District 9 has its share of problems but is still stronger and will hold up at home. The fact it got a best picture nod, even in the expanded field, says something to its credit. Wheras Avatar is just JC getting the nod for his visuals yet again.
You can't pick and choose in your argument this way. You can't say that District 9 getting the nomination proves your point that it's a better film then Avatar, because guess what, Avatar got the same nomination, and is likely to win it. You are using the same criteria to hold District 9 up, as you are using to bash Avatar, and it doesn't work that way. Both were nominated because they were considered worthy. It's not like every JC picture out there is chosen for best picture, they were both judged worthy based on their merits.
No, I qualified it by listing the following link. Why did you omit this? Is it because you knew it damaged you assertion I was 'picking & choosing' or just overlooked it.
D9 getting a nod for its screenplay speaks volumes to its merit for Best Picture nod. Obviously there aren't an equal amount of slots in both categories so being in both is a stronger indicator of a films merit.
Notice
D9 gets an
Adapted Screenplay nomination.
Avatar doesn't get any screenplay recognition...for a reason. Its mostly its techincal merits, and for a reason.
I mean, you have a Transformers quote in your sig. Is there ANYTHING AT ALL deep about that film? No, none. However you still enjoyed it none the less.
We have had arguments in the past ( I believe it was you, if it was not I apologize), when you say that Cameron is comparable to Michael Bay as a director. Are you sure some of your hatred of this film doesn't come from the fact that Cameron is getting all this recognition, while Bay is generally consided just a popcorn film director?
I did enjoy the fist
Transformers. I wouldn't argue it was tight writing but it held up for the purposes of putting a toyline on the big screen. The second,
Revenge of the Fallen, is horrid, just bad.
I enjoy the occasional guilty pleasure. Not all film has to be deep and meaningful. Transformers wasn't billing itself as the film to change all of cinema either. Avatar didn't even need to be a deep film it just needed to be better in its script than it was.
I'm not some Bay fan or follower. I mearly stated in the recent past that for those bashing Bay for spectacle over substance are praising Avatar for the same thing essentially.
However, just because Avatar did not get a screen play nod, doesn't make the script bad.
These two films are apples and oranges, with two completely different intentions. I don't know why people are comparing them just because they both have aliens. District 9's purpose, was to tell a story, and it did that brilliantly. The creatures and the environment were secondary to that. The story was the purpose, and the commentary it provided on the issues that one plagued Africa.
The point of Avatar was different. Avatar was, basically, a world building exercise. Cameron wanted to create a world all his own, and he and his VFX team did that brilliantly as well. He wanted to create a new universe, he, and others, could play in.
The one thing about Cameron which is unique as a director, is he is SO very involved with the art AND the science of film making, and visual effects technology. Whenever he makes a movie, is isn't just making a film to release, but he his creating a project that will push the bounds of what is possible with the current technology, in the hope that both he, and other filmmakers can reap it's benefits. He did it T2, he did it with Titanic, and he did it with Avatar. However, with the exoticness of the world he created, he used a well used and well known story to take the audience there. No it, and the characters weren't that deep and thought provoking (though much, much more so then you give it or them credit for), but that was never the point. Cameron has never really written deep characters, and they usually are some sort of extreme one way or another, but they are always a joy to watch, and he always makes sure they are well acted, and that their actions seem plausible.
I just really enjoy the mans work, and I do hold him in a very high regard, even over Spielberg and Lucas, because I always know that Cameron never makes small films. They are always an event, and Avatar is another one in the long proud line of Cameron films.