Avatar is zooming up behind Titanic fast. Avatar opened in it's last market on Jan. 15/10. Italy.
http://boxofficemojo.com/alltime/world/
http://boxofficemojo.com/alltime/world/
No, you're wrong. Read the thread again, I assure you that it's not 59 pages of people saying that they have nothing to say about the movie.Or rather, what the film is lacking is what we all saw.
“Never switch point of view in order to convey information that you can't figure out any other way to TELL THE READER. That will cause you to divert attention from the "ball" and will only frustrate the reader, not inform him. If there really is no other way for the reader to learn something, then they shouldn't know it.”
"Backstory delivered early on crashes down on a story’s momentum like a sumo wrestler falling on his opponent. Backstory belongs later."
http://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-learned-about-writing-fiction-from.html
Well finally got to see it last night. Highly entertaining. The storyline was so predictable you could just ignore it and enjoy the fireworks.
Edit: I'm amazed at 59 pages of discussion about it, though. There was virtually no substance and 100% style. Nothing to get your brains so profusely verbose.
stj, the criticisms I have of the film have nothing to with religion... regardless of whether one believes religion works or not. Overall I enjoyed the film quite a bit and intend to take my wife to see the IMAX version very soon. Many people who find problems with the film seem to have expressed those criticisms very well.The reason there are 59 pages is because the people who didn't like the story can't articulate their real reasons for disliking Avatar. If anything, people dislike the story because the hero does not beat up or kill his native rival for the hand of the loved one' because his rival is not a scenery chewing villain like Billy Zane in Titanic; does not win the climactic battle to save the native homeland; most especially, does not save his lady love from the villain. Every claim about predictability is BS.
And every allegation of cliche is sharply contradicted by remorseless fact. That man who pretends At Play in the Fields of the Lord is a White Messiah is a conservative pundit, which is practically the same as a professional liar. The basic story in Avatar has not been told enough to be cliche, even if you throw in Ferngully.
The story does have a major weakness, namely, it imagines a Religion That Works. But superstition is a treasured vice and cannot be acknowledged, much less criticized. It's not a plot cheat that God(dess) did it, because the groundwork is laid. But it's a cheap plot. If you can't suspend your disbelief for two hours, the movie's not for you. But this bbs has people who can suspend critical judgment for years, while equally cheap TV shows run.
What it boils down to, did you get a thrill when the bad but white guys got their asses kicked? And, were you a little disappointed that the good white hero wasn't the White Messiah?
Correct. It's sixty pages of 'well here's my two cents'.The single reason there are 59+ pages now is due to one thing - a tremendous number of folks have seen this movie, which itself has caused some division in opinion on it. Don't you find those factors combined likely to cause such a great amount of response?
Avatar's religion struck me as basically new age wish fulfilment. You get to have a scientific basis for eco-mysticism - it, like pretty much everything in the film's story, struck me as calculated to shape the moral quandry very specifically...
'I didn't sign up for this', as she puts it. Clearly, committing atrocities is not her cup of teaIt seems one way to be really sure. And what was the female pilot's reason for rebelling as she did?
It just seemed a little handy that the pilot the scientists were teamed up with was apparently the only one willing to actually fire upon their fellow humans.
It just seemed a little handy that the pilot the scientists were teamed up with was apparently the only one willing to actually fire upon their fellow humans.
Yes, how odd that the only two soldiers who spent all their time with the Na'vi or people who sympathized with the Na'vi would end up being the only ones to sympathize with the Na'vi
No, it's 59 pages of people saying what the film was sorely missing. Things such as a decent and original plot for one.No, you're wrong. Read the thread again, I assure you that it's not 59 pages of people saying that they have nothing to say about the movie.Or rather, what the film is lacking is what we all saw.
What do you mean it has zero importance? It's the entire moral imperative on which the Na'vi base their resistance. Like Selfridge said, there are a lot of other trees in the forest.Avatar's religion struck me as basically new age wish fulfilment. You get to have a scientific basis for eco-mysticism - it, like pretty much everything in the film's story, struck me as calculated to shape the moral quandry very specifically...
Oh, but on this you could not be more wrong. The existence of Eywa as a 'real entity' has NOTHING to with the moral quandry of the plot. Does the fact that Eywa is "real" (or not) make what the actions of the RDA more or less justified? No, it has zero importance.
Bull... The fact that they had a 'deity' did not matter in this aspect. It was their tree. Their land. Their decision to give it up.What do you mean it has zero importance? It's the entire moral imperative on which the Na'vi base their resistance. Like Selfridge said, there are a lot of other trees in the forest.Avatar's religion struck me as basically new age wish fulfilment. You get to have a scientific basis for eco-mysticism - it, like pretty much everything in the film's story, struck me as calculated to shape the moral quandry very specifically...
Oh, but on this you could not be more wrong. The existence of Eywa as a 'real entity' has NOTHING to with the moral quandry of the plot. Does the fact that Eywa is "real" (or not) make what the actions of the RDA more or less justified? No, it has zero importance.
Well there is this concept of basic of right and wrong that *most* people buy into, no matter what religion or philosophy they subscribe to. Like property rights, etc... Not taking what isn't yours, etc... Ring a bell?Cameron had to make the whole planet magical to justify the Na'vi being unwilling to bargain with the humans. It's cartoonishly black-and-white.
Of course, but let's run with this: A scientist might consider the beliefs of a tribal society, well, not strictly rational, and whatever the respect they have for them they aren't likely to site them as scientific evidence. Now, the same scientist might consider it unethical to forcefully remove said tribe from their home, but would not believe that it would harm the Earth goddess they worship (only their belief in it.)Bull... The fact that they had a 'deity' did not matter in this aspect. It was their tree. Their land. Their decision to give it up.
I still don't but such a distinction. There is basic wrong and right, and Trudy and Jake (not being scientists) are examples of characters that see that. It just doesn't matter to them whether the Na'vi beliefs are 'correct'. What is being done to them is wrong.Hence, the scientist and the shaman can both believe in the divine involvement of Eywa, and if you don't, you're one of those guys arrogantly nuking the blue monkeys. So, yeah, that's very important.
I still don't but such a distinction. There is basic wrong and right, and Trudy and Jake (not being scientists) are examples of characters that see that. It just doesn't matter to them whether the Na'vi beliefs are 'correct'. What is being done to them is wrong.Hence, the scientist and the shaman can both believe in the divine involvement of Eywa, and if you don't, you're one of those guys arrogantly nuking the blue monkeys. So, yeah, that's very important.
Well, in this case I think your are looking for ambiguity in the wrong place.
There is nothing ambiguous in taking what does not belong to you. Or killing because they do not want to give it you. Or destroying someones else's land.
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