoot the movie Antwone Fisher. While searching for authentic military servicemen for the movie, casting director Robi Reed discovered Wes. She soon convinced him to make the move to Hollywood and shortly thereafter cast him in his first series regular role on Showtime's Barbershop. Wes began to garner attention when Paul Haggis cast him as Corporal Steve Penning in In the Valley of Elah opposite Tommy Lee Jones. Following this, Wes worked with Oliver Stone in W, David Mamet and Shawn Ryan on the CBS series The Unit, and was part of the SAG Award®-winning ensemble cast of DreamWorks The Help, starring opposite Emma Stone as her brother. The ensemble cast also included Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer, Jessica Chastain, Allison Janney, Mike Vogel and Sissy Spacek. Recently, Wes wrapped ALL I SEE IS YOU opposite Blake Lively and Jason Clarke with Marc Forster set to be released in 2016. Wes will next star in the upcoming SyFy series THE EXPANSE, set to premiere Decmber 14, 2015. THE EXPANSE is a mystery science-fiction television series, based on a series of novels. Set in a future where humanity has colonized the Solar System, it follows police detective Josephus Miller (Thomas Jane), and his crew as they unravel a conspiracy that threatens peace across the System and the survival of humanity. Chatham resides in Los Angeles with his wife Jenn Brown and son Nash. NATALIE DORMER [Cressida] as ‘Margaery Tyrell,’ the would-be queen, on HBO’s award-winning series Games of Thrones, which is currently in production on its Sixth season. Dormer completed production on director Stefan Ruzowitsky’s Patient Zero for Screen Gems. The thriller, also starring Matt Smith (“Dr. Who”), focuses on an unprecedented global pandemic that causes the evolution of a new species. An aggressive form of rabies turns the infected into predators, addicted to violence. An inexplicably gifted human survivor with the ability to speak the new mutant language leads a hunt for Patient Zero and hope for a cure. Dormer also stars in Focus Features’ The Forest from director Jason Zada. The film is set in the Aokigahara forest at the base of Mt. Fuji, where a young American woman goes in search of her twin sister, who has mysteriously disappeared. She will play both sisters. Dormer recently lead the BBC’s highly successful movie, The Scandalous Lady Woman, starring as Lady Seymour Worsley, whose virtue was put on trial in 1782 in what was one of the country’s first divorce trials. Dormer is well-known for her starring role as ‘Anne Boleyn’ on Showtime’s hit period drama, “The Tudors.” She recently appeared in the recurring role of ‘Irene Adler,’ on CBS’ Sherlock Holmes rendition 32 “Elementary.” Other past television credits include recurring roles on BBC Television’s series “The Fades” and “Silk.” In film, was last seen in The Riot Club, with Max Irons and Sam Claflin, which premiered at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival. She starred opposite Chris Hemsworth and Olivia Wilde in director Ron Howard’s Rush for Universal, and opposite Brad Pitt, Michael Fassbender and Cameron Diaz in director Ridley Scott’s The Counselor. Additional film credits include The Weinstein’s Company’s W.E., from writer/director Madonna, Marvel’s Captain America: The First Avenger, Fencewalker, A Long Way Home, City of Life, Flawless with Demi Moore and Michael Caine and Casanova. In March 2010, Dormer made her stage debut at the Young Vic theatre in London as “Mizi” in the play Sweet Nothings. She returned to the theater in 2012, starring in the title role of After Miss Julie by Patrick Marber. In March 2013, Dormer played the Lady Door in the radio dramatisation of Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere, alongside Benedict Cumberbatch and James McAvoy. From his early years as a staple in The Mighty Ducks film franchise to starring in films like The Butterfly Effect, ELDEN HENSON [Pollux] has been a steady force in film & television for over 30 years. In 2013, Henson appeared in the Steve Jobs biopic JOBS. The feature premiered as the closing film at the 2013 Sundance International Film Festival. Henson quickly followed that up with an ensemble role in the CBS Drama Intelligence. That momentum continued into 2014 as Henson is set to appear in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 & 2 the next two installments of the popular global franchise The Hunger Games. Henson will next been seen playing the role of ‘Foggy Nelson’ in the upcoming Marvel/Netflix series Daredevil. EVAN ROSS [Messalla] is a triple threat - actor, singer, and dancer. He is currently working on his first album and in May 2015 released the single called How to Live Alone which featured T.I . It is the first single from Ross’s forthcoming full-length debut. The ultimate expression of love, the passionate ballad is an ode to Ross’s wife Ashlee Simpson whom he married last August. He can next be seen in the ABC drama "Wicked City" as an owner of a paparazzi agency who specializes in gruesome murder photos. The show is set in 1982 and a murder on Sunset Strip and will premiere October 24th. In November, he can be seen in Lionsgate’s film The Hunger Games: Mocking jay - Part 2 directed by Francis Lawrence. Ross joined the cast in Mocking jay – Part 1 as ‘Messalla,’ who was part of the TV crew that filmed propos for the war as part of the Airtime Assault. He later joined the rebels in the war. He was recently seen in the Courtney Cox directed Just Before I Go where he a young gay teenager looking for acceptance. He was also seen in the independent films The Wildnerness of James opposite Isabelle Fuhrman and Virginia Madsen. Life is Hot in Cracktown starring opposite Kerry Washington; Brooklyn to Manhattan and Gardens of the Night starring opposite John Malkovich. In 2011 he won the Breakthrough Performance Award at South by Southwest for his performance in the film 96 Minutes. Ross made his feature film debut in ATL for Warner Bros. He co-starred with T.I. and Antwan A. Patton (aka Big Boi) in this story about four friends preparing for life after high school and the different challenges that bring about turning points in each of their lives. He went on to star opposite Queen Latifah in the HBO film Life Support which closed the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. This was a film about a HIV-positive former drug addict who has overcome her addiction to become a wife and mother committed to educating people in the black community on how to protect themselves from becoming infected. Ross plays ‘Trace,’ a gay teenager and childhood friend of Willis’s daughter who was born HIVpositive and ends up on the street, selling his AIDS drugs for money. He was nominated for a NAACP Image award for the role. In 2007 he starred in the Lionsgate Film “Pride” along with Terrence Howard 33 and Bernie Mac. Pride is the real-life story of Jim Ellis (Howard) who in the 1970’s transformed a group of troubled black inner city kids into one of the best swim teams in the country. On TV he’s appeared on a number of shows, including “90210” (CW), “Luck” (HBO) and “Mooz-lum”; and Girlfriends with his sister Tracee Ellis Ross. Evan Ross, who Teen Vogue called “a natural born performer,” is no stranger to Hollywood. Ross is the son of superstar and former Supreme, Diana Ross. He currently lives in Los Angeles. PATINA MILLER [Commander Paylor] can currently be seen as press coordinator ‘Daisy Grant’ in the second season of CBS’ hit drama series, “Madam Secretary,” starring Tea Leoni, Bebe Neuwirth and Tim Daly. Written by Barbara Hall and directed by Dave Semel, the series premiered in September 2014 and returned to CBS on Sunday, October 4th. Miller made her feature film debut as Commander Paylor in Lionsgate’s The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1. Also starring Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Julianne Moore and Philip Seymour Hoffman, the first part of the famous trilogy’s finale was released in November 2014. Miller will reprise her role in the next film, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2, which will be released in November 2015. Miller starred as the Leading Player in the Broadway revival of Stephen Schwartz’s famous 1972 musical, Pippin. Directed by Tony® Award-winning director Diane Paulus, and also starring Matthew James Thomas, Andrea Martin and Terrance Mann, Pippin received the Tony® Award for Best Revival of a Musical at the 67th Annual Tony® Awards. Miller successfully put a contemporary twist on a role originated by award-winning actor Ben Vereen and mastered the Fosse movements that the show relies so heavily on. Miller earned a Tony® Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical and an Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical as well as Drama League, Fred and Adele Astaire Award and Broadway.com Audience Choice Award nominations for her performance. She previously performed the role of Leading Player in the American Repertory Theater production of Pippin from December 2012 to January 2013. Miller made her Broadway debut in the 2011 Broadway season as the gutsy nightclub-singer-turned-nun Deloris Van Cartier in the stage adaptation of Sister Act, which earned her first Tony® nomination as well as Drama Desk, Drama League, and Outer Critics Circle Award nominations for her performance. Miller originated the role of Deloris in the West End production of Sister Act at the London Palladium, where she received an Olivier Award nomination and a WhatsOnStage.com Theatregoers’ Choice Award for Best Actress in a Musical. Additionally, Miller starred in multiple Off-Broadway productions including Ragtime at Avery Fisher Hall, City Center Encores! production of Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson’s Lost in the Stars, and the Manhattan Theatre Club’s Romantic Poetry. Miller also appeared in the Public Theater’s pre-Broadway revival of Hair during its 2008 run at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park, also under the direction of Diane Paulus. Among her regional theatre credits include First You Dream, a Kander and Ebb revue at the Kennedy Center, Sister Act at the Alliance Theatre and Pasadena Playhouse and the Philadelphia Theater Company production of Being Alive. She has participated in workshops for Book of Mormon, Nightingale and American Idiot. Prior to her numerous theater credits, Miller appeared in the renowned daytime soap opera All My Children. Miller performed her first solo concert at the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts during its 2013-2014 theatrical season. She then made her New York City debut in February 2015 as part of Lincoln Center Theater’s “American Songbook” series, which subsequently aired on PBS. Miller received a degree in musical theater from Carnegie Mellon University. She currently resides in New York City. 34 FILMMAKER BIOS Over the past two decades, FRANCIS LAWRENCE [Director] has captivated audiences around the world with his creative body of work. A director and producer of film, music videos, and television, Lawrence has established himself as a longstanding artistic visionary that can not only cater to any demographic, but is also able to understand and convey the visions of some of the world’s most influential artists. Lawrence next directs The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2, the fourth and final installment of the hugely popular Hunger Games franchise. The film, starring Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Woody Harrelson, Julianne Moore and Philip Seymour-Hoffman, will be released by Lionsgate in November. It was also announced earlier this year that Lawrence will direct an upcoming film based on Homer’s epic The Odyssey for Lionsgate. Lawrence most recently directed The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1, which was released by Lionsgate in November 2014 and grossed over $750 million worldwide. Lawrence also directed the second installment of the franchise, The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, which was released in November 2013 and earned over $850 million worldwide. Lawrence made his feature film debut in 2005 with Constantine, based on the Hellblazer comic book, starting Keanu Reeves and Rachel Weisz. That was followed up by the 2007 hit movie, I Am Legend, a science fiction-horror-action-disaster film adapted from the Richard Matheson novel of the same name, starring Will Smith. In 2011, Lawrence directed Water for Elephants, based on the best-selling novel by Sara Gruen and starring Reese Witherspoon, Robert Pattinson, and Christoph Waltz. Lawrence is also a noted music video director, having won a GRAMMY® (Lady Gaga, "Bad Romance"), Latin GRAMMY® (Shakira, “Whenever Whatever”), and multiple VMA awards. He has worked with artists such as Jay-Z, Britney Spears, Beyoncé, Pink, Gwen Stefani, Jennifer Lopez, Aerosmith, Janet Jackson and many others. Lawrence has also directed commercials for many high profile clients including The Gap, Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger, Coca-Cola, Pepsi, L’Oreal, Bacardi, McDonald’s, Disneyland, Oldsmobile, Covergirl, and Maybelline. Lawrence is also experienced in the world of television. In 2008, he served as director and executive producer on the pilot and several episodes of the acclaimed series “Kings.” In 2011, he directed the pilot episode of FOX's “Touch,” featuring Kiefer Sutherland, which he continued on as executive producer for both seasons of the show. Lawrence was recently honored with the Director of the Year Award at CinemaCon 2015. PETER CRAIG [Screenwriter] is a novelist and screenwriter