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Miscellaneous See other Miscellaneous Articles Title: Avatar Review: We Have the Technology. Now What? Its an intriguing paradox--the success of a film as technologically elaborate and ambitious as James Camerons Avatar will come down to a simple question: Will audiences marvel at the movies groundbreaking production methods enough to forgive Cameron's curious choice to frame everything on a script that is, almost above all else, obsessed with the evils of technology in the wrong hands? Not only did Cameron wait more than a decade to make his more than $300 million passion project, but he spurred the invention of the cutting edge equipment to make his creation possible. The construction of a new dual-lens 3-D shooting system and the development of an ever-improving motion capture and virtual camera system allowed Cameron to take his audience to the distant inhabited world of Pandora without compromising his ambitious vision for the place. The film stars Sam Worthington as Jake Scully--a disabled corporate military veteran recruited to command a remotely controlled alien body--his avatar--in the hope of infiltrating Pandoras native humanoid species, the Navi. At first, his mission is a peaceful one--intended to help negotiate a peaceful settlement between the natives and the human colonial settlers. The evil techno-corporate types came to Pandora to dig up a priceless natural element, Unobtanium. Curiously, the audience is never let in on what it does, but the villains need it and theyll commit genocide to get it. Scully is the only hope to fend off what looks like unavoidable war. Fortunately, he meets a Navi princess (Zoe Saldana) able to train him in the ways of her tribe. Its only a matter of time before he falls in love with his new blue teacher--a love that leads him to question his allegiance. The soulless keepers of the bullets and bulldozers are led by Colonel Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang), a one-dimensional, cliche-spouting parody of a modern Marine. If adventure films are as good as their villains, Avatar falls woefully short. Theres no point to investing too much more on plot spoilers. Suffice to say, anyone whos seen Dances with Wolves, The Last Samurai, A Man Called Horse, Soldier, Pocohantas, Enemy Mine, or a host of other outsider stories should be able to call every plot point Avatar offers. In fact, its astounding how similar Avatars plot plays when compared to Kevin Costners Oscar-winning Wolves. But no such lack of creativity plagues the films action sequences, art design and 3-D effects. Every penny Cameron left unspent on story development poured into the films richly detailed world. And the details are essential as the high-def 3-D is ultimately unforgiving. Unlike traditional 3-D techniques that allowed foreground objects extend out toward the audiences perspective, Avatars image offers depth between the focused foreground and the surrounding environment. The battle scenes are packed with rapidly moving visual pieces--almost to the point of incoherence. But the 3-D invites the eye to roam the frame for its element of choice. The CG characters are painstakingly rendered, but movie magic makers still havent found a way to make CG players look less like finely drawn cartoon characters. When CG-dominated films can create onscreen creatures indistinguishable from real-world humans and animals (without toeing the uncanny valley), a wall will come down. For this reason, Avatar remains visually impressive but not as groundbreaking as, say, George Lucas Star Wars, which pushed traditional special effects techniques to the next level. Unlike Lucas more playful science fiction epic, Cameron reaches for a heavy environmental message. Avatar is every militant global warming supporters dream come true as the invading, technology-worshiping, environment-ravaging humans are set upon by an angry planet and its noble inhabitants. But the films message suffers mightily under the weight of mind-boggling hypocrisy. Camerons story clearly curses the proliferation of human technology. In Avatar, the science and machinery of humankind leads to soulless violence and destruction. It only serves to pollute the primitive but pristine paradise of Pandora. Of course, without centuries of development in science and technology, the film putting forth this simple-minded, self-loathing worldview wouldnt exist. Youd imagine Cameron himself would be bored to tears on the planet he created. There are no movies on Pandora, so hed be out of a job. The Navi rarely visit a multiplex. They sit around their glowing trees, chanting; they dont build and sink titanic ocean liners, and they dont construct deep-sea mini-subs enabling certain filmmakers to spend countless days exploring said cruise ships. Even with this confused message, Avatar should make a healthy profit. International audiences love spectacle, and Cameron lathers it lustily into his comeback project. But, he (and 20th Century Fox) better hope those same audiences dont think too much on the way out of the theater lest bad word of mouth does more damage to Pandora than the corporate marines.
Poster Comment: Yet another movie not to see. Dances with Wolves / Pocahantas / Captain Planet in space.
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#1. To: Prefrontal Vortex (#0)
I could practically tell you the whole movie from watching a few trailers. Sounds like my prescience is confirmed by this review. Gee, Cameron, evil nasty Western types go out and exploit a world for resources. How original. There's a reason why I really enjoy movies made prior to the 1980's. This is one such reason.
MapQuest really needs to start their directions on #5. Pretty sure I know how to get out of my neighborhood.
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