With her trusty bow and arrow, reality-show sharpshooter Katniss Everdeen drives The Hunger Games with a fierce tomboy energy rarely seen on the big screen. The teen hunter can nail a squirrel or split an apple from 100 yards away and she's quick to slam a guy against the wall when he announces his affections on national TV. But Katniss also comes to the gladiator bloodbath that is the Hunger Games fully loaded with compassion.
Powered by Jennifer Lawrence's Katniss portrayal, The Hunger Games is expected to generate Twilight-level box-office numbers — something that could bring a potential sea change in the way movie studios perceive the bankability of female action stars.
Dressed to kill, not to seduce, Katniss joins a long line of heroines who've made a mark in the guy-centric universe of action, sci-fi and horror. To celebrate these ass-kicking role models, past and present, Wired decided to revisit and update its brief history of the toughest women in movies, TV, comic books and video games.
Above:
Katniss Everdeen
Jennifer Lawrence became the obvious choice to play reluctant warrior Katniss Everdeen after picking up an Oscar nomination for Winter's Bone. In that 2010 indie flick, she showed smarts and determination as a teenager who fights for the survival of her impoverished Ozark Mountain family. By channeling a more athletic brand of understated heroism into Hunger Games' futuristic fantasy, Lawrence stays true to the literary source material. Katniss is not a people pleaser by nature. "I don't know how to make people like me," Katniss states early on in the film, which of course only makes her that much more likable. Her tough determination wins over couch potato nation with a combination of predatory cunning and righteous compassion, both on real-world theater screens and in her home country of Panem.
Lisbeth Salander (American film adaptation)
Following in the ferociously anti-social footsteps of Noomi Rapace, who portrayed the surly investigative hacker in the original Swedish film adaptation of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Rooney Mara sustained plenty of tension under the direction of David Fincher. In place of credibility-defying superhero shenanigans, Rooney's Lisbeth used wile to avenge her tormenter in one of the year's most unsettling sequences.
Evelyn Salt
Angelina Jolie extended her reputation as one of the few women who can single-handedly carry an action movie when she starred in 2010's CIA-themed Salt. Jolie’s lithe Agent Salt races through the movie in hyper-athletic chase scenes and smack-downs that leave a trail of bloodied male antagonists in her wake.
Starbuck
Katee Sackhoff gender-switched the Battlestar Galactica character played by Dirk Benedict for the original TV series. When BSG rebooted in 2003, Sackhoff quickly overcame skeptics with her tomboy take on Kara “Starbuck” Thrace. The actress took flight as a tough, smart, complicated pilot able to kick ass and soul search with equal conviction.
Red Sonja
Introduced in Marvel Comics' Conan the Barbarian, swords-and-sorcery hellion Red Sonja got incarnated on screen in 1985 by great Dane Brigitte Nielsen. More recently, filmmaker Robert Rodriguez produced concept art picturing his girlfriend Rose McGowan as the chain-mailed warrior in a movie slated for 2011.
Jack, aka ‘Subject Zero’
The Mass Effect 2 role-playing game numbers among its myriad mutants the biotic "Subject Zero" Jack, who also shows up in Dark Horse Comics' Mass Effect Redemption spin-off.
Witchblade
Megan Fox grew up idolizing Top Cow's tough chick Witchblade, portrayed on TV by Yancy Butler. Especially popular in Japan in manga and anime form, Witchblade comics have sold more than 100 million copies worldwide since 1995. Top Cow Productions has spent years developing a motion picture about the woman gifted with a supernaturally high-powered glove.
Xena
Statuesque New Zealand actress Lucy Lawless filled out Xena’s tight skirts and leather vests with brawn and brains. The character first appeared in the 1995 to 1999 television series Hercules: The Legendary Journeys before getting her own TV show. Making no apologies for Xena’s rib-cracking approach to problem-solving, Lawless remains a force to be reckoned with in Starz’s blood-and-sex-drenched Spartacus series.
Tank Girl
Birthed by Deadline magazine, this antisocial teenager harbored a fondness for machine guns and mutant kangaroos on the printed page before Lori Petty brought the character to life in 1995’s Tank Girl film.
Lara Croft (YES!!!!!!)
Videogame heroine Lara Craft became a pop-culture sensation when Angelina Jolie took on the character for one good Tomb Raider movie and a so-so sequel.
Cassie Hack
The star of Devil’s Due Publishing’s Hack/Slash graphic novel series, avenging feminist Cassie Hack takes sex ‘n’ violence for a wild ride aimed at ruining the lives of abusive creeps. Hollywood studios are currently circling a script that would propel Cassie to the big screen.
Ripley
Sigourney Weaver smoked, snarled and ripped the guts out of alien interlopers in the first three Alien movies. A feminist sci-fi icon, Ripley effectively upended the eye-candy apple cart for years to come.