who wrote The Town with Ben Affleck & Aaron Stockard. Among his books are Hot Plastic and Blood Father, which he adapted for the screen and will be released in 2015. As an award-winning filmmaker, DANNY STRONG [Screenwriter] is attracted to powerful and inspiring events that examine and expose the political, social, and cultural fabric of the world we live in. Strong’s recent work with some of today’s most influential creators further showcases his ability to bring complex characters to the fore with his writing. Strong wrote the screenplay for the acclaimed film The Butler starring Forest Whitaker and Oprah Winfrey. Directed by Lee Daniels, it was the sleeper hit of 2013, grossing over 100 million dollars at the US box office. He also wrote and produced the highly acclaimed HBO Film Game Change about the 2008 election. Starring Julianne Moore and Woody Harrelson, the film was nominated for 12 Primetime Emmys® and won for Best Movie/Mini-series. Strong personally won a Primetime Emmy® for Outstanding Writing, a Writers Guild Award, a Golden Globe®, the Producers Guild Award, a Peabody and the Pen Award for the film. His debut script was the HBO Film Recount, a movie about the Florida recount in the 2000 election. Starring Kevin Spacey, Dennis Leary and Laura Dern, the film was nominated for 11 Primetime Emmys® and won for Best TV movie. Strong was nominated for the Primetime Emmy ® for Outstanding Writing and he won the Writers Guild Award for the film. He is currently writing a film remake of Guys and Dolls for FOX Studios. Along with Lee Daniels, he created and will executive produced the TV series “Empire” for FOX. 35 In addition to his thriving career as a screenwriter, Strong is also an actor with extensive credits in film, television and theater, and has appeared in many of the most famous television shows of the last two decades. As an actor he is best known for the five seasons he played Jonathan on “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” and the four seasons he played Doyle on “Gilmore Girls”. His other credits include such iconic projects as Pleasantville, “Seinfeld,” “Nip/Tuck,” “Grey’s Anatomy,” “How I Met Your Mother” and many more. Most recently he has been seen on season 4 and 6 of “Mad Men” playing ‘Danny Siegel,’ on season 5 of “Justified,” playing the villainous Prison Guard ‘Albert Fekus,’ and the recent season of HBO’s “Girls,” playing ‘Pal,’ Elijah’s (Andrew Rannells) nasty boyfriend. On stage, he has appeared in over 50 plays and musicals in regional and LA theaters. Bestselling author SUZANNE COLLINS (Adaptation by, Based on the novel by, Executive Producer) first made her mark in children’s literature with the New York Times bestselling Underland Chronicles for middle grade readers. Her debut for readers aged 12 and up, The Hunger Games (September 2008), was an instant bestseller, appealing to both teen readers and adults. It was called “addictive” by Stephen King in Entertainment Weekly, and “amazing” by Stephanie Meyer on her website. It has appeared on the New York Times bestseller list for more than 260 consecutive weeks/more than five consecutive years since publication, and there are more than 65 million copies of all three books in the trilogy, The Hunger Games (September 2008), Catching Fire (September 2009), and Mockingjay (August 2010), in print and digital formats in the U.S. to date. Foreign publishing rights for The Hunger Games trilogy have been sold into 56 territories in 51 languages to date. Year of the Jungle, Suzanne Collins’s picture book based on the year her father was deployed in Viet Nam, with illustrations by James Proimos, was published in 2013 to great critical acclaim. Suzanne Collins also had a successful and prolific career writing for children’s television. She has worked on the staffs of several Nickelodeon shows, including the Emmy ®-nominated hit Clarissa Explains It All and The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo. She received a Writer’s Guild of America nomination in animation for co-writing the critically acclaimed Christmas special, Santa, Baby! In 2010 Collins was named to the TIME 100 list as well as the Entertainment Weekly Entertainers of the Year list. In 2011 Fast Company named her to their 100 Most Creative People in Business. NINA JACOBSON [Producer] has built an impressive 20-year career as a senior film executive at three major motion picture studios. Her first film as producer and the first film for her company, Color Force, was Diary of a Wimpy Kid which grossed over $75 million worldwide and led to the production of the successful sequels, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules and Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days. Jacobson produced The Hunger Games based on Suzanne Collins’ best-selling novel and subsequent books in the series The Hunger Games: Catching Fire and The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1. The three films have grossed a remarkable $2.4 billion combined worldwide with the final film in the series, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 scheduled for release on November 20, 2015. Jacobson and her Color Force partner Brad Simpson are currently developing feature films based on the international best-selling novels Where’d You Go Bernadette? by Maria Semple, Kevin Kwan’s Crazy Rich Asians and Donna Tartt’s The Goldfinch. On the television side, Color Force is currently in production on the first season of the anthology television series “American Crime Story: The People vs. O.J. Simpson” with Ryan Murphy which will air on FX in early 2016. They are also producing hip-hop crime drama “The Infamous” for A&E. Prior to forming Color Force, Jacobson was president of the Walt Disney Motion Picture Group, where she oversaw script development and film production for Walt Disney Pictures, Touchstone Pictures and Hollywood Pictures. During her tenure, 15 of Jacobson’s projects grossed over $100 million domestically, including “Pirates of the Caribbean,” “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe” and “The Princess Diaries.” The “Pirates of the Caribbean” franchise became the highest grossing film in Disney’s history, generating almost three billion dollars in worldwide box office. Before joining the Walt Disney Motion Picture Group, Jacobson was a senior film executive at DreamWorks SKG, where she developed “What Lies Beneath” and originated the idea of DreamWorks’ 36 first animated feature, “Antz.” She also held positions at Universal, Parkes/MacDonald Productions, Silver Pictures and began her career at Disney Sunday Movie. Jacobson is a graduate of Brown University and currently lives in Brentwood with her partner Jennifer and their three children, Noah, Josie and William. JON KILIK (Producer) is a leading New York-based producer renowned for his collaborations with visionary directors and for entertainment that integrates powerful stories with human values and social issues. He has partnered creatively with such directors as Spike Lee, Julian Schnabel and Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu – and he has produced all four films in the blockbuster Hunger Games series based on the dystopian modern classic by Suzanne Collins. Most recently, Kilik produced Bennett Miller’s Foxcatcher, starring Steve Carell, which garnered widespread critical acclaim and five Oscar® nominations. In 2015, he completed The Hunger Games with Mockingjay – Part 2. Kilik has produced 15 of Spike Lee’s films including the groundbreaking (and Oscar®nominated) Do The Right Thing, Malcolm X, Clockers, He Got Game, 25th Hour and the forthcoming Chi-Raq. Kilik also developed and produced all of the films by artist and director Julian Schnabel. He produced Schnabel’s debut Basquiat, the Oscar®-nominated Before Night Falls, the rock documentary Lou Reed’s Berlin and the Oscar®-nominated and Golden Globewinning The Diving Bell and The Butterfly. Kilik first worked with Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu on the intricate, multinational production of Babel, for which he received a Best Picture Oscar® nomination and the Golden Globe Award for Best Dramatic Film. They reunited for Biutiful, nominated for Best Foreign Language Film. Kilik produced Gary Ross’ inventive directorial debut, the fantasy drama Pleasantville, and went on to work with Ross in shepherding the first installment of The Hunger Games to the screen setting in motion the global cinematic phenomenon. Their collaboration continues with the forthcoming historical drama The Free State of Jones starring Matthew McConaughey. Other highlights of Kilik’s producing career include: Robert De Niro’s celebrated directorial debut, A Bronx Tale, adapted from Chazz Palminteri’s play, Tim Robbins’ Academy Award® winner Dead Man Walking, based on Sister Helen Prejean’s work with Louisiana death row inmates, starring Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn, and Robbins’ 1930s tapestry Cradle Will Rock; as well as Ed Harris’ Academy Award®-winning directorial debut, Pollock, starring Harris as the iconic abstract painter Jackson Pollock. Kilik has also produced Oliver Stone’s period epic Alexander and exploration of the Bush presidency W., Jim Jarmusch’s dark comedy Broken Flowers, winner of the 2005 Cannes Film Festival Grand Jury Prize, and Chris Eyre’s Pine Ridge Reservation-set Skins. Born in Newark, Jon Kilik grew up in Millburn, New Jersey. He graduated from the University of Vermont, then moved to New York in 1979, where he began his filmmaking career and has been a significant presence in the filmmaking community ever since. Kilik delivered a controversial and inspirational keynote address about the potential for the film industry’s future at the 2013 IFP Film Market at Lincoln Center. He also received honorary doctorates and delivered the commencement address at the University of Vermont (2003) and Monmouth University (2013). PHILIP MESSINA (Production Designer) last designed The Hunger Games and The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. In 2011, Messina designed Marc Forster’s Machine Gun Preacher starring Gerard Butler. Prior to that Messina worked with M. Night Shyamalan to create the fantasy adventure The Last Airbender. He has also frequently collaborated with director Steven Soderbergh, designing Soderbergh’s Ocean’s Thirteen, Ocean’s Twelve and Ocean’s Eleven. The latter garnered Messina an Art Director’s Guild nomination. They also teamed up on The Good German, Eros, Solaris, Traffic and Erin Brockovich. They first met when Messina worked as the art director on Out of Sight. 37 Additional credits include Curtis Hanson’s acclaimed drama 8 Mile starring Eminem and Gregory Jacob’s directorial debut: Criminal. Born and raised in Lawrence, Massachusetts, Messina graduated from Cornell University with a degree in architecture. His initial foray into films was as a set designer on Mermaids, School Ties and Housesitter which were all filmed in the Boston area. Relocating to Los Angeles, he went on to serve as the art director on such films as Hard Target, The Neon Bible, Reckless, The Associate, Trial and Error and The Sixth Sense. For television, Messina was the production designer on the series “Freaks and Geeks” created by Paul Feig and executive produced by Judd Apatow. Messina is married to set decorator Kristen Toscano Messina, with whom he frequently collaborates. They live in Los Angeles with their six-year-old son, Luca. The design team of KURT AND BART [Costume Designers] is a creative collaboration born out of a chance meeting at the University of Colorado in 1983. Formally educated in the notorious NYC club scene of the 1980’s, their sartorial obsession and shared sensibility has traversed the worlds of fashion, music, theatre and film. In 2014 Kurt and Bart received the Costume Designer’s Guild Award nomination for Excellence in Period Film for their work on the Oscar® winning drama Dallas Buyers Club, directed by Jean-Marc Vallee, starring Mathew McConaughey and Jared Leto. Stoker starring Nicole Kidman and Mia Wasikowska was an opportunity to work with internationally acclaimed auteur director Park Chan-wook. Their costume design work was nominated for the 2014 London Film Critics Circle for Technical Achievement. Their previous work in film is as varied as the gritty noir Out of the Furnace starring Christian Bale and directed by Scott Cooper for Relativity, to the dance musical Step Up 3D directed by Jon M. Chu for Summit Entertainment and Touchstone Pictures. Kurt and Bart’s filmography includes Ryan Fleck and Anna Boden’s It’s Kind of a Funny Story with Zach Galifianakis and Emma Roberts, Todd Solandz Dark Horse with Mia Farrow and Selma Blair, Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Freidman’s Howl with James Franco and John Hamm, Dito Montiel’s Fighting with Channing Tatum, Daniel Barnz Phoebe in Wonderland with Elle Fanning, and John Cameron Mitchell’s notorious Shortbus. Their early career included designing their own clothing line called Design Asylum and creating costumes for commercials and music videos. They stood out as styling team with an approach as much about pulling fashion looks as it was about designing and building custom pieces to realize a visual image. As stylists, Kurt and Bart have worked with some of the world’s strongest and most prolific image makers, among them, Steven Klein, Herb Ritts, Patrick Demarchelier, Matthew Rolston, Francis Lawrence, Dean Karr, Mark Seliger, and Mary Ellen Mark. They have created lasting images with such music icons as David Bowie, Ozzy Osbourne, Marilyn Manson, Courtney Love, Pink, and Britney Spears. As Senior Vice