Re: Do those who liked Avatar still like it as much as you did a year
Color me totally shocked.
I don't agree
Color me totally shocked.
I don't agree
I don't agree, but eh, I stand by my original point, which is that the movie has a lot more romance and non-geek appeal than your Moons and District 9s, and I wouldn't be at all surprised if those factors played a role in the online dumping on it.
I don't agree
Color me totally shocked.
Since Jake didn't save the day, all interpretations that fixate on that are wrong.
The story of how the bravest and beautifulest Navi of all discovered how good Americans, er, humans, really can be, would have been one of the tritest and boringest stories imaginable.
One of the things that really stuck in people's craws about Avatar is one of us going over to their side, that we have to leave our crippled side to die and change.
I don't agree, but eh, I stand by my original point, which is that the movie has a lot more romance and non-geek appeal than your Moons and District 9s, and I wouldn't be at all surprised if those factors played a role in the online dumping on it.
You seem to not understand the meaning of the phrase "played a role". Might want to ask a friend for help with that.I don't agree, but eh, I stand by my original point, which is that the movie has a lot more romance and non-geek appeal than your Moons and District 9s, and I wouldn't be at all surprised if those factors played a role in the online dumping on it.
Because as we all know, "geeks" all think girls have cooties and were the only ones who had issues with Avatar.![]()
CHARLIE ROSE: But here what they are bothered by, too, the critics of
this message. It is that they have to be rescued by.
JAMES CAMERON: Oh, that’s a different criticism, though.
CHARLIE ROSE: It’s very different, but that’s another criticism.
JAMES CAMERON: That’s the left-wing criticism of the movie.
CHARLIE ROSE: That’s exactly right.
JAMES CAMERON: That it’s paternalistic, which is a form of racism.
CHARLIE ROSE: So somebody from the planet earth has to come over and
rescue the Na’vi from the bad people who want to do in their planet.
JAMES CAMERON: See, I think that they’re looking at the film from a
kind of a civil rights aspect instead of from a historical perspective.
The historical perspective is that when indigenous populations who were at
a bow and arrow level are met with technologically superior military forces
that have muskets, blunderbusses, and ships and horses with armor and so
on, which is the history of the colonial period, they lose. If somebody
doesn’t help them, they lose.
It’s not a question of them standing up for themselves. They can’t do
it. And historically that has been the case. So we’re not talking about,
you know, a racial group within an existing population fighting for their
rights.
CHARLIE ROSE: You’re saying the noble savage cannot win alone.
JAMES CAMERON: Absolutely not.
CHARLIE ROSE: That’s what you’re saying.
JAMES CAMERON: Historically there’s only one instance that I know of
on this planet where they have actually prevailed and become a legitimate
part of the ongoing culture once the Europeans invaded, and that’s in New
Zealand, where the Maori, because they’re tough bastards, basically,
managed to find them to a draw and get a decent treaty that they all live
by.
But here in South America and Central America, they just got subsumed
or enslaved or marginalized.
I like Jake's character arc and Lapis doesn't, so there's not much point debating that aspect further.
Meanwhile, you're throwing around all sorts of hyperbole. If the blue people were hapless, they would have lost the big battle, and lots of real-world geeks who would love to get girl cooties all over them a lot more often then they do tend to shy away from romance-centric stories. Discuss those points if you like, but the hyperbole approach isn't as cute as you seem to think.![]()
As for the point about the Na'vi needing Jake's help, here's Cameron on Charlie Rose:
This is indeed trueI do like the Covenant comparison, though... it could have used SRD as a script consultant to saw off some of the story's rounded edges.
Both those alternate scenarios would have been interesting to see, but I still stand by my "romance?-meh" theory.Cameron's got a fair point, but I would imagine that the larger complaint of those who cry "Paternalism!" is the out-of-nowhere decision to make Jake Sully the Chosen One who tames the mythical beast and brings all the tribes together. Jake still could've been a critically important part of the movie but let, say, Neytiri be the one who tames the beast and unites the tribes. Or Bigshot Asshole Na'vi that wants to boink Neytiri, for that matter.
James Horner's score is rather derivative of earlier material, however, including a rather annoying theft of his theme from Glory. It's a little bewildering that after having an entire year to work on the score that what we have is the best he could come up with.
As far as the politics go, I don't see the film as either particularly subversive, nor particularly conservative. The human military are the villains, but Cameron is careful to make them private contractors rather than a government army of any kind. District 9 already offered a searing indictment of such things, and without resorting to the heavy handedness of Stephen Lang casually sipping a coffee while he relishes the massacre he's ordered.
On the other end of the spectrum, Jake is definitely cut from the cloth of the white savior, but the film subverts that to a degree by letting Neryti save him in the end. Still, it's more than a stretch to eliminate all credit to the character for saving the day at the end. Without his intervention, the Na'vi would have been divided and wiped out long before any divine intervention. Speaking of which, isn't denying him credit for saving the day rather ignoring the strong implication that Jake and/or Sigourney Weaver's character are responsible for Eywa's final intervention against the human army? He was the "chosen one" after all--a stupid narrative that I could certainly live without in science fiction from now on.
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