This movie looks absolutely terrible. The effects look like they were done in 1999. The story is tired. Pass.
Obvious troll is obvious.
I'll probably see this movie.
What's the quality threshold point for the Internet geeks to decide that a movie deserves to be successful based solely on it's visual effects? In other words, if this movie had a $20 million budget and was directed by a 3rd tier director for the DVD market with the exact same story, would anyone go see it? It will be interesting to see the execution to see if the plot and dialogue really are as cliché as the dialogue we've seen would suggest.
Like Lucas and Spielberg, Cameron has always explored the limits of technology in order to explore his personal visions. There are very few producers and directors in Hollywood with the financial muscle to do so. I hope Cameron doesn't make the mistake Lucas did and get so wrapped up in the technology end of it that the rest of the film suffers.
This movie needs to make a lot of money to break even, probably half a billion dollars worldwide once marketing and distribution get a cut if the budget for the actual movie production itself is in fact $300 million. While there is a precedent for a Cameron film making more than that amount of money, his average box office take is $79,000,000 not adjusted for inflation. The reasonable expectation for a Cameron film that doesn't star Leonardo DiCaprio and make ten million mothers and daughters from New York to Hong Kong over see it ten times each is about $200-300,000,000 I'd think. He'll probably also license out a lot of the tech they used to make the movie in order to recoup some of the costs to the production company as well.
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