President of Production and Development at Color Force, BRYAN UNKELESS [CoProducer] was a co-producer on The Hunger Games and Catching Fire. He was the development executive on the wildly successful Diary of a Wimpy Kid franchise, which is based off of Jeff Kinney’s best-selling children’s books. The third film in the series, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days—starring Steve Zahn, Rachel Harris and Zachary Gordon—was released in August of 2012. Unkeless was a development executive on Lone Sherfig’s adaptation of the best-selling novel One Day by David Nicholls. Starring Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess, One Day was released by Focus Features in 2011. Prior to joining Color Force, Unkeless worked at Parkes-MacDonald Productions where he was involved with projects such as The Burning Plain—written and directed by Guillermo Arriaga—and The Uninvited— directed by the Guard Brothers. A graduate of Duke University, Unkeless enjoys art, swimming, running, cycling and watching the Denver Broncos win. 38 One of the most renowned Makeup Artists in the motion picture business, VE NEILL [Make-Up Designer & Department Head] has set many standards of excellence in the makeup field. Over the course of her career Neill has won three Academy Awards®, two Emmy® Awards, four Saturn Awards, a BAFTA Award, Local 706 Best Character Makeup Award and the first Artist to be awarded Hollywood Foreign Press “Makeup Artist of the Year” Awards well as the first Makeup Artist to be honored as Makeup Artist of the Year by MAC Cosmetics. That is a total of 22 international nominations and wins for her creative and innovative makeups. From her early career as a rock ‘n roll stylist, Neill began to develop her skills as a Designer and Makeup Artist. Specializing in concept, design and execution, Neill entered the film industry and discovered a talent for extreme fantasy makeup. Neill created space travelers for the first Star Trek film and for the hit comedy Galaxy Quest, rock ‘n roll vampires for Joel Schumacher’s The Lost Boys and visions of The Afterlife for Tim Burton’s wacky comedy Beetlejuice. She turned Johnny Depp into scissors wielding anti-hero for Edward Scissorhands, Robin Williams into a Scottish Nanny for Mrs. Doubtfire, Martin Landau into horror king Bela Lugosi for Ed Wood and brought to life an onslaught of villains, beauties and super-heroes for Warner Brothers’ early Batman series. She gave Patricia Arquette the Stigmata, transformed Christine Baranski into the Grinch’s sexy girlfriend, aged Johnny Depp 60 years for the film Blow and turned Jude Law into the perfect Love-Robot for Steven Spielberg’s A.I. Neill continues her illustrious career with an assortment of new characters ranging from possessed beings in Constantine and a slew of dirty, drunken, barnacle encrusted Pirates for the Pirates if the Caribbean series. She turned Johnny Depp into the infamous Butcher Barber of Fleet Street for the film musical Sweeney Todd and transformed Mike Myers into The Love Guru. She worked with Robert Downey Jr., Jamie Foxx, and Catherine Keener on The Soloist, Jim Carrey and Ewan McGregor in I Love You Phillips Morris. More Vampires for Priest starring Paul Bettany, Maggie Qu, Carl Urban and Lilly Collins. In 2010 she headed up the Special Makeup FX Department for the film Thor. She swung in to action as the Department Head for The Amazing Spiderman 1 & 2. She also did The Host, a Stephanie Myers book. Throughout her career Neill has worked with many of Hollywood’s brightest stars. Jack Nicholson, Keira Knightly, Julia Roberts, Danny DeVito, Sarah Jessica Parker, Johnny Depp, Uma Thurman, Orlando Bloom, Sigourney Weaver, Jude Law, Ethan Hawke, Catherine Keener, Jim Carey, Andy Garcia, Keanu Reeves, Jennifer Lawrence and Woody Harrelson, Saoirse Ronan, Diane Kruger and William Hurt have all called upon Neill for her expertise with Beauty, the Bizarre and lots of Wild Characters. This is a small part of the all-star list of clientele who enjoy the touch of Neill’s magical brush. She has now added the title, The Judge to her resume for the new hit reality TV Show Face Off on the Syfy channel. The show highlights Special Makeup FX and is now gearing up to shoot Season 8. THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY – PART 2 END CREDITS Unit Production Manager First Assistant Director Key Second Assistant Director [Clear Field/Single Card Crawl] Second Unit Director [Clear Field/Single Card Crawl] Executive in Charge of Production Jan Foster Christopher Surgent Douglas Plasse Charles Gibson Donna Sloan [Clear Field/Single Card Crawl] 39 Co-Producers CAST Katniss Everdeen Peeta Mellark Gale Hawthorne Haymitch Abernathy President Snow Plutarch Heavensbee President Alma Coin Primrose Everdeen Finnick Odair Effie Trinket Boggs Johanna Mason Beetee Katniss' Mother Caesar Flickerman Cressida Messalla Pollux Castor Tigris Egeria Annie Cresta Enobaria Commander Paylor Homes Mitchell Lieutenant Jackson Leeg #1 Leeg #2 Commander Lyme Antonius D4 Officiant Doctor Aurelius Greenhouse Guard #1 Injured Career Rebel Sniper Pugnax Commander of D5 Girl in Lemon Yellow Coat Rebel Nurse Capitol Girl Katniss' Father Everdeen Child #1 Everdeen Child #2 Stunt Coordinator / Fight Coordinator Supervising Stunt Coordinator Stunt Coordinator (Berlin) Assistant Stunt Coordinator (Berlin) Stunt Coordinator (Paris) Key Stunt Rigger Head Stunt Rigger (Berlin) Katniss Stunt Double Peeta Stunt Double Gale Stunt Doubles Henning Molfenter Charlie Woebcken Christoph Fisser Jennifer Lawrence Josh Hutcherson Liam Hemsworth Woody Harrelson Donald Sutherland Philip Seymour Hoffman Julianne Moore Willow Shields Sam Claflin Elizabeth Banks Mahershala Ali Jena Malone Jeffrey Wright Paula Malcomson Stanley Tucci Natalie Dormer Evan Ross Elden Henson Wes Chatham Eugenie Bondurant Sarita Choudhury Stef Dawson Meta Golding Patina Miller Omid Abtahi Joe Chrest Michelle Forbes Misty Ormiston Kim Ormiston Gwendoline Christie Robert Knepper Mark Jeffrey Miller April Grace David Hallyday Linds Edwards Thomas Blake, Jr. Cameron MacConomy Desmond Phillips Elle Graham Lacy Dmitriew Kate Rachesky Phillip Troy Linger Bear Lawrence Theodore Lawrence Sam Hargrave R.A. Rondell Ralf Haeger Florian Hotz Philippe Guegan Michael Hugghins Alexander Magerl Renae Moneymaker Ralf Koch Erik Schultz Daniel Hargrave Jeremy Fitzgerald Jackson Spidell Joerg "Elma" Ellmer Kyle Gardner Michael Hanson Finnick Stunt Double Utility Stunt (Berlin) Stunt Riggers 40 Jacob Hugghins Tony Hugghins Eddie Yansik William Morts Brian Simpson Rockey Dickey Arturo Dickey Brycen Counts John Patrick Daily Werner Bernstaedt Thayr Harris Chris Daniels Monique Ganderton Stephen Conroy Reginald Jackson Jr. Dante Won Ha T. Ryan Mooney Garrett Hammond Scott Hunter Cody Robinson Cecilia C. Ice Amy Lynn Tuttle Sarah Reagin Bobby Jordan Max Calder Aaron Toney Remington Steele Joe Williams Matt Berberi Shane Daniels Holland Diaz Victor Lopez Daniel Graham Todd Warren Mike Wilson Brent Bernhard Danya Bateman Maya Santandrea Nick Dekay Nick Stanner Philip Dido Damita Howard Crystal Hooks Andy Rusk Jacob Kabel Paul O'Connor Kevin Morgan Jane Oshita Chris Antonucci Jessica Merideth Tony McFarr David Brian Martin Maggie MacDonald Elizabeth Davidovich Dean Grimes Greg Sproles Todd Rogers Terry John Tyler Vogt John Casino Ryan Stratis Kevin Cassidy Jennifer Cobb Jacob Garcia Marcelle Coletti Jermaine Holt Tye Claybrook Jr. Donny Carrington Stunt Rigger (Berlin) Stunts 41 Jwaundace Candece Shellita Boxie John Bernecker Joann Bernat Josh Diogo Yan Dron Troy Faruk Ian Eyre Scott Dale Jennifer Harris Aby Martin Christopher Padilla Eric Stratemeier James Tyroff Ashley Rae Lonnie Smith Laurie Singer Thomas Culler Scott Loeser Alan D'Antoni John Junesung Shim Bayland Rippenkroeger Karin Justman Nicholas Jones Greg Reynolds Joseph Logan Newell Haley Nott Matthew Murray Andy Martin Raven Baker Jennifer Badger Stanton Barrett CC Taylor Rebecca Ohmes Eric Benson Theresa Pink Adam Ciesielski Israel Horne Allan Padelford Leo Plank Alrik Kreemke Jockel Neubauer Steve Albrecht Tim Haberland Kristin Haberland Jan Böhme Alexandra Nazahn Marie Mouroum Cha Lee Yoon Phong Giang Can Aydin Kristoffer Fuss Vanessa Wieduwilt Oliver Juhrs Chris Gneisel Sven Raschka Wolfgang Lindner Markus Ranglack Georg Ebinal Elman Mammadov Charlene Thoms Bella Garcia Georgina Philp Claudia Heinz Eskindir Tesfay Joshua Grothe Sascha Girndt Stunts (Berlin) 42 Marco Albrecht Wanja Götz Uli Richter Matthias Guenther Thomas Hacikoglu Mike Moeller Niklas Kinzel Hannes Pastor Rajab Hassan Hugo Bariller Julien Bruant Serge Crozon Thierry Saelens Lyne Doffagne Frederick Renard Louis-Marie Nyee Jerome Gaspard Vincent Haquin Ludovic Silmezis John Medalin Vincent Bouillon Frederic Vallet Vladimir Houbart Marion Levavasseur Julie Pinault Anthony Pho Sean Guegan Jonathan Henry Helene Tran Sybille Blouin David Paris Alan Purwin Stunts (Paris) Helicopter Pilots [Clear Field/Single Card Crawl] [Georgia LOGO] [Clear Field/Single Card Crawl] Southeast Casting by Jackie Burch, CSA [Clear Field/Single Card Crawl] In Memory of Garry Bailey CREW Production Supervisor Associate Producer Set Decorator Supervising Art Director Art Directors Mika Saito Cameron MacConomy Larry Dias Dan Webster Andrew Max Cahn Priscilla Elliott Lauren Polizzi Sean Ryan Jennings Justin Miller David Thompson, S.O.C. Trevor Loomis Patrick Sokley Josh Medak Jess Lakoff Don Steinberg Dwight Campbell Kyle Spicer Adrian Jebef Saul McSween Daniel Wurschl Murray Close Assistant Art Directors "A" Camera Operator First Assistant "A" Camera Second Assistant "A" Camera "B" Camera Operator First Assistant "B" Camera Second Assistant "B" Camera Data Management Supervisor DIT Film Loaders Still Photographer Associate Producer / Post Production Supervisor Jeffrey Harlacker 43 Film Editor First Assistant Editors Jennifer Vecchiarello Lauren Clark Carroll Lara Khachooni Micah Wolf Paul Alderman Madelaine Jereczek Tom Reagan Steve Miller Rod Dean Adam Zucker Dillard Brown Assistant Editors Visual Effects Editors 3D Editor Post Production Assistant Post Production Intern Supervising Sound Editors and Re-Recording Mixers Skip Lievsay Jeremy Peirson, CAS Jason Miller Walter Garcia Post Production Coordinator Visual Effects Producer Associate Visual Effects Producer Visual Effects Accountant Visual Effects Coordinators Chrysta Marie Burton Cynthia LeJeune Victor F. Medel Ainslie Thomas Patrick Thomas O'Rourke Robbie Janda Leah Hardstark Wes Dorough Kristofer Cross Andrew Prescott Lead Data Wrangler Data Wrangler Visual Effects Assistants Visual Effects Berlin / Paris Coordinator Visual Effects Berlin / Paris Data Wrangler Visual Effects Berlin Assistant Visual Effects Paris Assistant In-House Visual Effects Supervisor In-House Compositing Lead In-House Compositors Annabelle Troukens Bastian Hopfgarten Roman Remer Delphine Volny John Stewart Michael Liv Eric Almeras Sam Edwards Greg Groenekamp Raul Moreno Bethany Onstad Mattaniah Yip Roxy Zuckerman Ana Maria Quintana Jose Antonio Garcia Jonathan Lee-Ger Fuh Jay Collins Dave Deever Script Supervisor Production Sound Mixer Boom Operator Sound Utility Video Assist Supervising Engineer 24 Frame Playback Supervising Engineer 24 Frame Operating Supervisor 24 Frame Playback Operator Playback Operators Monte Swann Jared Rosen Dave Landaker Peter Thoren James Gallimore Chris Love Dan Murbarger Chad Williams Ted Cognata Jason Zorigian David Halagarda Jill Vaupen Nicole Morales Kim Khoo Jason Bogard David M. Atkinson Video Projectionist Watchout Operator Video Consultant Production Coordinator Assistant Production Coordinator Travel Coordinator Shipping Coordinator Production Secretary Production Controller 44 Production Accountant First Assistant Accountant Key Second Assistant Accountants Jim Dunlap John Weber Kathy Donno Gaytra Arnold Annette Maria Bas Kathy Edwards Maggie Levinge Boysie Jereza Ariane Chatman Christopher Beeman Tina Sauls Marcus J. Calloway Alex Huebner Marisol Jimenez Kaity Warnock Ken Ryan Rice Gorton Pictures Liam Hearne Second Assistant Accountants Supervising Payroll Accountant Assistant Payroll Accounting Clerks Construction Accountant Construction Accounting Clerk Insurance Estimator Post Production Accounting by Post Production Accountant Post Production Payroll Accountant Post Production Assistant Accountant Post Accounting Clerk Location Manager Key Assistant Location Managers Amanda Sutton Erica Kolsrud Patrick Williams Ken Lavet Naomi Motohashi Trey Neely Chris Saharek Gabby Williamson Aubrey Devaney Assistant Location Managers Second Second Assistant Director Additional Second Assistant Directors Megan Schmidt Kristina Peterson Cody Williams Aric Sabin Ethan Duff Robin "RK" Kempf Courtni Mills Becca Rogers Corey Burks Riley Flanagan Kelly Gill Brian Patrick Carroll Jamie MacDonald Julie Pechanek Kevin Abrams Rob Pittard Joseph Raines David Martin Benjamin Muratet Max Fisher Anna Heppner Greg Hopwood Amber Blackman Nicole Adkins Mallory Bradley Victoria Payne Anna Stachow Rene Warnes Cecily C. Carrieré Bianca Hawkins Antonette N. Tucker Greg Capoccia Andrew Litvak Set Production Assistants Assistant to Ms. Jacobson Assistant to Mr. Kilik & Ms. 45 Foster Assistant to Ms. Lawrence Assistant to Mr. Hutcherson Assistant to Mr. Hemsworth Assistant to Mr. Harrelson Assistant to Mr. Hargrave & Mr. Rondell Casting Associate Casting Assistant Local Casting Associate Local Casting Assistant Extras Casting by Cira Sims Andre Pochon Angus Harrison Joshua Fritel Elizabeth Nouri Shayna Markowitz Bridget Cohen Samy Burch Alex Marden Rose Locke Jamie Lynn Catrett Katie Lawson Ressie Burtley Guy Micheletti Ben