Alice
Milla Jovovich cranked up her survivalist adrenaline for a swarm of gun-toting film adventures based on the Resident Evil videogames.
Mystique
Marvel Comics’ X-Men series features a bevy of strong female mutants, but in 2004’s X-2 movie, Rebecca Romijn’s portrayal of blue baddie Mystique gave form to what is arguably the greatest supervillain costume ever devised.
Catwoman (!!!!!!)
When it comes to campy superheroines, (Queen) Michelle Pfeiffer set the bar high when she cracked whips as Catwoman in 1992’s Batman Returns.
Black Widow
She’s a prim legal secretary. No, wait, she’s a martial arts expert! In Iron Man 2 and upcoming The Avengers, Scarlett Johansson plays both sides of her Marvel Comics character, posing as buttoned-down Natalie Rushman.
Sarah Connor
Linda Hamilton forever altered the muscle-to-fat ratio for machine-gun-wielding sex symbols when she played Sarah Connor in 1992’s Terminator 2: Judgment Day. More than two decades later, petite Lena Headey gave the character her own twist on TV’s Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles.
Neytiri
It could have gone so terribly, cheesily wrong, but Zoe Saldana’s performance as the alien Na’vi princess stole the show in James Cameron’s sci-fi blockbuster Avatar. Sensuous and fierce, the nature-loving Neytiri provided 3-D cinema with its first three-dimensional character.
Buffy
Introduced in the 1992 film Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Buffy Summers took off as a pop-culture phenomenon when Sarah Michelle Gellar reinvented the high-school adventuress for Joss Whedon’s 1997 to 2003 Buffy TV series. Long before True Blood and Twilight came calling, Buffy tapped an appetite for wit, sex and action.
Hit Girl
In the Kick-Ass movie, 11-year-old Chloe Grace Moretz ripped into her performance as a potty-mouthed superhero with enthusiasm rarely found in grown-up actors. For those who weren’t offended by the pre-adolescent blood-letting, Hit Girl proved that you’re never too young or too girly to dismember bad guys.
Lisbeth Salander (Swedish film adaptation)
This surly bisexual hacker, equally adept at combating corporate conspiracies and tattooing “I am a pig” on the bellies of abusive men, earned worldwide renown through the trilogy of novels by Stieg Larsson and a Swedish film franchise starring Noomi Rapace.
Elektra
Jennifer Garner, one of Hollywood’s most athletic actresses, played Marvel Comics’ Elektra Natchios in a 2005 movie. Although the film failed to catch fire with audiences, Garner at least accomplished the rare feat of snagging top billing in a superhero movie.
River Tam
In Joss Whedon’s space Western TV series Firefly and its big-screen sequel Serenity, Summer Glau attracted a cult following for the character that lives on in comic-book incarnations.
Sydney Bristow
In J.J. Abrams’ TV show Alias, Jennifer Garner pulled off high-octane action stunts on a weekly basis as she portrayed superspy Sydney Bristow.
Aeon Flux
MTV’s 1991 Aeon Flux cartoon morphed into a big-budget action vehicle for Charlize Theron, who took on the wiry heroine after winning her Best Actress Oscar. Plagued by on-set accidents, Aeon Flux fizzled commercially, but at least the filmmakers took a stab at casting an A-list actress smack in the middle of the action.
Wonder Woman (hello)
DC Comics' crime-fighting Amazon, aka Diana Prince, has swatted swarms of supernatural nemeses for 70 years. In 1974's Wonder Woman TV series, Lynda Carter famously wore the character's all-American hot pants.
Anna
The best sci-fi villain during the 2009-10 TV season, alien leader Anna, portrayed by Morena Baccarin on ABC’s V series, proved to be as ruthless as a reptile beneath her creamy-smooth exterior.
Seven of Nine
As Star Trek: Voyager character Seven of Nine, Jeri Ryan deserves a special mention for becoming the biggest fanboy superstar of her generation. She set the stage for sci-fi sex symbols like Tricia Helfer’s Number Six in Battlestar Galactica and Alessandra Torresani in Caprica.
SOURCE
This list is missing quite a few. I'll put in some honorable mentions (which should technically be on the list but whatever...)
Storm
The Bride
The Birds of Prey
Sailor Moon and the Sailor Scouts
Cutie Honey
Mireille Bouquet and Kirika Yuumura
Mulan
Bayonetta
Charlie's Angels
Thelma & Louise
Princess Leia Organa
Morrigan
Nikita
Eowyn
The Women of Neon Genesis Evangelion
Hermione Granger
Olivia Benson
Dana Scully
Juliet Burke
Sun Hwa-Kwon
Nikita (Original Series)
Rachel Stein
And last but not least...
The Women of Game of Thrones (A Song of Ice and Fire)