Yeah! When I first saw "RDA" on the side of the vehicles, I was thinking, "Jeepers, I thought Richard Dean Anderson was more environmentally-conscious than that!"Richard Dean Anderson vs. Alien. Sounds cool.![]()

Yeah! When I first saw "RDA" on the side of the vehicles, I was thinking, "Jeepers, I thought Richard Dean Anderson was more environmentally-conscious than that!"Richard Dean Anderson vs. Alien. Sounds cool.![]()
Unless you're claiming the movie is presenting human thinking as superior to that of the Na'vi? That Sully's "naturally superior" human thought processes grant him excellence to teach the natives their own tricks, AKA Mighty Whitey? So now it's the humans who are being presented as "better" is it?
In that case maybe they should have called the film Flight of the Na'vigator.![]()
I like How It Should Have Ended's point about Sully not actually doing what he was sent there to do over the months of getting to know you montages: open negotiations between the humans and Na'vi. He was the one chance for negotiation. He didn't even bring up that the humans wanted rocks the Na'vi don't have any use for.
Yeah, this definitely bugged me. He was way too busy getting freaky with the natives to remember the point of his mission. I mean, he could have easily done both!
It is never explained why Eywa "chose" him from the first moments that the glowy, glowy jellyfish surround him. He is "chosen" because the story needs him to be. He masters all the Na'vi skills because the story needs him to, not because he actually learns anything or has any untapped resources within himself that the adventure brings forth. The Chief's Daughter falls in love with him, not because he's a great guy, or extraordinarily skilled, or because they find they have a deep soul connection - but because, you guessed it, the story needs her to fall in love with him.
I like How It Should Have Ended's point about Sully not actually doing what he was sent there to do over the months of getting to know you montages: open negotiations between the humans and Na'vi. He was the one chance for negotiation. He didn't even bring up that the humans wanted rocks the Na'vi don't have any use for.
Yeah, this definitely bugged me. He was way too busy getting freaky with the natives to remember the point of his mission. I mean, he could have easily done both!
Which, despite all the supposed "political" material in the film, is why it sucked.
Jake was a lousy protagonist.
His arc made no sense. The only reason he is the protagonist is because they took the laziest possible path when introducing a fantasy world - they made the protagonist completely ignorant of everything (with a ridiculous backstory that this company would give this very expensive Avatar body to someone without training that person at all, because, hey, they only had 6 or 7 other people with Avatars, so obviously they needed this one desperately and right now!) so that people could walk around saying, "Hey, Jake, we know you don't know anything about this (the Avatars, the Na'vi, Unobtanium), so let us explain it the audience, er, um, I mean, to you." There's no good justification why this numbskull who hops up with his very expensive Avatar body and takes off in it becomes the point man for the negotiations - which, as it is pointed out, he totally blows due to his narcissicism.
It is never explained why Eywa "chose" him from the first moments that the glowy, glowy jellyfish surround him. He is "chosen" because the story needs him to be.
He masters all the Na'vi skills because the story needs him to, not because he actually learns anything or has any untapped resources within himself that the adventure brings forth.
The Chief's Daughter falls in love with him, not because he's a great guy, or extraordinarily skilled, or because they find they have a deep soul connection - but because, you guessed it, the story needs her to fall in love with him.
There's not only nothing redeeming about Jake - there's nothing interesting about him. He's petty, shallow, weak-willed and immoral. But he's so heroic that he can tame the Turok and unite the Na'vi tribes after an emotional evolution that occurs in about 2 seconds of screentime.
Most of the ecological/ political/ Dances with Wolves/ Fern Gully/ colonialist background is thematically confused - which is why sometimes it seems the story is throwing around the Mighty Whitey trope and at other times is slamming white guilt down everyone's throats. But ultimately, Avatar is stupid, because Jake, as a main character, is stupid.
I like How It Should Have Ended's point about Sully not actually doing what he was sent there to do over the months of getting to know you montages: open negotiations between the humans and Na'vi. He was the one chance for negotiation. He didn't even bring up that the humans wanted rocks the Na'vi don't have any use for.
Yeah, this definitely bugged me. He was way too busy getting freaky with the natives to remember the point of his mission. I mean, he could have easily done both!
How can you forget all that stuff about Quarritch recruiting him for recon? It was not at all clear that his real mission was to negotiate, which makes this complaint rather questionable. Jake finds out how nonnegotiable Hometree is, precisely because he understands the Na'vi better than anyone else. Reducing the issue to rocks the Na'vi don't use falsifies the movie's premises.
I like How It Should Have Ended's point about Sully not actually doing what he was sent there to do over the months of getting to know you montages: open negotiations between the humans and Na'vi. He was the one chance for negotiation. He didn't even bring up that the humans wanted rocks the Na'vi don't have any use for.
Yeah, this definitely bugged me. He was way too busy getting freaky with the natives to remember the point of his mission. I mean, he could have easily done both!
Which, despite all the supposed "political" material in the film, is why it sucked.
Jake was a lousy protagonist.
His arc made no sense. The only reason he is the protagonist is because they took the laziest possible path when introducing a fantasy world - they made the protagonist completely ignorant of everything (with a ridiculous backstory that this company would give this very expensive Avatar body to someone without training that person at all, because, hey, they only had 6 or 7 other people with Avatars, so obviously they needed this one desperately and right now!) so that people could walk around saying, "Hey, Jake, we know you don't know anything about this (the Avatars, the Na'vi, Unobtanium), so let us explain it the audience, er, um, I mean, to you." There's no good justification why this numbskull who hops up with his very expensive Avatar body and takes off in it becomes the point man for the negotiations - which, as it is pointed out, he totally blows due to his narcissicism.