D. Griffith Jr. Tim Rook Charles Arnold Bill Chapman Jr. Ryan Ferguson John Grubb Whitney Pate Sean Piper Ryan Provence Frank Ryan Micah Tai Wallace D.G. Dhiensuwana Kevin Fahey William Bennett, Jr. Jeff Brinker Oscar Gomez Mike Hester David Skinner Justin Bernhard Scott Bobo Charley Brown Clint Carswell Christopher A. Cooley Karim Essawy James Floyd Berrian A. Hobby IV Justyn Plath Paul E. Prickett Tim Richeson Jacob Ross Zachary Saville Michael Ann Swan Dorrie Van Winkle Michael Howell John Bonnin Jason Hibarger Walter Bithell Greg Etheredge Cristen Clark Justin Elder Niles McElroy Scott Medcalf Stephen Raybourn Dirk Jenkins Michael Tyson Donny Fowler Mike Robertson Carson E. Mayne Lance Bregeth Tim Chang Extras Casting Assistants Key Grip / "A" Camera Dolly Grip Best Boy Grip Dolly Grip Grips Rigging Key Grip Rigging Best Boy Grips Rigging Grips Technocrane Operator Libra Head Operators Gaffer Best Boy Electric Lighting Technicians Base Camp Electrician Rigging Gaffer Rigging Best Boy Electric Stage Rigging Gaffer Rigging Equipment Best Boy Rigging Electricians 46 Devin Clark Michael Justin Cowart Greg Davis Jonathan Escobar Aubrey Gall Kerry Hoskins Grayson Hunter John Larimore Michael Patterson Daniel Talley Jordan Tyson Scott Barnes Robert Russell Matt Klann John Lally Mike Visencio David Scott Phillip Abeyta Catherine Cravens-Penrod John Richard Walden Aaron Richards Arthur Schultz Mark Vuille Brian Woronec Robert Fechtman Jim Hewitt Karl Martin Easton Smith Jim Tocci Ernie Avila Al Hobbs George Lee-McDonnell Dawn Brown Manser Scott Lukowski Nathan Schroeder Joanna Bush Trey Shaffer Wylie Griffin Giacomo Ghiazza Raymond G. Prado Scot Erb Lighting Console Programmer Rigging Dimmer Board Operator Dimmer Technicians Fixtures Foreperson Fixtures Best Boy Fixtures Set Designers Concept Artists Graphic Designer Art Department Coordinator Storyboard Artists Senior Model Maker Art Department Production Assistants Kate Emery Lauri Lannan Brett Smith Steve Ladish James Smith Scott Johnson Samuel P. Carter Dana Corbett Deborah Croswell Matthew Flory Daniel Foster Blade Ladish Amy Lehman Sean Macomber Mike Magno Frank McKeever Lisa "Pike" Rincon Rahmon Rose Douglas Stanley Eugene Sullivan Frankie Walker Beth Wheeler Tony Andraus Ed Bearden III Leadperson Set Decoration Gang Boss Drapery Foreperson On-Set Dresser Set Dressers 47 Erik Berentsen Kai Blomberg Jonathan Bobbitt Neil Bowman Maxwell Britton Tom Callinicos Nicole Eldredge Jose Garibay Corey Gomez Michael Gregan Linda Brenick Gruskin Freddie Haft Rodney Harris Terry Hill Aimee Holmberg Jim Jackson Dane Junod Tyler Kettenburg David Ladish Melanie Ladish Albert M. Lewis IV Jose E. Libao Victor Mendez David Mitchell Michael A. Murray Jr. Michael Peritz Edward J. Protwa Eric Ramirez Eli Reichline Patrick Shaw Daniel F. Simmons James Slater Eitan Sonnenberg Timothy Stuart Ely Vegh David Weeks Sara Gardener-Gail Margaret Hungerford Christopher Carlson Lisa Chugg Set Decoration Buyers Set Decoration Warehouse Manager Lead Set Decoration Scenic Painter Set Decoration Scenic Painters Mark Keever Rick Brondum Renee Lesselroth Anna Ragghianti Seay Earehart Stephen D. Eno Jeff DeBell Pedro I. Barquin Jessica Echols Cary Goen John Hemphill T.J. Rottenberg Larry E. Scott Drew Petrotta Rick Chavez Hannah Hinkel Amy Giedraitis Chuck Rousseau Amanda Ward James Perini Steve Cremin Key Greens On-Set Greens Foreperson Greensmen Property Master Assistant Property Masters Armourer Property Assistant Property Production Assistant Special Effects Coordinator Assistant Special Effects Coordinator Set Foreperson William D. Lee Brandon Keys McLaughlin 48 Pyrotechnic Foreperson Special Effects Technicians Lee McConnell Nathen Cavins Terry Chapman Troy Cloud Roderic Duff Donny Eidson Trey Gordon Nick Karas Jay King Joe Love Wes Mattox Paul Sabourin George S. Vrattos Patrick Edward White Scott Willis Matt Wilson Chelsea Madison The Aaron Sims Company Aaron Sims Steffen Reichstadt Luca Nemolato Jared Krichevsky Joshua Min Cvetomir Georgiev Lauren Barciszewski Mark A. Peterson Lisa Tomczeszyn Edward T. Hanley Deborah Cha Blevins Jennifer Kamrath Special Effects Buyer Creature Design by Creature Art Director Creature Concept Artists Creature Concept Coordinator Costume Supervisor Assistant Costume Designer Key Costumers District 13 Combat Uniform Concepts by Specialty Costumes by Specialty Costumes Supervisor Specialty Costumes Crew Aitor Throup Film Illusions, Inc. Russell Shinkle Dorothy Bulac-Eriksen Marilee Canaga Dan Crawley Josh Cameron Chris Dooly George Gaspar Tamaki Heid Anthony Julio Gil Liberto Art Pimentel Tim Ralston Scott Ramirez Katelyn Rodgers Jody Schoffner Sarah Zinn Scott R. Hankins Costumer to Ms. Lawrence Costumer to Mr. Hutcherson & Mr. Hemsworth Costumers Valentina Aulisi Tiffany Busche Melanie Mascioli Daniel Molaschi Damien Quinn Danny Dirks Kristin Adams Achtmeyer Amelia McKinney Matt Jerome Ellen Semones Ashley Marie Parker Korii Young Shayne Duhon Matthew Simonelli Steven Rehage Kairo Courts 49 Camille Hardiman Marilyn Madsen Klara Farberov Heather Vandergriff Gloria Berra Esther Lopez Margarita Kalend Jill Thraves Tony Acosta Jr. Marla Hayes Sarah Laux Molly Rogers Bren Cook Keith Hudson Bunny Walker Paul Lewis Dustin Fletcher April J. Traquina Scott Coppock Ashley E. Singer Joni Huth Luis Jimenez Sara Olson Juan Carlos Jimenez Myra Foy Judith Chang Synithia Cochran Mary L. Monds Ruth A. Hossie Natasha Paczkowski Teresa Jimenez Phillip Boutté Jr. Alan Villanueva Constantine Sekeris Trey Shaffer Montgomery Hom Meredith Busey Taylor Good Anthony Davis Manufacture Foreperson Table Persons Specialty Costumers Buyers Head Ager / Dyer Textile Artist Textile Artist Agers / Dyers Head Milliner Milliner Key Tailor Tailors Key Stitcher Seamstresses Cutters / Fitters Draper Costume Illustrators Costume Concept Artist Graphic Textile Artist Costume Researchers Costume Accountant Costume Accounting Clerk Makeup Designer / Department Head Makeup Department Head Key Makeup Artist Makeup Artists Ve Neill Nikoletta Skarlatos Conor McCullagh Dave Dupuis Margaret Prentice Richard Alonzo Lynne Eagan Joanetta Stowers Brian Penikas Don Rutherford Deborah Rutherford Angela Moos Corinna Woodcock John Blake Jason Collins Kim Collea Noreen Wilkie Jamie Hess Peter De Oliveira Gunn Espegard Anita Brabec Elena Arroy Julie Socash Robert Maverick Brad Look Debbie Zoller Leslie Devlin 50 Victor Del Castillo Becky Cotton Susan Ransom Micah Laine Stevie Martin Gindy Martin Lay'na Anderson Mi Young Nicole Sohn Aida Scuffle Roy Wooley Jamillah Simmons Judy Ponder Tracey Miller Smith Noël Hernandez Bill Myer Travis Pates Gigi Collins Patrice Coleman Malika James Keitric Starks Carol Rasheed Stephanie Ponder Sarah Mays Tyson Fountaine Brian Kinney Glenn Hetrick's Optic Nerve Studios, Inc. Ken Culver Erin Draney Mike Obrian Hiroshi Katigiri Rich Mayberry Steve Winsett Brad Palmer Special Makeup Effects, Prosthetics Created by Project Coordinators Lead Artist Special Effects Artists Hair Designer / Department Head Hair Department Head Key Hairstylist Third Hairstylist Background Hair Coordinator Background Fitting Coordinator Hairstylists Camille Friend Kim Santantonio Barbara Cantu Vincent Gideon Cynthia Chapman Nikki Wright Dawn Turner Wyatt Belton Victor Paz Tracey Moss Jerome Allen Ann Bray Norma Lee Louisa V. Anthony Iraina Crenshaw Clare Corsick Susan Lipson Lionel Brown Shelia Cyphers-Leake Robert Mathews Pierce Austin Rachel Solow Bryn Leetch Roxanne Wightman Lauran Upshaw Kathy Estocin-Foley Lance Aldredge Suzanna Boykin Andrea C. Brotherton Joseph Ferrara Monique Lewis 51 Jacklin Masteran Joe Matke Heather Morris Tiffony Simpson Linda C. Thompson Laurel Van Dyke Melanie Verkins Traci Walker Bryan Whisnant Celena Shackelford Cater Francie Brown Wanda Yang Temko Greg Tresan Carol Tresan Seth Tepfer Chris Snyder Dale Snyder Adam Barker Michael Carroll Sr. Scott Lodwig Yann Denoual David Tye Mariano Fernandez Gerard Forrest Hank Giardina Fredric Meininger Willie Haspel Dennis Richardson John Moore Michael Gowen Pete Anderson Mark Bialuski Stephen Gindorf Devlin Lerew Sergey Mazurov James Meyer Robert Prchal Paul Roberts Robert Zavala Garry Bailey Seth Gardner Adam Johnson Mark Knapton William Monroe Waylyn Morgan Kenneth Saunchegraw James Wactor Doug Womack Andrew Brittain Donald Cochran Scott Deadwyler Michael Duffin David Fegely Sven Fodale Matt Greene Gary Hardy Jason Dock Harrell Samuel McGehee Jessie McMillion William Mullis Jeffrey O'Brien Patrick Oldknow Kyle Olsen Alfred Ransdell Mike Slattery Tom Sola Studio Teacher Dialect Coach Voice Coach Animal Coordinator Animal Coordinator / Trainer Choreographer Construction Coordinator General Foreperson Plaster Supervisor Modelmaker Supervisor Labor Supervisor Lead Sculptors Welding Supervisor Location Foreperson Paint Supervisor Toolman Forepersons Mill Foreperson Buyers Propmaker Forepersons Propmaker Gang Bosses 52 Michael Stone Joseph Voltolin Nelson Werntz James Anthony Kenneth Anthony Robert Ballew Mike Barber Eric Barker Bryan Bazzell Ronald Bloodworth Kenneth Brown James Burke Larry Cranford Keith Crowe Kenneth Dean Marshall Downey Rick Fields Michael Fowler Wayner Garner Johnny Garner William Gouinlock Darrin Graham Gary Grayson Christopher Green William Greenwood III Rob Hamby Mark Harbacheck Larry Harris Tim Hightower Jimbo Hollums William Hughes Aaron Jaggers Shane Johnson Steve Klimes Alphonse Lambert, Jr. Jason Maloney Scott Maney Steve Mayo Wayne Morgan Timothy Mumpower Matthew Nelson William Palmer Brian Parham Gail Pearson Breck Pinkerton Curtis Pitchford II Harold Proctor Randy Proctor William Pyke Joseph Raposa Kenny Rivers Seth Roesch Randall Rome Matthew Russell Barry Stanczak William Stephens Kurt Stumpf II Jeff Tolley Tavis Trussell Guy Tustin, Jr. Glenn Wactor Billy Wade John Walgren Jonathan Weaver Vance Williams Paul Wilson Bret Woodall Propmakers 53 Plaster Foreperson Plaster Gang Bosses Eric Nelson David Falconer Richard Holling Derrick Humphreys Jorge Pena Tracy Turner Justin Allmett Michael Alvarado Bryce Barker Steven Bey Alex Bye Michael Fretwell Victor Harris Jason Jackson Arthur Lilyander Mark Lopez Matt Lopez Raul Lopez Ryan McBride Doug Polito David Rodriguez Gregg Smets Daniel Soles Jared Trepepi Eric Van Hull Michael Carroll, Jr. Ronald Riggs Joe Bravo Sarah Burke Brandon Johnson Timothy Eilers Jonathan Burdeshaw Christine Mahuna John Marshall Gerard O'Halloran David Rushing Daniel Soltis Bruno Troadec Jeremiah Crowley Vincent Amelio Cliff Battle Ronald Bishop Lee Brownlow Craig Butterman Michael Cordell Richard Dragin Chet Garlow Justin Garlow Louie Gauna Klaus Gonzalez Mickey Harrison Julia Hill Brian Iglesias Timothy Johnson Garrett Manley Joshua Miller Dan Murphy Greg Newton John O'Loughlin Caleb Phillips Jim Pike Alex Ramey James Straka Michael Strange Wendell Ray Swafford John Tillotson Luis Ulloa Plasterers Mouldmaker Foreperson Mouldmaker Gang Boss Mouldmakers Sculptor Gang Boss Sculptors Welding Foreperson Welders 54 Danny Vasquez Lawrence Watson Jr. Eric Wright Eddie Esparza Robert Fidalgo Tim Imre Hector Vega Michael Cook Russell Hightower Jeremy Hughes, Sr. Kyle Wells Wesley Coleman Evan Fowler Bryan Heil Elijah Morgan Calvin Scott Brandon Watson James Brice Justin Clark Nicholas Clements Codey Courtemanche Stacy Crowe Keron Cutkelvin Jeffrey Deese Ryan Dolson Johnathan Fagan Nathan Furtado Charles Brian Gleaton Christopher Gopaul Michael Gopaul Bryan Hembree Richard Hilley Jeremy Scott Hughes, Jr. Crystal Johnson B. David King Garrett Martin James Morton Jeff B. Norris Glen Page Derrick Phillips Michael Pierce Jon Privett Jacob Proctor Robert Reed Derrick Runnion Chris Short Nicholas Sills Steven Strawhun James Sutton Josh Walker Chris Watson Tyler Whisnant Maximo Soto Frederika Gray Belle Rose Armstrong Mario Barajas Kate Lee Todd Hatfield Tiffany Boyett Smith Jeremiah Castleman Thomas Ellis Jeffery Ellis Larry Farris David Johnson Gregory Massey Chad Reilly Michael Roland Labor Forepersons Utility Forepersons Utility Gang Bosses Utility HOD Carrier Lead Scenic Foreperson Scenic Forepersons Scenic Artists 55 James Williams Cliff Berns Andrew Carter Michael Costello Charles Swift Stacy Clinger John Dorrien Troy Hope Suzan Katcher Jason Lagos Joseph Northrop Mike Rust Lamont Snipes Chris Samp Ben Darnell Russell Drew Joseph Griffith Nicholas Hatfield Bobby Martin Santisouk Phrasavath Craig Shordon James Bruce Smith George Stuart, Jr. Michael Thompson Sean David Tyler Emilia Vrattos Sarah Snyder Paint Forepersons Paint Gang Bosses Stand-by Painter Painters Construction Assistant Transportation Coordinator Transportation Captains Denny Caira Robert Brubaker Wally Frick Jayson Chang Craig Vogel Quincy Cason Jim Babbidge Timothy S. Barker Kevin Caira Adam Chrisman Ryan Coble Christopher Dooley Pam Hovies Vincent King Haskell Loudermilk Alan Love Ben Lowe III Tim McGaughy Peter McGoran Michael Anthony McMahan Fitzathor Miller John Muller Donald Murphy Matt Neel Nick Nelson Carl Parsons Robert Wayne Pullen Eddie Ray Vic Ross Edward M. Ross Danny Rowe, Jr. Stuart Schiff Steve Sorkin Dennis Steere Taylor Suffield Royce Taffar Franklin Thomas James Turman Jr. Kathleen Webster Transportation Dispatcher DOT Administrator Driver to Mr. Lawrence Drivers 56 Larry Lee Williams Victor Ybiernas Glenn Knowlton Ann & Mario Catering Marijan Zoric Ann Zoric Anthony Zoric Manuel Castillo Raymundo Gomez Luka Jurkin Gresszell Williams Britney Lozano Georgia Belcher Lauren Aparicio Stephanie Beman Javan Adams Jr. Andrew Arcieri Jasmin Arvanites Shawn Brotherton Russell S. Daugherty Shawn Delaney Landon Butch Diaz Christian Fisher Paradise Franklin Michael Gallichet Adam Hamilton Glenda Beth