Jennifer Lawrence and Josh Hutcherson are returning to the world of Panem to reprise their roles as Katniss Everdeen and Peeta Mellark from the original Hunger Games films for the prequel, The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping, multiple outlets reported.
Lionsgate will release the new film, which is adapted from author Suzanne Collins's dystopian novel of the same name, in theaters on Nov. 20, 2026.
Sunrise on the Reaping is set 24 years before Katniss and Peeta stepped onto the deadly field as reluctant tributes representing District 12. Haymitch Abernathy (Woody Harrelson), who was the sole surviving victor of previous Hunger Games from District 12, served as a mentor for Katniss and Peeta.
The story of Sunrise focuses on 16-year-old Haymitch, portrayed by Joseph Zada, as he fights to survive his own Hunger Games — all while refusing to bend the knee to the ruthless Capitol, which selects twice the number of tributes. Haymitch and 47 other children are sent into the deadly arena.
While no specifics have been released about Lawrence and Hutcherson’s roles in the upcoming movie, Collins’s Sunrise on the Reaping novel has a flash-forward scene with a grown Katniss and Peeta, where Haymitch recounts his experience in the Hunger Games to them.
Hutcherson told Variety in November, “I would love to be back on set with [director] Francis [Lawrence], with Jen, with Liam, with Woody [Harrelson],” the star said. “It would not take any convincing at all. I’d be there in a heartbeat.”
Sunrise on the Reaping is the sixth movie in the Hunger Games franchise and comes after the 2023 adaptation of The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, which starred Tom Blyth as a young President Snow and Rachel Zegler as Lucy Gray Baird, a singer forced to compete in the Hunger Games.
Lionsgate dropped a star-studded teaser for the new movie back in November, including Whitney Peak as Lenore Dove Baird, Mckenna Grace as Maysilee Donner, Jesse Plemons as Plutarch Heavensbee, Ralph Fiennes as President Snow, Elle Fanning as Effie Trinket and Glenn Close as Drusilla Sickle.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Scientists dove hundreds of feet into the ocean and found creatures no human has ever seen. Our trash beat us there - 2
The Hybrid Volkswagen ID. ERA 9X Will Become the Brand’s New Flagship in China - 3
Step by step instructions to Deal with Your Time While Chasing after an Internet based Degree - 4
'Women on the floor, riddled with bullets': Ex-hostage Rom Braslavski recounts 'horrors' of Oct. 7 - 5
Striking American and European television Projects: A Survey
Examination In progress into Abuse of Japanese Government-Supported Advance
CDC's upcoming vote on hepatitis B vaccine could impact childhood immunization
This Huge Ocean Beast Shifts Sharks’ Evolutionary Timeline
Oldest sequenced RNA reveals details about a mammoth’s final moments 40,000 years
Flu season is ramping up, and some experts are "pretty worried"
One of the best meteor showers of the year peaks at the worst possible time this week
Sound Propensities: 20 Methods for helping Your Insusceptible Framework
Bolsonaro briefly leaves Brazilian prison for medical tests after a fall from his bed
NASA study shows how satellite 'light pollution' hinders space telescopes