It is never explained why Eywa "chose" him from the first moments that the glowy, glowy jellyfish surround him. He is "chosen" because the story needs him to be. He masters all the Na'vi skills because the story needs him to, not because he actually learns anything or has any untapped resources within himself that the adventure brings forth. The Chief's Daughter falls in love with him, not because he's a great guy, or extraordinarily skilled, or because they find they have a deep soul connection - but because, you guessed it, the story needs her to fall in love with him.
There's not only nothing redeeming about Jake - there's nothing interesting about him. He's petty, shallow, weak-willed and immoral. But he's so heroic that he can tame the Turok and unite the Na'vi tribes after an emotional evolution that occurs in about 2 seconds of screentime.
Most of the ecological/ political/ Dances with Wolves/ Fern Gully/ colonialist background is thematically confused - which is why sometimes it seems the story is throwing around the Mighty Whitey trope and at other times is slamming white guilt down everyone's throats. But ultimately, Avatar is stupid, because Jake, as a main character, is stupid.
Many of the ideas in Avatar are very familiar to things I've read in SF literature over the past twenty years. I found much of it visually interesting. That said the Navi are a disappointment. They're designed the way they are in order for the audience to easily identify with them, but there is no sense or logic to the way they look.
Having them being able to link with other animals (and each other) and Eywa is quite interesting, but they still look very much like North American aboriginals or Arawak indians only somewhat distorted in proportion, size and being blue.
Humanoid aliens abound in television SF because it's the most cost effective way to help tell your story. And yet even television SF has tried clever ways to use non humanoid aliens. A big budget project like Avatar could have done something better, but they chose not too. Unlike District 9 (and some others) who managed something more alien on a lot less money.
Many of the ideas in Avatar are very familiar to things I've read in SF literature over the past twenty years. I found much of it visually interesting. That said the Navi are a disappointment. They're designed the way they are in order for the audience to easily identify with them, but there is no sense or logic to the way they look.
Having them being able to link with other animals (and each other) and Eywa is quite interesting, but they still look very much like North American aboriginals or Arawak indians only somewhat distorted in proportion, size and being blue.
Humanoid aliens abound in television SF because it's the most cost effective way to help tell your story. And yet even television SF has tried clever ways to use non humanoid aliens. A big budget project like Avatar could have done something better, but they chose not too. Unlike District 9 (and some others) who managed something more alien on a lot less money.
At the very least the Na'vi should have had a second pair of upper limbs as we've seen multiple animals have, and can be assumed to evolutionary closest to the Na'vi.
Posted on Simon Pegg's Twitter...
Happy to hear all round cool dudes Fred Armisen and Anton Yelchin have signed up for the Smurfs movie but will it just be Dances With N'avi?
about 23 hours ago via TweetDeck![]()
Earlier in the film, you see an evolutionary "missing link," so to speak, with the monkey creature. Look at it, and you'll see it has bifurcated forearms.
Beyond that, I'm shocked that people are shocked that Cameron made the Na'vi humanoid creatures that are relatable to the audience. What the fuck do you expect? Cameron to studio executives - "Yeah, umm, I want $400 million to make a movie about an alien world, all the while creating a new way to film and make it in...umm...3D. Yeah, I know there aren't a lot of theaters with 3D projection systems, but we can force them to adopt it right? I know, we're in untested waters here, and I have nothing to show you in regards to this tech, but trust me, it'll be the best 3D ever. Oh, and the main characters are going to be giant squid creatures that communicate with colour bands that the audience will have a difficult time relating to...but this is science fiction, they'll go for it. So how about that half billion bucks?"
They took a giant risk on financing the project...this is show business...of course there's going to be some give and take, such as maybe creating an alien species that the majority of filmgoers don't have to take a massive cognitive leap to even relate to.
As for the Na'vi design, I agree with 3D Master that the Na'vi should have had four upper limbs and probably other features similiar to lower Pandoran wildlife (secondary pairs of eyes, for instance). The reasons you offer for why they didn't do it that way are no doubt entirely accurate, so it's completely understandable. But the criticism can still be made- the Na'vi are not as alien as their ecosystem would suggest. The criticism doesn't neccessarily mean an attack on the film.![]()
Earlier in the film, you see an evolutionary "missing link," so to speak, with the monkey creature. Look at it, and you'll see it has bifurcated forearms.
Beyond that, I'm shocked that people are shocked that Cameron made the Na'vi humanoid creatures that are relatable to the audience. What the fuck do you expect? Cameron to studio executives - "Yeah, umm, I want $400 million to make a movie about an alien world, all the while creating a new way to film and make it in...umm...3D. Yeah, I know there aren't a lot of theaters with 3D projection systems, but we can force them to adopt it right? I know, we're in untested waters here, and I have nothing to show you in regards to this tech, but trust me, it'll be the best 3D ever. Oh, and the main characters are going to be giant squid creatures that communicate with colour bands that the audience will have a difficult time relating to...but this is science fiction, they'll go for it. So how about that half billion bucks?"
They took a giant risk on financing the project...this is show business...of course there's going to be some give and take, such as maybe creating an alien species that the majority of filmgoers don't have to take a massive cognitive leap to even relate to.
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