Hewitt Rachel Jacobs Robert Windsor Jones Jr. Matthew Brody Lathan Cassandra Lawson Kelsey Parsell Kristofor Short Patricia Tuckwiller Quentin Turner Derron Delaney Theresa Khouri L. Wren Boney John W. Galbreath Loretta Hightower Eldon Hughlon, Jr. Jay Knight, Jr. Daniel Vice Paul Lowe SISS LTD. Randy Bowie Mike Stewart Louis Dupart Rod Covington ENTERTAINMENT CLEARANCES, INC. Laura Sevier Cassandra Barbour William Casey Hurwitz Creative Caterer Head Chefs Catering Assistants Key Craft Service Craft Service Second Assistant Craft Service Third Assistant Additional Helpers Key Set Medic Key Construction Medic Medics Medical Technical Advisor Set Security Rights & Clearances by Unit Publicist EPK Produced by BERLIN UNIT A co-production between Seashore GER1, Inc. and Studio Babelsberg Line Producer Supervising Art Director Art Directors Miki Emmrich David Scheunemann Steve Summersgill Wolfgang Metschan Gunnar Zimmer Mark Rosinski Karl Keil Soenke Hansen Assistant Art Director Set Decorator Assistant Camera "C" Camera Operator 57 First Assistant "C" Camera Second Assistant "C" Camera First Assistant "D" Camera Second Assistant "D" Camera Sound Cable / Additional Boom Operator 24 Frame Playback Key Grip Key Lighting Grip Best Boy Lighting Grip "B" Camera Dolly Grip Grips Vernon Dolan Florian Schwarz Heiko Wentorp Stephanie Dahlhaus Howard Bevan Robin Haefs Glenn König Peter Kramer Robert Bartz Christian Scheibe Philipp Rath Sebastian Mayer Hinrich Peters Frank "Paco" Didlaukies Sebastian Lindner Sonny Fels Christof Grunz Kenneth Pearson Robert Schroeder Jonathan Beneteau Christian Brubach Tina Guenther Torsten Rackoll Sebastian Koloczek Florian Sperr Stephan Wulff Rene Krasel Klaus Hoenicke Andre Zuchold Patrick "Pepe" Wessler Matze Behm Martin Hampel Andreas Koebernick Thomas Huebener Helmut Prein Oliver Haas Daniel Jopp Axel Scholz Goetz Schmidt Zur Nedden Joerg Meinert Nikolas Wunder Sascha Goerlich Enno Hoffmann Georg Simmendinger Olaf Richter Mirko Fricke Angelika Padberg Anne Rosch Georg Heimann Philip Fleischer Sebastian Beutler Stefan Wilking Arian Uting Dietmar Haupt Holger Lehnau Christian Rybka Maximilian Dreusch Roland Modes Matthias Dippe Carsten Klockow Matthias Edinger Anton Meister Guido Zinck Lukas Hippe Mads Gutowski Lighting Grips Junior Lighting Grip Lighting Grip Trainee Rigging Key Grip Rigging Best Boy Grip Rigging Grips Remote Head Technician Gaffer Best Boy Electric Set Power Electrician Electricians Additional Electricians Lighting Truck Master Rigging Gaffer Rigging Best Boy Electric Rigging Electricians Dimmer Operators Junior Dimmer Operator Condor Operators 58 David Horn Jonathan Kaiser Stefan Braesen Bruno Keller Sebastian "Berry" Behrens Dan Jung Harry "Abu" Groepler Stefan Graf Jost Engelmayer Till Sadlowski Hartmut Doering Sven Hoffman Hubert Bogdanowicz Carsten Woithe Stephanie Rass Tarnia Nicol Marc Bitz Roxy Konrad Henning Brehm Generator Operators Fixtures Foreperson Fixtures Best Boy Fixtures Electricians Digital Set Designer Set Designers Junior Set Designer Art Department Coordinator Graphic Designer Assistant Set Decorator / Coordinator Storeperson Assistant Storeperson Lead Set Dresser Set Dresser Forepersons Marei Hitzler Bjoern Holzhausen Henri Grund Attila Krueziu Christoph Heinecke Hubert Boeck David Thummerer Michael Bernardy Florian Speidel Jens Gaube Tim Sehling Ralf Churfuerst Ingwer Neitzel Fabio Piastra Nane Cornelius René Roll Katharina Kluge Lothar Riedrich Rainer Kaufmann Set Dressers Set Decoration Buyer Set Decoration Shopper Set Decoration Trainee Rubble / Greensperson Greensperson Property Master / Stand-by Props Assistant Property Master Assistant Stand-by Props HOD & Armoury Supervisor Senior Office / Armourer Crew Coordinator Office / Armourer Crew Coordinator Key Armourer First Armourer Armourers Till Sennhenn Marco Boehm Gemma Stratton Adolf Wojtinek Michael Apling Juliane Walker Hummer Hoymark Mario Uy Mark Nielsen Sven Huebner Uwe Lehmann Walter Wißmann Eckart Friz Friederike Beckert Carolin Langenbahn Katrin Bellingen Katrin Eser Gerd Nefzer Bernd Rautenberg Gun Smith Buyer Props Store Person Helping Hands Property Assistant Special Effects Supervisor Special Effects Set Foreperson Special Effects Workshop Foreperson Special Effects Breakaways Foreperson Special Effects Sr. Workshop Michael Luppino Jaroslav Bucek Sebastian Venhues 59 Technicians Juergen Thiel Norman Ernst Olaf Will Andreas Schiller Special Effects Sr. Set Technicians Zoltan Toth Christoph Gartlacher Jens Schmiedel Thomas Thiele Daniel Godec Andreas Herberg Special Effects Technicians Special Effects Sr. Pyrotechnics Technician Special Effects Pyrotechnics Technician Special Effects Technical & Crew Coordinator Special Effects Buyer Nefzer Project Management & Accounting Costume Supervisor Costume Department Coordinator Cast Costumers Marcus "Paul" Preussing Andre Emme Klaus Mielich Rene Barthel Josefa Geiss Meike Schlegel Susanne Stroh Theresa Anna Luther Dietke Brandt Juliana Stenzel Emily Abel Patricia Puisy Julia Schaedle Urs Dierker Sophie Jentzsch Liz Kreyenberg Kati Lafin Inga-Britt Wassmann Anna Munro Jan Diekmann Catalina Iturralde Aponte Katrin Kobold Christophe Linéré Ulrike Diallo Ellen-Maria Muggelberg David Werer Petra Schaumann Valeska Schitthelm Crowd Costume Coordinator Crowd Costumers Buyer Agers / Dyers Key Tailor Tailor Seamstresses Wardrobe Assistant Makeup Department Head Hair Department Head Prosthetics Makeup & Hair Coordinator Makeup & Hair Artists Joern Seifert Mareike Sass Andrea Gotowschikow Jana Filipp Johanna Ragwitz - Agentur Filmgesichter Patrick Winkler Patrick Peters Extras Casting by Extras Casting Assistants Extras Casting Production Assistant Crowd Marshalls Sophie Heller Silvia Willmy Annett Franz Christian Ressel Mareike Beer Martin Ragwitz Paul Hoffmann Lisa Böttcher Kenneth Seifert Klaus grosse Darrelmann René Wuttke Location Manager Assistant Location Managers 60 Anna Coats Mario Wittmann Badr Zouhir Friedbert Vietz Constantin Brandenburg Jan Prudoehl Set Manager Location Assistants HOD Facilities Production Accountant Assistant Accountant Assistant Accountant / Cashier Payroll Accountant Assistant Cashier Assistant Payroll File Clerk Production Coordinator Assistant Production Coordinator Travel Coordinator Shipping Coordinator Production Secretary Production Office Trainee Crowd Assistant Director Key Third Assistant Director Key Set Production Assistants Lena Schmigalla Christian Fischer Rabeah Hinrichs Andreas Schumann Grit Menzzer Daniel Steiner Mai Ngoc Nguyen Silvia Lindner Elisabeth "Ellie" Kemps Michèle Maurer Katharina Gapski Milena Bomalick Karsten Junghans Dennis Becker Finn Pelke Ronny Schroeder Andreas Simon Bobby McGee Luisa Laute Katalina Ketschau Anni Sell Max Egner Robert Malte Weber Leon Fechner Rosemoon Cunningham Anne-Sophie Velten Louis Baer Daniel Kyburz Benjamin Loebbert Chris Cordes Lynn Kommer Jenny Mey Alex Toechterle Dierk Grahlow Set Production Assistants Construction Coordinator Assistant Construction Coordinator Staff Coordinator Construction Construction Buyer Construction Workshop Supervisor HOD Carpenter Supervisor Carpenter On-Set Carpenter HOD Plasterer HOD Rigger / Construction Engineer Modelmaker HOD Painter Stand-by Painter Transportation Coordinator Assistant Transportation Coordinator Transportation Captain Drivers Captain Transportation Secretary Picture Car Coordinator Assistant Picture Car Coordinator Drivers André Brueggemann Henry Grimm Cathleen Hoffmann Denny Neisener Marco Naumann Stefan Kurth Roman Berger Brita Hofmann Ulrich Posselt Ben Palmer Pablo Alza Dominik Reindl Florian Haeger Carsten Uhlig Florian Dieckmann Philipp Von Bremen Svenja Stirn Tom Ehrhardt Martin Sekiewicz Karsten Assmann 61 Melanie Baehring Darin Damjanow Sven-Uwe Dassler Michel Ehmke Sebastian Ennen Enrico Fischer Nils Frommhold Frank Gust Steffen Haronitis Serkan Havan Axel Huebner Daniel Huhn Robert Keller Tom Kirsten Nils Konrad Andreas Korpel Marco Kube Oliver Kujas Mathias Langwich Jan Luo Oliver Maloy Georg Meierotto Robert J. Napier Benjamin Reil Elias Roehm Michael Rother Ali Ruezgar Tommy Schlegel Andreas Schumacher Christoph Stangier Wolfgang Stuebner Mike Tippe Altay Uensal Eric Von Mutius Steve Wilks Wolfgang Zuber Klaus Splinter Matthias Fehrenbach Saem Khat-Nefzer Jolanta Koenig Jean Pierre Mogge Elena Meyer Christian Epping Teresa Hetzel Viktoria Glaeser Anna Brandstetter Christoph Stumpe Christopher Opara Saskia Ansky ADG Ambulanz Dienst - Ulrike Trispel Joerg Lehmann Werner Schuetz Grit Belitz Jens Hoffmann Adrian de Wet Markus Pluta Sascha Wolfram Christian Wehrle Jacob Engel Hagen Raeder Chris Durth Rade Matic Marko Mende Ronald Deter Andreas Knaeblein Truck Wrangler Head Caterer Caterers Craft Service Assistants Stand-Ins Set Medics Health & Safety Supervisor Health & Safety Coordinator Security Coordinator Visual Effects Supervisor Visual Effects Unit Key Grip Visual Effects Unit Gaffer Visual Effects Unit Video Assist Visual Effects Unit Grips Visual Effects Unit Electricians 62 Production Executive Production Executive / Location Business Affairs Assistant to Mr. Woebcken & Mr. Fisser Assistant to Mr. Molfenter Financial Controller Accountant Head of Art Department Art Department Accountant Head of Publicity Assistant Publicity Legal Counsel FOR STUDIO BABELSBERG Sonja B. Zimmer Markus Bensch Katja Hoerstmann Jenifère Nieschmidt Marie Wildenhain Wolfgang Schwedler Margit Juetz Michael Duewel Marlies Deponte Eike Wolf Bianca Makarewicz Unverzagt von Have Dr. Andreas Pense Dr. Gero Brugmann PARIS UNIT Production Services by Co-Producer Unit Production Manager First Assistant Director Second Assistant Director Third Assistant Director (BG) Art Director Set Decorator First Assistant Camera Film Loader Camera Trainee VFX Unit Plate DOP VFX Unit Plate First AC VFX Unit Plate Second AC Sound Utility Key Grip Best Boy Grip Grips Peninsula Film Seashore John Bernard Gilles Castera Ali Cherkaoui, A.F.A.R. Yannick Fauchier, A.F.A.R. Guilhem Malgoire Stéphane Cressend Emmanuel Délis Michel Galtier Jeremy Mauroy Emmanuelle Alaitru Hugues Espinasse Gregori Gajero Vincent Tulasne Gautier Isern Michel Strasser Marc Casi Laurent Schepman Joseph Mario D'Orio Antoine Husson Christian Metz Honore Soubrie Jean-Bernard Josko Eric Larsen Matteo Strasser Franck Bonomi Stephane Afchain Andy Achard Maurice Bricler Philippe Canu Robert Dona Gilles Floquet Mathieu Jourdan Pascal Rossignol Christophe Surbier Jean-Francois Drigeard Tom Mitaux Franck Fiquet Antonin Drigeard Benjamin Prevost Frederic Thurot Mouloud Lakrout Nabil Dridi Yannick Audige Alexandre Gotkovski Robert Prevost Victor Abadia Christophe Boissy Michel Boissy Rigging Key Grip Rigging Best Boy Rigging Grips Gaffer Best Boy Electric Electricians Rigging Gaffer Rigging Best Boy Electric Rigging Electricians 63 Christophe Coic Pascal Henin Philippe Pantanella Vincent Pantanella Yvan Quehec Philippe Vigier Dimmer Operators / Lighting Fixtures Tristan Szylobryt Jeremy Daillac Eric Monin Joel Canard Loic Le Pechon Jean-Philippe Desfarges Pierre Vergnes Mary Finn Saisselin Adrien Roman Carine Demongueres Loic Chavanon Generator Operators Set Designer Assistants to Set Designer Art Department Coordinator Assistant Art Department Coordinator Assistant to Art Director Art Department Assistants Severine Guignard Alice Leconte Marion Le Borgne Alexandra Von Bachmayr Laurent Jarriau Benoit Julienne Lola Hequily Antoine Annarumma Thibaut Josserand Lucas Levon Jean-Roch Bonnin Ludovic Guille Mathias Canard Jean-Baptiste Chartier Stephanie Arnaud Edith Baudrand Catherine Little-Le-Baccon Charly Finck Frederic Devillers Olivier Breban Charlotte Winter Aurelie Appert Stephane Gallotta Samir Moundy Marcel Daudin Karine Mathieu Sonia Gloaguen Tina Trottin Fabrice Messy Dominique Odic Eric Lapetite Jean-Louis Dias Simon Blanjoie Jean-Louis Morin Florent Argenta Jeremie Lalevee Louis Morin Frank Pitussi Uriel Zylberman Storeperson On-Set Dresser Assistant Set Dressers Set Dress Junior Drapery Foreperson Drapery Foreperson Extra Drapery Assistant Drapery Assistant Extra Set Dress Swing Gang Set Decoration Buyer Set Decorator Buyer Assistant Set Dresser Extras Set Dress Swing Gang Extras Set Decorator Assistant Greenspersons Stand-by Props Stand-by Props Assistant Stand-by Prop Assistants (Extras) Regis Marduel Ewen Aubert Christophe Maratier Marc Leroyer Jerome Miel Christophe Gabbiati Stephane Linet Armourer Supervisor Armourer Coordinators Armourer Assistants 64 Special Effects Supervisor Special Effects Set Foreperson Special Effects Local Coordinator Special Effects Local Assistant Coordinators Gerd Nefzer Bernd Rautenberg Guy Monbillard Charles-Axel Vollard Olivier Zenenski Patricia Colin Laurence Caines Jerome Brousseau Aurelie Dolbeau Fanny Marteau Marie Berroyer Sarah Monfort Julien Reignoux Emmanuelle Bredoux Emmanuelle Pastre Alexandra Langlois Dominique Descantes Karine Niederman Frederic Lebugle Damien Lopez Elea Talandier Nathalie Tissier Vesna Peborde Annabelle Petit Vichika Yorn Veronique Boumaza Turid Follvik Francoise Quilichini Melanie Queyrel Carreno Jocelyne Lemery Awefa Stubbs Vincent Jabes Hue-Lan Van Duc Corine Maillard Mathilde Humeau Avril Carpentier Stephanie Guillon Amelie Bouilly Francois-Xavier Joubaud Kay Phillips Sabrina Champion Patrice Iva Eric Benazet Anouk Gredoire Michele Decanini Patrick Inzerillo Christine Dendeleuf Catherine Duplan Laetitia Potrel Alexandra Becquet Diane Mahmoudi Stephane Desmarez Gil Allan Elise Ollivier-Wong Charlene Neves Michel Demonteix Corinne Masselo Silvine Picard Jose-Luis Casas Serrano Aurélie Avram Aurélia Morain Elsa Matocq Juliette Chatry Olivier Martin, AFR Arnaud Kaiser Costume