Many Chapel Hill residents have joined the national Hunger Games craze, but one parent wasn’t so enthusiastic.
A Smith Middle School father refused to sign a permission slip for his 8th grade daughter’s field trip to see the movie Thursday — and then he voiced his concerns.
Dino Lorenzini, a professor at the University of Georgia, sent an email to his daughter’s school and to Chapel Hill town mayor Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt Tuesday protesting the field trip.
He opposed Smith Middle School’s Hunger Games trip because of the movie’s violence.
The Hunger Games movie is based on the first book in a trilogy of novels written by Suzanne Collins.
The movie is set in a post-apocalyptic nation and tells the story of a young girl competing in a vicious annual national tournament.
“The Hunger Games” involve 24 randomly selected participants who are forced to battle to the death in an outdoor arena until only one person is left alive.
The 7th and 8th grade classes at Smith Middle School finished a unit on dystopian literature, and “The Hunger Games” was one of several books that students could read for the unit.
“I do not think that our school should condone the violence in this movie by organizing an official school trip to view it,” Lorenzini said in an email to the faculty at Smith. “I am all for the kids having fun, but this movie is not appropriate, and we as a school should have no part in it.”