An aside: I
hate that movie. It's stupid, overblown and tiresome. 'FREEEEEEEEDOM!'
The soundtrack is pretty neat though.
That being said, while watching Avatar, I couldn't help but think that Princess Mononoke, a much more textured and complex take on the same themes, had made that kind of movie slightly outdated.
I wouldn't say Mononoke makes Avatar outdated. Sure, it has a more interesting approach to the environment(especially how it handles the idea of nature gods), but it doesn't have mechas and giant blue people and so on.
Avatar is not supposed to be a detailed or complicated critique of how we handle our environment - it just incorporates that as the ideological backdrop of its action/adventure fantasy. And in that material Mononoke has hardly outclassed it.
It's really much more like, say, Nausicaa - some environmental themes, but mainly a cool and fleshed out fantasy world. Incidentally I like Nausicaa a lot better.
So many people who may not have read these sort of things or seen these foreign films felt it was new at the cinema. It seemed original because they weren't familiar with them, not because they were truly original.
I remember reading about people who were unimpressed because it was pretty much just Flash Gordon again. Lucas owes as much to the Buster Crabbe serials as he does to Akira Kurosawa and Joseph Campbell.
That might have made an impression on the dying culture of Europe.
Wait, what? Europe was many things in the sixteenth century. Dying was not exactly one of them.
As far as historical parallels go, Avatar's conclusion struck me as fantasy mixed in with Isandlwana or Little Bighorn (or indeed Vietnam) - sometimes the better armed white guy really is laid low by the natives. He could be outnumbered or brashly overconfident - in Avatar's case, possibly both.
Of course, we all know how those wars ended... so there's room for the sequel!