Supervisor Key Costumer On-Set Costumers Costumers Buyer Tailors Seamstresses Milliner Costume Runners Makeup Department Head Makeup Artists Contact Lens Technician Department Head Hairstylist Extras Wig Artist Hairstylists Extras Casting by Extras Casting Assistants Location Manager (Voisins) Location Manager (Ivry / 65 Abraxas) Assistant Location Managers Ronan Michel Alphonse Huynh Cecile Enjalbal Axel Devaux Martin Pype Vincent Corbille Gregoire Mouveau Benoit Demoucron Sebastien Ordonez Alice Cordie Jan Lou Roussin Location Assistants Facilities Manager Facilities Assistants Production Accountant First Assistant Accountant Second Assistant Accountant Third Assistant Accountant Art Department Assistant Accountant Accountant Production Secretary Payroll Accountant Accounting Clerk Production Coordinator Assistant Production Coordinator Travel Coordinator Key Set Production Assistant Set Production Assistants Emmanuelle Balestrieri Claire Thoreux Audrey Martignon Benjamin Celliez Christine Bleunven Sandra Curiel Arnaud Ple Olivier Kaczmarek Segolene Amice Lagny Mickael Conan Geraldine Serafini Jean Ghesquiere Orsa Cousin Benoit Seiller Anne Lanco Charlotte Nguyen Hugo Rousselin Laurent Blu Stephen Melanga Gary Brocaud Marc Boubli Walter Shnorkerll Marie de Busscher Thibaut Herbet Arthur Tabuteau Frederic Bruguet Axel Moine Quentin Rigot Rodrigue Adompo Edouard Sueur Johann Sorin Victor Nataf Alexandrine Veyrier Maxime Lecoq Rose-Marie Gomes Dos Reis Aurelien Chaillou Delphine Bouya Benjamin L'Hoir Garance Cahoreau-Gallier Ludovic Erbelding Jean-Luc Roselier Jean-Pierre Cabardos Stephane Guerreau Eric Petit-Jean Jean-Pierre Agaesse Martin Boutilie Guy Lacroix Philippe Behar Marthinus Brand Patrick Bretonniere Philippe Carchon Yannick Heuveline Construction Manager Construction Buyer Head Carpenters Carpenter Gang Bosses On-Set Carpenter Carpenters 66 Laurent Bessou Isoline Favier Leonardo Pancari Yann Parussie Yoann Varin Julien Lebouvier Tiresias Mercier Franck Bonetto Christian Rivet Camille Nguyen Francis Nocture Jean-Philippe Da Benta Ireneusz Spiewak Benoit Squizzato Jean-Francois Juvanon Jacques Fresnel Bertrand Guinnebault Jerome Clavier Marie Predieri Isabelle Georges Philippe Meynard Elodie Pujol Martine Brassaert Lauriane Indekeu Vincent Dangoise Denis Chaboissier Stephane Blanc Regis Lebourg Peter Hammond Eddie Guittard Acacio Francisco Benoit Bourchis Patrice Fasola Olivier Garand Laurent Champoux Eli Petit-Jean Didier Tardivel Emilie David Najib Sobhi Valentine Gutierrez Assia Beldjerrou Jerzy Nowak Laercio Ribas Da Cruz Jean-Luc Whisker Nicolas Germain Vincent Martin Francois Roux Benjamin Vermot Muriel Nicolle Pauline Faisant Aleth Galen Bruno Guillemet Vincent Gazier Pascal Cheve Yannick Demarle Alexis Coletti Thomas Serre Xavier Longuet Fabrice Bourderioux Franck Heleno Maxime Couteret Nicolas Baudry Pierre Hue Charles Heidet Marc Letourneur Vanessa Altmeyer Pierre Andrin Welder Foreperson Welders Welder Trainee Utility Head Painter Painter Forepersons Painter Patinas Stand-by Painter Painters Sculptor Foreperson Sculptor Gang Boss Sculptors Staffer Construction Swing Gang Transportation Coordinator Transportation Captains Picture Car Coordinator Picture Car Assistant Drivers 67 Maxime Baulleret Bruno Benchimol Thierry Bernardet Damien Blumberg Damien Bonduel Denis Bourgeois Jerome Breban Jean-Claude Capronnier Thierry Carpentier Jamel Chabane Frederic Chartier Malik Chennit Pascal Chouvier Alexia Cipriani Philippe Coutureau Henri Darrasse Emmanuel De Bernardi Yves Dore Bertrand Doudet Stephane Dupeyrou Karine Durac Philippe-Emmanuel Etame Marc Fege Yannick Fleury Philippe Gallet Stephane Geneste Jean Steeve Gerard Christophe Giallella Jean-Paul Girbal Thierry Grenade Marc Guisiano Christian Guyonnet Benoit Hemard Yves Hoffmann Vincent Huot Moulay Hicham Jaouik Yann Jeannot Alain Lefevre Sébastien Le Mouel Michel Mahieu Pierre Marchal Samuel Marconnaux Antonio Marra Attilio Marra Gilles Marsalet Gerard Mayer Kevin Mayer Philippe Mayer Julien Meunier Boban Milosavljevic Jose Moura Antonia Olivares Dominique Pariza Louise Perissel Alphonso Robert Peres Vincent Petit Warren Pruvost Camille Rave Didier Ribes Maxime Ribes Jean-Baptiste Rogez Lionel Rothschild Morad Salhi Mamadou Sall Sylvine Salvagniac Valerie Servant Rachid Slimane 68 Nassim Souni Olivier "Tintin" Suffert Nina Surguine Alexandre Thiery David Tisse Sylvan Trystram Robert Turel Arnaud Vaillant Julien Van Steenwinckel Nabil Yassa Francis Marques Philippe Millot Resto Cine Joines Jean-Baptiste Evelyne Jean-Baptiste Julie Patenotte Reginald Raymond Dicedieu Resil Tom Guy Edwige Pourrier Kamel Kaloussi Bahija Hichami Marie Cerisier Christophe Thomas Aurélie Boderiou Leclercq Corentin Thomas Mikael Gaudin Jill Gage CARE On Set / Eric Ozanne (MD) James Iacino Sandrine Cormier Patrick Rolin Harold Heberle Mehdi Tabar Laurent Tremauville Mechanics Caterer Head Chef Catering Assistants Key Craft Service Craft Service Assistant Crowd Marshalls Set Medics Set Security Production Manager Production Coordinator First Assistant Director Art Director Director of Photography Script Supervisor Sound Mixer Boom Operator Key Grip Motion Control Gaffer Best Boy Facilities Manager Head Carpenter Head Painter Painter Patina Capitol Propaganda Roxanne Pinheiro Fred Millet William Pruss Laure Lepelley Monbillard David Nissen Chloé Rudolph Michel Kharat Frédéric Gendre Gérard Rival Nicolas Charuet Nicolas Sand Jérôme Fourquin Jean Louis Bergamini Gilles Brette Jérôme Hayot Cyril Hipeaux ADDITIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY Key Second Assistant Director Production Supervisor First Assistant "A" Camera Second Assistant "A" Camera Second Assistant "B" Camera Camera Utility Still Photographer Visual Effects Data Wrangler Music Playback Operator Utility Sound Key Grip Taka Kawakami Susan Ehrhart Jorge Sanchez Randy Stone Melissa Fisher Kyler Dennis Richard Foreman Joe Wehmeyer John Maskew Matt Derber Geoff Knoller 69 Best Boy Grip Dolly Grip Grips Rell Putt John Smalley Charlie Brown Travious Downer Clint Mahoney Jeffery Taylor Mike Campbell Angela Fogle Quinton Lindsey Shaun Spencer Nolan Aldridge James Kastelberg Mike Laird David McLendon Antimo Ponticello Ben Bowling Killian Clear Keith Cutler Jeremy Johnson Joe Harold Page Gregory Souris Jay Cooper Nathan S. Clark Jen Hicks Thomas Day Brian D. Smith Erinn Knight Rebecca Napier Russell Lindsay McAllister Ryan Gomez Missy Hintz Laveda Lewis Tim Patterson Alex Capaldi Monique Shaw Phil Richardson Derek Wilson Michele Etges David Oster Marcel Pinkowski Trevor Schliefer Jess Shuler Austin Freeman John Birchall Ryan Neal Talley Singer Tracy Stockwell Dan Engle Ann Stacy Katina Parham Alan F. Collins Kelsey Fowler Jim Waitkus Oranz Walker Emily Levine Orlando "Double O" Fooks Felicia P. Smith Agatha "Kassandra" Domineck Chris "Barefoot" Allen Terrance Bell Derek L. Harris Trey Hunter Donte Hunter Rennae Isles Dwayne Lain Nathan Mack Rigging Key Grip Rigging Grips Lighting Technicians Rigging Technicians Leadperson On-Set Dresser Set Dresser Property Master Special Effects Technician Costumers Key Hairstylist Production Accountant First Assistant Accountant Payroll Production Coordinator Assistant Production Coordinator Production Assistants Key Set Production Assistant Set Production Assistants Assistant to Ms. Lawrence Plaster Foreperson Modeler Gang Boss Lead Scenic Scenic Artist Painters Transportation Captains Dispatcher Drivers 70 Terence McDade Tony Steere Marvin Williams Tony Kerum Ivan Kerum Sergio Celis Peter Johnson Garry Nazaire Brad Terry Joe Deingenis Chris McDougal Andrea McDougal Barry Strait Thaddaeus Mercer Gregory Lenz Tyrone Kupritz Dean McManus Caterer Chef / Driver Chef Assistants Craft Service Assistant Craft Service Set Medics Construction Medics Set Security VFX ELEMENT UNIT First Assistant Director Key Second Assistant Director Key Set Production Assistant VFX Element Director of Photography Camera Operator First Assistant Camera Bac DeLorme Christy Busby Joe McDonough Mark Weingartner Denise Bailie Clyde Bryan Tom Nemy Gary Scott Andrew J. Borham Deb Cottrill Warren Brace Nathan McConnell Cory Schulthies Alejandro Wilkins Dea Cantu Brian Deutsch Rick Kline Dustin Evans Jason Stachur Jim Recznik Emory Goocher Dan Riffel German Valle Taurean Chappell Schenley Sargusingh Melvin O'Robert Frazier Cody McKinzie Neal Goff Adam Meadows Second Assistant Camera DIT Script Supervisor Key Grip Best Boy Grip Grips Gaffer Best Boy Electric Electricians Dimmer Operator Video Assist VFX ADDITIONAL ELEMENT UNIT First Assistant Director Key Second Assistant Director Director of Photography Camera Operator First Assistant Camera DIT Visual Effects Data Wrangler Script Supervisor Video Assist Key Grip Gaffer Best Boy Electric Prop Master Special Effects Coordinator Extras Casting by Production Assistant Set Production Assistants Greg Hale Neil Lewis Patrick Loungway Andrew Turman David Seekins Brook Willard Derrek Brajkovich-Horn Judi Townsend Johnny Medeiros Les Tomita Josh Davis Carlos Baker Douglas T. Madison Richie Helmer Kristan Berona Lindsey Harris Nick Charles 71 Tiffany Gomes Matt Mosley Mike Rutkowski Chris O'Hara Stunt Coordinator POST PRODUCTION Sound Designer Supervising Dialogue and ADR Editor Dialogue Editor Supervising Foley Editor Assistant Sound Editor Dubbing Recordist Dubbing Engineer ADR Mixers Jeremy Peirson Thomas Jones Ralph Osborn John Joseph Thomas Sarah Bourgeois Mark Purcell Bryon Williams Thomas J. O'Connell David Betancourt Michael Miller, CAS Ryan Young ADR Recordist Post Sound Services and ReRecording Provided by Warner Bros. Sound / Burbank Technicolor Sound at Paramount Alicia Stevenson Dawn Lunsford David Jobe Ranjani Brow Ashley Lambert Wendy Hoffmann Ranjani Brow Wendy Hoffmann Ashley Lambert Jackie Gonneau Elizabeth Bolton June Christopher Jennifer Foley Julie Falls Kerry Wollin Warren Sroka William Calvert Kirk Baily Jack Blessing Steve Alterman Rif Hutton Juan Pacheco Shane Sweet Michael Corbett George Perez Cameron MacConomy Bryan Pennington Technicolor - On-location Services Chris Giuffrida Cory Pennington Fabien Napoli Denise Woodgerd Foley Services Provided by Foley Artists Foley Mixer ADR Voice Casting by ADR Cast Dolby Sound Consultant High Definition Dailies Transfers by Technicolor Dailies Operator Technicolor Dailies Assistants Technicolor Dailies Producer Supervising Digital Colorist 2nd Digital Colorist Digital Intermediate Producer Digital Intermediate Editor Digital Intermediate Assistant Colorist Assistant Digital Intermediate Producer Previsualization & Postvisualization Services by Digital Intermediate by Efilm Mitch Paulson Elodie Ichter Loan Phan Devon Miller Jake King Lesley Nicolucci Halon Entertainment LLC 72 Previs Supervisor Postvis Supervisor Artists Clint G. Reagan Ryan McCoy Buffy Bailey Paul C. Berry Bryan Chojnowski Justin Coury Spencer Kelsey Craig D. McPherson Andre Mercier Andrew Moffett Matthew Newhart Casey Pyke Elaina Scott Zachary Wong Javier Zumaeta Patrice Avery The Third Floor, Inc. Scott Hankel Mike "Pharoah" Barrett Roger Liu Leonard Green Alexandra Zedalis Chris Edwards Kerry Shea Producer Previsualization Services by Previs Supervisor Previs Artists Previs Creative Supervisor Previs Producer Previs Assoc. Production Manager Previs Coordinator Previsualization Services by Previs Supervisor Previs Artists Claver Knovick Emily DeVitt The Cavalry FX, Inc. Gavin Wright David Aguilar Aaron Arendt Arsen Arzumanyan Christopher Batty Matt Bauer Chris Cantero Raffael Dickreuter Faris Hermiz Mary Manning Ben Nelson Parker Sellers Amy Vatanakul Daniel Zamora EPS-Cineworks Richie Adams Scarlet Letters Double Negative Adrian de Wet Melinka Thompson-Godoy Editorial Services Provided by Main and End Titles by End Crawl by Visual Effects by Visual Effects Supervisor Visual Effects Producer Visual Effects Supervisor Singapore Visual Effects Producer Singapore CG Supervisors Patric Roos Darryl Li Jeremy Hardin Benjamin Huber Mike Brazelton Walter Gilbert Harrison Goldstein Sara Khangaroot Esme Long Benjamin Carlson Sam Girdler Aylwyn Goh Eunice Khoo Liz Mann Ashleigh Yu Alene Tan 2D Supervisors Line Producers Coordinators Production Assistants 73 Josiah Singh Jake Lee Abigail Cadogan Edward Cross Andrew Edmondson Sing Hui Tan Dhuha Isa Andrew Poole Becky Graham Andrew Simmonds Rico Dober Joshua Robinson Timothy Clark WeiKian Ang Dinesh Bishnoi Matthew Crowe Michael Karp Oliver Atherton Dhiraj Brahma William Dao Kevin Norris Abu Thahir Eric Vezinet Robert Andrews Arild Anfinnsen Romain Buignet Marieke Franzen Federico Frassinelli Andras Ikladi Jeffrey Kasunic Richard Simko Guy Williams David Man Brett Reyenger VFX Editorial CG Sequence Supervisor 2D Sequence Supervisor FX Supervisor Model Supervisor Matte Painting Supervisor Matchmove Supervisors Roto/Prep Supervisors Lighting/Rendering Supervisor CG Lead Artists 2D Lead Artists Roto/Prep/Matchmove Lead Artists Dinesh Anbazhagan Gerald Ang Adeline Chan Cookie Chee Favian Ee Vijay KR Hanumantha Rao Sajeev Sadanandan Kunal Salunkhe Digital Matte Painters/Concept Artists Hovig Alahaidoyan Dave Freeman Dong Hun Kang Faizal Mohd Vamsi Mudraboina Abhijit Mulye Jia-Hao Ng Luan Nguyen Sullivan Richard Michael Steward Lubos Gerardo Surzin Kouji Tajima Andrew Williamson Habeeb Ahmed Purvez Amirali Gerald Ang Mario Antonanzas Dorothy Ballarini Manoj Barhate Branko Basarovski Frédéric Bonpapa Nicola Brodie CG Artists 74 Ye Cao Remi Cauzid Aleksandar Chalyovski Jerly Chang Thom Chang Zang Shiang Chen Dax Chew Ronald Chew Kian Shyang Chong Henry Chua Emily Cobb Josh Cooper Chris Coupe Alistair Darby Rajbir Singh Dhalla Prashant Dhotre Valerio Di Napoli Paresh