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3. Nina Jacobson (born September 15, 1965) [citation needed] is an American film executive who, until July 2006, was president of the Buena Vista Motion Pictures Group, a subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company. [1] With Dawn Steel, Gail Berman and Sherry Lansing, she was one of the last of a handful of women to head a Hollywood film studio since ...
Box office. $865 million [2] The Hunger Games: Catching Fire is a 2013 American dystopian action film directed by Francis Lawrence from a screenplay by Simon Beaufoy and Michael deBruyn, based on the 2009 novel Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins. The sequel to The Hunger Games (2012), it is the second installment in The Hunger Games film series.
The website's critical consensus reads, "With the unflinchingly grim Mockingjay Part 2, The Hunger Games comes to an exciting, poignant, and overall satisfying conclusion." [114] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 65 out of 100, based on 45 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [115]
“The Hunger Games” and “American Crime Story” producers Nina Jacobson and Brad Simpson have inked an overall film deal with Sony Pictures Entertainment under their Color Force banner.
The actor worked with Jacobson and Simpson on the Hunger Games prequel film, in which he played Sejanus Plinth, once a mentor to a tribute in the games who was forced to become a Peacekeeper ...
Following the release of Suzanne Collins's novel The Hunger Games, on September 14, 2008, Hollywood film studios began looking to adapt the book into film. In March 2009, Color Force, an independent studio founded by producer Nina Jacobson, bought the film rights to the book.
When it came to casting The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, the filmmakers quickly zeroed in on Rachel Zegler to play the lead role of Lucy Gray Baird, the musically talented ...
Nina Jacobson. Brad Simpson [1] (Partner) Color Force is an American independent film and television production company founded in 2007 by producer and film executive Nina Jacobson after her 2006 termination as president of Disney's Buena Vista Motion Pictures Group. [2][3] Its films include the Diary of a Wimpy Kid and The Hunger Games series.