With the Harry Potter film series done and dusted and the Twilight Saga limping towards its finale, a new teen fiction adaptation is being let loose on us, and it's seriously good stuff.
The Hunger Games is based on the young adult novel by Suzanne Collins, who was involved in adapting what's likely to be the first of a screen trilogy with director Gary Ross. Together they have crafted a film that for almost two and a half hours has you on the edge of your seat.
It's not the most original dystopian fable. But with its well-formed characters, strong narrative, tense action and heartbreaking moments, The Hunger Games is more than just a blockbuster film of a blockbuster book, it's also smart, poignant and thrilling.
We're transported into a futuristic America, a post-apocalyptic world called Panem with a class structure where the rich and powerful live decadent lives while coming up with ways to keep the poor oppressed. The citizens of Capital have little to worry about, except perhaps what extravagant outfit they are going to wear next, with a dress sense seemingly influenced by a mix of Marie Antoinette and Willy Wonka.
That's in a stark comparison to those in the enslaved 12 Districts where life is purely about survival, and never more so than at the annual Hunger Games.