Dodia Olivier Dubard Alex Galan Walter Goh Alexander Hartwin Jamie Haydock Daniel Hourigan Julius Ihle Martin Johansson Romain Joly Yong Jin Kim Duncan Kuah Terence Lam Dirk Lambert James Lee Jason Leo James Lewis Chew Teng Lim Melissa Lim Michael Lyle Animesh Maity Louis Manjarres Marco Manzini Rhodri Matthews Philip McAuliffe Effandi Mohamed Vikram Mohan Fernanda Moreno Madhu Nair Georges Nakhle Geng Tong Neo Daniel Neves Evan Ng Rainne Ng Tom O'Flaherty Alban Orlhiac Nizhen Phang Dione Quek Tavis Roberts Matthew Sadler Jorge Sanchez Tim Shim Digant Sutar Lionel Taillens Alex John Tan Jorg Unterberg Mengdi Wang Mattias Werner Tom Whitehead Ross Wilkinson 75 Ying Xiong Anna Yamazoe Farhad Yusufi Robert Zeltsch Sabina Bihlmaier Mike Boden Randy Brown Patrick Burke Helen Carr Saptarshi Chakraborty Wayne Chan Paul Chapman Ricky Cheung Kunal Chindarkar Julian Chong Andreas Cronstrom Francesca Dare Francesco DellAnna Ben Dick Favian Ee Joe Engelke Javier Fernandez Eli Ferre Shizuka Fukuda Michelle Goh Varun Hadkar Michael Harkin Tom Hocking Zameer Hussain Selvan Ilamurugu Matthew Jacques Helen Johnson Jean-Francois Leroux Sky Lim Lorenzo Lovera Michael Lowry Tony Lyons Giacomo Matteucci Alice Mitchell Sandrine Moniez Travis Nelson Shailendra Pandey Miriam Pavese Mark Payne Angelica Perez Angelo Perrotta Travis Porter Aled Prosser Giorgia Pulvirenti Sam Reed Stephanie Saillard Juan Ignacio Salgado Alessandro Salis Gianfranco Sgura Siddharth Shah Aarti Shukla Christopher Sillitoe Thomas Steiner Paul Stirling Jelena Stojanovic David Joseph Sweeney Andras Szocs Raymond Tan Chris Tay Emeline Tedder Corinne Teo Stephen Tew 2D Artists 76 Adam Trowse Pavan Rajesh Uppu Jan Van de Laar Pau Viladot Ruochen Wang Christine Wong Anton Yri Khaled Zeidan David Zeng Cleve Zhu Daniel Caffrey Alvin Chia David Chia Caleb Choo Dibbyo Choudhary Evelyn Chow Kenneth Chua Adam Collins Sudip Dutta Sureshkumar E Wayne Er Akash Gade Collin Hee Hemant Hiraman-Gaikwad Sreedev J Virendra Jadhav Awadhut Joshi Prachi Kambli Matthew Kee Narender Koshiyari Amit Kumar Firdaus AB Latif Hao Feng Liang Pei Shan Lim Prashant Limkar William Lin Rajendra Malla Nafisah Mohamed Shakil Nadkarni Shankar Narayanan Celleste Ng Siddhant Paigankar SuneelKumar Palla Amey Panchal Saurabh Patel Sumer Patel Amol Patil Anil Reddy CH Daniel Ryan Gautam Sarode Amanda Seah Amir Shaazza Sean Shia Suraj Shinde Sachin Shivkar Ganesh Singh Kapil Soni Avadhoot Tambe Gabriel Tan Kwan Yew Tan Michael Tan Seng Kiat Tan Theophane Tan Zheng Wei Tan Tay Hwah Tang Kenzo Tee Nishant Teli Matchmove Artists 77 Dhananjay Verma Jeremy Wong Ruiting Wang Yong Jie Wong Esther Yap B Yuvarajan Joel Aguilar Saurabh Arora Nithin Babu Alexandre Bain Michael Baker Bhojarajan Balan Somnath Bobade Sushovan Bose Matthew Cameron Janice Chandra Cheow Hong Chia Ishwar Chougule Andrea Chua Kalpesh Churi Rakesha CR Nicole D'Cotta Mayank Dabral Chandrashekar Dindu Jayshri Dudhyal Lui Fontillas Rachel Foo Tripuraj Gond Thatipamula Goud Hj Hasnadi Mike Hill Melvin Hong Sam Horgan Therese Johansson Nazira Kassim Iqbal Khan Elicia Koo Rama Krishna-Agirishetty Kai Siang Kuah Mohit Kumar Suman Kumar Vinod Kumar Anil Kumar-Reddy Devesh Kumar-Yadav CH Kurumurthy Vijin Laithambika Johnny Lee Pratyush Lenka Nicolas Lim Kew Lin Vinayak Mahadik Michelle McKeating Nicolas Millot Nitesh Mishra Hidayat Isnin Muhd Chetan Narade Joan Ng Choon Juan Ong Shobhit Pal Aditya Pandey Jaiprakash Parmar Ajay Patel Guy Penwill Aditya Ponguri Ramachandra Prabhu Jagannadham Rajana Chandramouly Ramulu-Kannuri Roto/Prep Artists 78 Venkatesh Ranganathan Vishal Raut Ankush Ravre Srihari Reddy Laxminarayan Sahoo Purva Shah Upasana Shanker Aditya Sharma Sagar Shrinath Danielle Siah Jia Yi Siew Chuan Xiong Sim Sheelvant Singh-Kshatriya Nadia So Liam Spencer Kiran Surendran Joanne Tai Choon Xuan Tan Jerrod Tan Rahul Thakur Sinto Thomas Jacky Toh Hiroko Ueno Alejandro Vela-Castro Sandupatla Vinayak Adam Walker Peter Welton Kristofer Whitford Kai Wing Wong LeongKit Wong Ken Yap Jun Xian Yue Rosli Zainal Md Zishan-Ahmad Roto/Prep/Matchmove Production Adam Barde Jatin Bhavsar Sze Jia Eng Kundan Jha Vivek Joshi Sajid Khan Mehul Mavani Nicole Nonis Vivek Pundir Ashwin Raju Akash Roy Saneha Sharma Craig Bates Robert Davies Nivedita Goswami Yang Ki Tay Yan Zou Africa Aguirre Eric Bachtiar Miles Drake Pete Hanson Laurie Pellard Philip Pendlebury Kat Tysoe SauYan Wong Lisa Wood Francois Bleibel Shane Christopher Bea Domenge Boon Hean Low Liam Hoflay Damien Maupu Pipeline TD/ATDs Data Managers Research and Development 79 Harshna Patel Mungo Pay Martin Prazak Emmanuel Turquin Michael Zannetou Toh ZiJing Will Lucas Lauren Perry Menglu Song Vanessa Velasquez Colin Brown Stephen Feltham Catarina Goncalves Garry Maddison Hannes Sap Tech Department Grading Visual Effects & Animation Created by Visual Effects Supervisor Senior Visual Effects Supervisor Animation Supervisor CG Supervisor Compositing Supervisor FX Supervisor Production Manager Executive Producer Head of Production Senior Model Artist Lead Creature Artist Lead Shader Writer Lead Texture Artist Animation Weta Digital Limited Martin Hill Joe Letteri Eric Reynolds Luke Millar Mark Richardson Brian Goodwin Lucy Appleby David Conley Cyndi Ochs Kenichi Nishida David Short Mathias Larserud Georgy Arevshatov Nino Kristoffer C. Aniceto Mike Aslin Ronan Binding Moragot Bodharamik Julia Jooyeon Chung Ryan Cronin Simeon Duncombe Yannick Gillain Elizabeth Gray Jim Hatibarua Huy Ho Peter Kasim Tom Kloc Makoto Koyama Jerry Kung Carmelo Leggiero Garrick Rawlingson Mark Stanger Andrew Giakhang Tran Derrick Auyoung Thomas Meade Alex Gregory Telford Leon Woud Don Bradford Ben Campbell Alexia Cui Robin Kuyper David A. Ostler Helen Paul Kenneth C. Gimpelson Jake Lee Robert K. O. McLeod David Saxon Ki-Hyun Kim Tristan McMahon Christopher A. J. Pitt Cody Amos Animation TD's Lighting TD's Lighting Pipeline TD's Assistant Lighting TD's FX TD's 80 Gaelle Delcourt Chris Edwards Matthew Harris Lorenzo Lavatelli Sean Seongkyun Lee Cornelius Porzig Eddy Purnomo Sebastian H. Schmidt Andreas Söderström Sandy Sutherland Jonathan S. Swartz Nathan Abbot Johan Aberg Ella Boliver Norman Cates Daphne De Jesus Keith Herft Christoffer Hulusjö Steve McGee Paul Raeburn Paul Redican Jordan Schilling Florian Schroeder Michael Thingnes Tobias Wiesner Compositors Department Heads & Supervisors Gino Acevedo Phil Barrenger Lee Bramwell Simon Clutterbuck Alasdair Coull Graeme Demmocks Shawn Dunn Areito Echevarria Luca Fascione Richard Frances-Moore Kathy Gruzas Quentin Hema Matt Holmes Marco Revelant Charles Tait Pete Williams Jedrzej Wojtowicz Tom Buys Kristin Cambie Marten Coombe Chloe Feodoroff Jen Gillespie Diana Godo Samantha Haines David Hampton Cale Hetariki Carey Johnson James E. Knowles Shelley Matsutani Richard Matthews Robert McDougall Patrick Miller Jennifer Leigh Mortimer Arwen Munro Peti Nohotima Brice Parker Kris Rich Janet Sharpe Anne P. Taunga Sandy Coco Taylor Mariko Tosti Production 81 Beck Woolhouse Dmitry Alkhimov Primož Bončina Benjamin Brenneur Justin Chappell Vernessa Cook Sakey Dariusz Długosz Lindsay George Isaac Hamon Tom Holzinger Corrado Ianiri James Leon Jones Jr Matthew Kapfhammer David Luke Chris Moss Wei Ning Tony Norman Martin Orlowski Daniel Ostrov Pemerika Pemerika Simon Quach George Redmond Sora K. Sewambar Rod Lewis Smith Razvan Vacar James Van Der Reyden Gavin Williams Pete Woodley-Page Jason Gordon Mark Haenga James Moore Olaf A. W. Skjenna John Stevenson-Galvin Sompong Teekasathien Clare Woodford-Robinson Rémi Fontan Nikolay Gabchenko Laure Lacroix Jasmine Wong Tristan Alarcon Rupert N. D. Ashton Nick Grace Yoshihiro Harimoto Richard John Moore Nick Shore Amy Thomas Matthias Zeller Dan Ayling Amy Cuthbertson Eamon Samuel Duncan Ludovic Fouche Mark L. Holmes Stephen R. Hutt Stephen Karl Alex Kramer Lars Kramer Jason Locke Matt Mueller Wolfgang Niedermeier Stephan Remstedt Peter Salter Marc Smith Albrecht Steinmetz Bernard M. Stock Raphael Thiery Jon Thorsen Glenn Wells Motion Capture/Motion Editing Models/Layout Textures/Shaders Creature TD's Camera TD's 82 Paint/Roto Jessica Bascom Scott Baxter Lucy Beeler Ria-Bella Buys Ryan Bennett Josh Canalini Robin Stuart Cape Tim Cheng Wonmok Mark Choi Douglas Chubb Jasper Chung Jim Croasdale Jason Cutler Chris J. Gerrard Agnes Gould Geoffrey Hadfield Kerstin Herold Prerana Jaiswal Danny Jones Fern King Ricky T. McMahon Daniel Meighan Seth F. Miller Matthew Mylchreest Ray Ooi Daniel Luke Orr Emrys Plaisted Christin Quek Troy Ramsey Craig Douglas Rattray Hanna Marijke Stewart Prajeesh Thomas Imaging/Editing/Data Management Daniel Ashton Nick Booth Joerg W. Bungert Shaun Laws James Meikle Stephen Roucher Amber Marie Smith Angus Ward Richard Addison-Wood Jean-Marie Aubry Jack Elder Andrew Harvey Peter Hillman Myles Elliott Jackson Peter James McGrattan Paolo Emilio Selva Shijun Haw Björn Siegert Jorge Schwarzhaupt Andrea Weidlich Rebs Guarina Teijo Holzer Barbara L. Howe Eddie J. Hoyle Justin Israel Niall J. Lenihan Renton McNeill Tim Murphy Steve Bayliss Chris Bolger Moss Bowering-Scott David Brunette Tanya Buchanan Erina Chamberlain Research and Development Rendering Production Engineering Support Services 83 Byron Darling Alice Frost Mike Gunn Greta F. Hewitt Ian Jack Tessa Kershaw Brendan Keys Heather Kinaston-Smith Sally Mainland Sarah Marriott Daniel Marwick Sherryn Matthews Vaughan C. Mayclair Andrew McJorrow Gabriel Page Samuel Alexander Page Ezmae Reid Kim Rickard Sally Shanahan Poppy Sinclair-Lockhart Jeanne Stuart Linda Wall Ange Waller Iraia Whakamoe Akakoa Williams Alicia Williams Ivy Willmott David Wright Ian Baker Michael James Burborough Andrew C. Cahill Hamish Charleson Matt Cunningham Elliot Gardner Archie Koning Arthur Low Zachary R. Pater Jay Rama Andrew Ross Jeremie Ryan Bill Ryder Clinton Scott Simon J. H. Smith Deborah Stephens Alan Stevenson-Galvin Angus D. Williams Andy Wright John Young MPC David Seager Laura Schultz Michael Adkisson Mark Michaels Max Wood Georgina Street Kayleigh Harding Lauren Barnes Lara Berners Kirk Chantraine Dugan Chen Carlos Ciudad Ben Duncan Gordon Dunick Francesca Frazzi Dipesh Gajjarr Ben Harrison Barbara Holmes IT Visual Effects by Visual Effects Supervisor Visual Effects Producer 2D Supervisors CG Supervisor VFX Production Managers VFX Production 84 Edan Hopper Vidyadhara Karedla Abhishek Kemkar Tom Melson Dora Morolli Kartiki Patil Eric Qui Aled Robinson Richard Romero Pip Sellick-Taylor Jithendran Thottupurath Robert Tovell Tamarin Williamson Lisa Gonzalez David Skorepa Jose Antonio Martin Antonios Magdalinidis Oliver Dale Andrew Bain Kelly Walsh Gianluca Pizzaia Sandra Murta Sujay Kumar Shreedhra Trehan Gopi Krishna Kelsey Gow David Schneider Laszlo Mates Daniel Alejo Peter Dudley Rafal Kaniewski Srinivasa Raju Martin Riedel Amit Sharma Juan Alonso Sathish Babu Carlos Balila Swamy Bogram Ioan Boieriu Raja Bose Katreena Bowell Jeffrey Burt Claude Chabot Chandrasekhar Chagatipati Pedram Christopher Sam Cox Christophe Dehaene Chema del Fresno Martinez Pablo Del Molino Izqueirdo Bharath Ediga Daniel Fernandez Julia Flanagan Juan Garcia Hanna Goodman Nicolaas Groot Bluemink Jonny Gu Dinesh Gudimetla Candice Harvey Alberto Hernandez Thomas Hiebler Andrew Hodgson Gabor Hovanyi Seok Ryan Jang Merriet Jero Tadaomi Kawasaki Karthi Keyan Bumjun Jeremy Kim Lead Digital Artists Digital Artists 85 Mandy King Shuen Wong Pauline Koh Michelle Korczak Georgios Kyparissous Balamurugan Lakshmanan Joe Levac Philip Lorentzson Rasely Ma Tytus Majerski Suraj Makhija Tsvetomir Marinov Ian Mathews Paul Mathon Lee Matthews Arun Mohan Aravinda NB Yashwanth Noogola Negin Paydarfar Gina Pentassuglia Gianluca Pizzaia Emile Poissant Jose David Portales Jagadeesh Pratap Anirudh R Rokas Rakasuskas Leslie Renaud Scott Sanderson Durga Santosh Jan Sarbort Mag Sarnowska Yoann Schmid Anissa Senoussi-Nicastro Alican Sesli Fabio Siino Po Sing Chu Maciej Skoluba Chris Stefiuk Andrew Thompson Vladimir Tkachenko Mark Tompkins Audrius Urbonivicus Daniel Veilikov Ricardo Velez Lea Vera Toro Kenson Wang David Welstead-Wood Bernard Wicksteed Remo Wieland The Embassy Visual Effects Inc. Winston Helgason Danielle Kinsey Annie-Claude Lapierre Visual Effects by Visual Effects Supervisor Visual Effects Producer Visual Effects Project Manager Visual Effects Production Assistant CG Supervisor Compositing Supervisor Asset Lead Asset Artists Caitlin Jessen Michael Blackbourn Michael Stewart Paul Copeland Darren Porter Donmil Yip Andy Chan Anna Kang Karinga Wells Dmitri Bajenov Himanshu Joshi Tanner Scott Simon van de Lagemaat Matchmove Artists Animator FX Artists Lighting Artists 86 Tristam Gieni Cesar Rodriguez Eden Munoz Kevin Hadi Mei Chu Austin Basile Ed Englander Eldose Madott Marc-Andre Gray Prashant Raj J. Aaron Kambeitz Cantina Creative Jay Grunfeld Donna Cullen Stephen Lawes Sean Cushing Alan Torres Jayse Hansen Sang Youb Shin Nhi Ngoc Vo Alexandra Boden Karla Curby Julianne Dome Aaron Eaton Matt Eaton Junghwa Hong Lauren Hulsey Jennifer Kennedy Tony Lupoi Stephen Morton Leon Nowlin, Jr. Fernando Raigoza Jr. lola | VFX Edson Williams Allison Paul Roto/Paint Lead Roto/Paint Artists Compositors Concept Artist Visual Effects by Visual Effects Supervisor Visual Effects Producer Compositing Supervisor Executive Producer Designers VFX Artists Visual Effects by Visual Effects Supervisor Visual Effects Producer Visual Effects Executive Producer Compositing Supervisor Lead Compositor Compositors Thomas Nittmann Jeremiah Sweeney William Barkus David Levine Drew Huntley Brian Hajek Yuki Uehara Chris Cabrera Jason Schaefer Rob Olsson Sun Lee Josh Singer Lee Mar Adedunmola Olanrewaju Onur Cayli Juan Alvarez Erik Werlin Daniel Flores Greg