Re: Do those who liked Avatar still like it as much as you did a year
Given how a certain section of this board (and, for that matter, Rob Bricken of ToplessRobot.com) has no compunction about calling the wildly uneven Tron: Legacy "excellent" yet gleefully dumps all over Avatar (which only beats the former by 35 points on Metacritic), I can't help but wonder...
Could Avatar be getting a fair share of its nerd hate for being a love story? Unlike such beloved geek films as Tron: Legacy, its female character isn't just a hot cipher but an actual woman, who feels and acts and f**** like one.
And, on a related note, could it be in part due to the movie's inclusiveness? Audiences around the world with no geek cred whatsoever loved and embraced the movie, but instead of being impressed at Big Jim's ability to speak to such a huge portion of the globe, many geeks sniffed that his script lacked subtlety. (Funny, I don't remember LotR as being all that thematically complex, but it did adapt an established property in such detail that many non-geeks got confused, or at least disoriented.)
Possessiveness regarding planet-hopping and space helicopters, anyone?
Just some thoughts.
I frankly wish they'd saved last summer's re-release of the movie for this past holiday season. Summer was too early to revisit it, but I'd have gladly gone around New Year's.
Given how a certain section of this board (and, for that matter, Rob Bricken of ToplessRobot.com) has no compunction about calling the wildly uneven Tron: Legacy "excellent" yet gleefully dumps all over Avatar (which only beats the former by 35 points on Metacritic), I can't help but wonder...
Could Avatar be getting a fair share of its nerd hate for being a love story? Unlike such beloved geek films as Tron: Legacy, its female character isn't just a hot cipher but an actual woman, who feels and acts and f**** like one.
And, on a related note, could it be in part due to the movie's inclusiveness? Audiences around the world with no geek cred whatsoever loved and embraced the movie, but instead of being impressed at Big Jim's ability to speak to such a huge portion of the globe, many geeks sniffed that his script lacked subtlety. (Funny, I don't remember LotR as being all that thematically complex, but it did adapt an established property in such detail that many non-geeks got confused, or at least disoriented.)
Possessiveness regarding planet-hopping and space helicopters, anyone?
Just some thoughts.

I frankly wish they'd saved last summer's re-release of the movie for this past holiday season. Summer was too early to revisit it, but I'd have gladly gone around New Year's.