Meadows Adrian Salas Melanie Tucker Scott Jepson Jason Gandhi Max Leonard Skulley Effects Culley Bunker Kimberly Church Nathan L. Boyette Tsuyoshi Kobayashi Dally Garcia Digital Matte Painters 3D Artists Roto Artists Pipeline Engineers Visual Effects by Visual Effects Supervisor Visual Effects Producer Visual Effects Coordinator Compositing Supervisor Compositors 87 Stephen Olmos Ian Johnston Carsten Dietz Ramon Hamilton Janik Ruehl Exceptional Minds Visual Effects by Head of Production/Visual Effects Supervisor VFX Executive Producer Compositing Supervisor Artists Craig Seitz Susan Zwerman Immanuel Morris Patrick Brady Christopher Chapman Josh Dagg Lloyd Hackl Eli Katz Magnopus Craig Barron Magdalena Wolf Visual Development by Visual Effects Supervisor Visual Effects Producer Visual Effects Production Coordinator Concept Designers Lap Van Luu Chris Evans Alex Nice Steven Messing Caio Andrade Lidar Guys Gentle Giant Studios, a 3D Systems Company Scott Willman Heather Willman Jason Ramsey Greg DiGiacomo Gener8 Ben Breckenridge Paul Becker Chad Cortvriendt Sarah Young Ben Murray Isaac Guenard Peter Pelisek Tim Chou Ted Sandifer Marlon Engel Jason Bowers Dan Carnegie Craig Houston Ethan Casper Dan Langlois Tylor Maurer Collin Kortschak Warren Larkam Annsh Patel Jon Warne James Chang Richard Pring Shen Liu Lei Zhang Sooman Ginze David Serrano Erik Classen Ipyana Ponder JoAnna Johnson Robert Maisonet Nirmal Kumar Dave Ladner Dan Carpenter Jenna Sunde System Admin LIDAR Services Provided by 3D CyberScanning Provided by Stereo Supervisor Stereo Producer Stereo Production Manager Stereo Coordinator Stereo Conversion by Senior Stereo Supervisor Executive Producer Producer Stereo Supervisor Supervisors Production Editorial Stereo Artists 88 Giles Longman Joshil Patel Jahan Zeb Michael Souvage George Ferris Judy Nguyen Robin Dutta Billy Smith Michael Mansueto Alvaro Zendejas JP Connery Cody Graham Damian Karwowski Francisco Massanet Cobol Yu Jared Bonin Zachary Ng Donaji Zuniga Rojas Alexander Reid Owen Cartagena Brittany Wetzel Eric Mitchell Michael Jimenez Nathan Behmlander Murat Ayasli Brendan Llave Sami Pinto (Oms) Melissa Best Jan Paul Dorr Daniel Stein Bradley Millford Daniel Mason Justin Kim Vance Dehne Jason Negreiff Mike Accettura Elvis Yang Alex Martinez Monroy Erika Lehner Jushua Provido Stephanie Chan Justin Tan Chad Haskell Ian White Tifannie Jacoubsen Eldon Derksen Jayson Davis Rafael Echegaray Robert Reategui Lex Millena Ivanna Mikhaylova Brandon Barney Geoffrey Harlos Brian McCann Rino George Tasha Brotherton Jimi Clark Clarkson Jorge Jimenez Niv Ende Emmanuel Rojas Jurado Ryan Hamar Monica Munoz Rushabh Punmiya Heather Hughson Emmanuel Guevarra Meagan Byrt Jeff Yu 89 Truyen Senh Dang Joshua DaSilva Aleksander Hardi Matthew Schmoll Karla Odemaris Burgos Rocha David Parada Carlos Alberto Oceguera Sierra Stephen Mascarenhas Nixon Fernando Parminder Chadda Piyush Jain Aakash Singh Rajput Digambar Shivaji Pingat Harendra Rajbhar Juganu Kumar Kunal Madan Shirsate Mangesh Patil Mohan Jagdale Nirakar Rabindra Sethy Pravin Chetry Ravi Raj Robin Mamachan Rupesh Kumar Singh Sandeep Saraswat Sandeep Suresh Kotkar Suheb Issak Rakhangi Trilochan NaIk Uttam Sharma Vikas Tulshiram Ther Vivek Bakerao Shelke Swapnil Soni Allan Peresh Christian Athindriya Dasgupta Deepak Chandra Deepti Nadhan Gaurav Mandole Kamini Nivangune Mayumi Boruah Omprakash Ray Punit Kumar Vishwakarma Pushparaj Singh Rahul A. Khanna Rajnish Kumar Ravindra D. Golatkar Ravindra Singh Rathore Sagar Gawde Sameer Rane Sherin Varghese Vimal Dehma Yogesh Nikam Arundhati Jaiswal Avadhut Pradeep Nerurkar Deepesh Dwivedi Gorakh Dagdu Jagdale Jafin Jecob Komal Dogra Mandar Korhalkar Muthuraman A Neha Sadre Padmanadan Chetty Pradeepkumar B. Jadhav Rajesh Kanhaiya Yadav Ranjeet Nawalkishor Singh Ravindra Pandurang Shinde Shiwaji P. Sawant Swapnil Hajgude Assis Lead Vinutha Sridhara Marimganti Head of Stereo Conversion Stereo Producer Head of Pipeline Stereo Artists 90 Sunil Kumar Virendra A Dangle Legend3D Anthony Dunifer Jamie Pastor Keith Kolod Jenny Dolan Tiku Fisher Amanda Morgan Jessica Ozbirn Daniel Ricwulf Lynn Sibley Natalie Tejada Tom Driscoll Matt Akey Chris Del Conte Andrew Farris Anthony Garcia Eric Heaton Kim Henry Adam Lauwers Gloria Nguyen Ryan Ramsey Erasmo Romero Tyler Wheeler Aileen Acayan Jillianne Aclan Cameron Ake Israel Alatorre Tovonaina Andriamampionona Lilian Angel Kamran Arian Jeffrey Au Rami Bahsous Brad Banda Christian Barratt Justin Beattie D.J. Becerral Jessica Bell Chris Bloom Mark Bolibruch David Bradley-Bell Annie Breedlove Joshua Bristow Joshua Callahan Sean Callahan Sarah Canale Antonio Carrasco Nicolas Casanova Julien Chagnon-Zimmerly Auggie Christman August Christman Bruce Chung Christine Clippinger Agustin Cortes Matt Crispo Chad Cutler Nyssa Dalley Samuel Darnell Josh Deason Leonardo Delaney Reyna Delaney Eshan Dissanayake Adam Dunn Jean-Paul Ear Brandon Edgar James Eggleston 3D Conversion by Stereo Supervisor Stereo Producer Stereo Compositing Supervisor Depth Supervisor Stereo Coordinators Depth Grade Operator L3D Executive Producer L3D Head of Production Lead Stereo Artists Stereo Artists 91 Randahl Elkins Kathryn Fay Anthony Florio Jennifer Gallaugher Brannek Gaudet Philip Gordon Curtis Green Anthony Gregory Jeremy Hall Andrew Hall Jason Hebert Julia Heseltine Kim Hickey Wilson Ho Jameson Hoang Felix Honda Shane Inch Quan Jiang Jake Jones Brad Kaiser Christopher Kerr Angelina Kryvosheyina Stephanie Ku Gary Layug JiYoung Lee Shae Lepere Lun Li Fernando Limasuribe Alexander Limpin Colm Mackay Khoi Mai Laura Massingham Dj Matias Cody McCaig Sean McCarty Steven Mccreanor Jeff McIntyre Brandon Mcmenamin Wanamas Meevasana Taylor Meraz Sheetal Meshram Riley Mitchison Summyr Montesanto Javier Moreno Eric Ng Wendy Nguyen Glenn Osgood Benjamin Pablo Garrett Pedde Nick Perrotta Jessica Petrunti Sandy Phetchamphone Melvin Philip Leo Plasencia Adam Quattrociocchi Esmeralda Ramirez Chris Razack Josiah Reeves Andrew Rhinehart Sade Ricketts Steve Romero Daniel Sandoval Julius Santos Kate Schultz Andrea Sciame Natalia Shevcun Michelle Shoukralla 92 Kris Sison Joshua Smith Matthew Smith Trystan Snodgrass Minjae Song Anna Sou Perry Stoutt Wessley Summers Matthew Swanton Michael Sweetser Brian Sziklasi Genevieve Thauvette Sunny Thipsidakhom Dida Tosheva Ted Trabucco Ben Ussher Chloe Valdecantos Christian Valenzuela Kealani Vanderleest Valeri Vidakovic Vanesa Vidakovic Matthew White Aaron Williams Jessica Wolff Charlie Wong Danielle Woods John Wootton Caroline Ye Ryan Yeung Fotokem Mato Der Avanessian Larry Michalski Perry Suppa Prints by Lab Color Timer Sales Executive Scheduler FOR LIONSGATE Co-Chairman, Motion Picture Group Co-Chairman, Motion Picture Group Co-President, Motion Picture Group President of Production, Motion Picture Group Executive Vice President, Production & Development Senior Vice President, Production & Development Assistant to Mr. Friedman Assistant to Mr. Wachsberger Assistants to Mr. Feig Rob Friedman Patrick Wachsberger Erik Feig Michael Paseornek Jim Miller Matthew Janzen Rachel Scheer Deborah Ortega Nirokhi Raychaudhuri Amanda Kruse Dana Gills Chase Clements Hannah Harris Assistant to Mr. Paseornek Assistant to Mr. Miller Assistant to Mr. Janzen Vice President, Production Finance Vice President, Production Accounting Vice President, Production Supervisors of Production Mark Pedante Jeff Dash Curtis A. Miller Bree Bailey Ami Cohen Manager of Production & Development Production Finance Coordinator Executive Vice President, Business & Legal Affairs Executive Vice President, Kyle Benn Cara Smiczek Robert Melnik Patricia Laucella 93 Business & Legal Affairs Executive Vice President, Business & Legal Affairs Executive Vice President, Business & Legal Affairs Senior Vice President, Business & Legal Affairs Senior Vice President, Business & Legal Affairs Attorney, Business & Legal Affairs Vice President, Business & Legal Affairs Senior Credits Coordinator Credits Assistant Assistant to Mr. Melnik Assistant to Ms. Laucella Assistants to Ms. Chiaramonte & Mr. Strina John Biondo Deborah Chiaramonte Philip J. Strina Charlyn Adkins Marc Shapiro Amy Tillman Chris Mello Karina Garcia Jennifer Kristin Cox Elizabeth Roberts April Stewart Journey Heaton Tim Palen Chief Marketing Officer EVP, Worldwide Theatrical Publicity EVP, Digital Marketing SVP, Theatrical Marketing SVP, Theatrical Marketing SVP, Worldwide Promotions & Consumer Products SVP, Research and Strategy SVP, Worldwide Publicity EVP, Global Franchise Management & Partnerships SVP, International Marketing & Publicity SVP, Head of Feature Post Production Vice President, Feature Post Production Visual Effects Executive Manager, Feature Post Production Senior Coordinator, Feature Post Production Coordinator, Feature Post Production Post Production Assistant Executive in Charge of Film Music General Manager & EVP, Music Business Affairs Music Executive Music Business Affairs Music Finance Executive Manager, Film Music Senior Coordinator, Film Music Music Coordinator Julie Fontaine Danielle DePalma John Fu Doug Lloyd Paula Kupfer Jean McDowell Jennifer Peterson Kerry Phelan Melissa Martinez Carl Pedregal Mark W. McCoy Kathy Chasen-Hay Ariana Young Justin Powell Kimi Rosenthal Eric Van Dyn Hoven Amy Dunning Lenny Wohl Trevon Kezios Raha Johartchi Chris Brown Nikki Triplett Ryan Svendsen Rona Rapadas Matt Lilley / MCL Music Services, Inc. Carter Armstrong Music Clearance and Licensing Music Consultant Executive Vice President, Finance Screening Operations Executive Cameras Provided by Wescott A. Guarino Timothy Ralston Panavision Chapman / Leonard Studio Equipment, Inc. Cinemoves, Inc. Camera Dollies Provided by Camera Cranes by 94 Grip & Lighting Equipment Provided by Payroll Service Provided by Cinelease Grip & Lighting Equipment Entertainment Partners EFS Entertainment Arthur J. Gallagher Entertainment Insurance Services Brian Kingman Theresa Balaszi Rodney Isaac Insurance Provided by Production Financing Provided by Union Bank, N.A. Anthony Beaudoin Bryan LaCour Matthew J. Anderson Comerica Entertainment Group Jeff Colvin Adam J. Korn Completion Guaranty Provided by Film Finances Inc. David Bennett Ivener & Fullmer LLP David R. Fullmer Bonnie Sisson Jim Weidman David Olson Philip Tallman Shawn Murphy Immigration Law & Work Visas Supervising Music Editor Music Editor Temp Music Editor Score Recorded and Mixed by Additional Arrangements and Synth Programming Additional Music by Orchestrations Sven Faulconer Gabe Witcher Pete Anthony Jeff Atmajian Jon Kull John Ashton Thomas Peter Bateman Peter Boyer Orchestra and Choir conducted by Choir Choirmasters Pete Anthony London Voices Terry Edwards Ben Parry Trinity Boys Choir David Swinson Sunna Wehrmeijer Thomas Bowes Sonia Slany Giles Lewin Richard Boothby Richard Tunnicliffe Isobel Griffiths Susie Gillis Chris Cozens Richard Grant Mark Graham Joann Kane Music Service Erik Swanson David Channing Carlos Mosquera Johnny Traunwieser Christopher Wray Pamela Sollie Abbey Road Studios, London, UK James Newton Howard Studios, Santa Monica, CA Boys' Choir Boys' Choirmaster Solo Vocalist Orchestra Leader Solo Fiddles Viola de Gamba Baroque Cello Orchestra Contractor Assistant Orchestra Contractor Auricle Control Systems Music Librarian Music Preparation by Mix Recordist Scoring Editor Assistant Scoring Editor Second Mix Engineer Synth Programming Scoring Coordinator Score Recorded at Score Mixed at 95 Score Available On REPUBLIC RECORDS [logo] "DEEP IN THE MEADOW (LULLABY)" Lyrics by Suzanne Collins Music by T Bone Burnett and Simone Burnett Performed by Jennifer Lawrence SPECIAL THANKS This project was completed with assistance from the Georgia Film, Music & Digital Entertainment Office, a division of the Georgia Department of Economic Development This film benefited from the French Tax Rebate for International Production With the participation of the Canadian Film or Video Production Services Tax Credit With the participation of the Province of British Columbia Production Services Tax Credit The filmmakers acknowledge the assistance of the New Zealand Government's Screen Production Grant This film was produced with the support of [DFFF logo] [Ontario Wordmark Tax Credit LOGO] Akkua srl - Brescia - Italy Alexis Bittar LLC Anastasia Radevich Bonnie Young Bumble and Bumble Canali Clermont Lounge Clinique Daniel Vi Le Etxeberria Gary Graham Inaisce Juun J. Kevin Murphy Kris "KB" Bagwell © La Géode - Paris, Adrien Fainsilber - Architect La Mer Luis Alvarez of Aquage MAC Make-up For Ever MJQ Murad NARS Natura Bisse Obsessive Compulsive Cosmetics Paul Mitchell Products Paul Mitchell The School - Atlanta Peter Movrin Pierce Law Group LLP Quis Quis Ricardo Bofill - Abraxas Architect Soren Bach Steffie Christiaens Tuomas Laitinen Umi Urban Decay Valmax Ville de Ivry Sur Seine Ville de Noisy Le Grand WEN Hair Care FILMED AT EUE / Screen Gems Studios 96 TEAMSTERS [logo] SAG / AFTRA [logo] DOLBY ATMOS® [logo] FILMED ON LOCATION IN Atlanta, Georgia Berlin, Germany Paris, France American Humane Association monitored the animal action. No animals were harmed®. (AHAD 05258) [logo] Camera and Lenses by Panavision [logo] [Aspera VFX logo] NO. 49995 [logo] MOTION PICTURE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA, INC. © 2015 Lions Gate Films Inc. All Rights Reserved. The persons and events in this motion picture are fictitious. Any similarity to actual persons or events is unintentional. This motion picture is protected under the laws of the United States and other countries. Unauthorized duplication, distribution or exhibition may result in civil liability and criminal prosecution. 97 IATSE [logo] [Fotokem logo]