Justin does Avatar   24 comments

“They’ve sent us a message… that they can take whatever they want. Well we will send them a message. That this… this is our land!”

The Scoop: 2009 PG-13, directed by James Cameron and starring Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana and Sigourney Weaver

Tagline: None.

Summary Capsule: Humans are bad.  Really bad.  Like, scum of the galaxy bad.  If you don’t understand that, don’t worry — James Cameron will hammer it into your head over the next three hours.

Justin’s Rating: One big hollow gobstopper

Justin’s Review: In Avatar, one of the Big Bad Meanie Humans describes the indiginous population of an alien planet as “tree hugging hippies”.  I guess we, as the audience, were supposed to be repulsed by the brash and brusque nature of this ignorant soul, but as the neverending running time of Avatar wore on, I ended up agreeing whole-heartedly.

This entire movie is one great big literal tree-hugging hippie.  And I’m not rooting for the hippie, folks.

I really, really missed director James Cameron over the last decade.  The man helmed some of the hands-down best movies of all time — Terminator 1&2 and Aliens among them.  But ever since crowning himself as King of the World in the late 90′s, he more or less disappeared from regular moviemaking to embark on documentaries and pseudo-documentaries that were less than thrilling, to say the least.  I heard someone say that Cameron went through the same phase that George Lucas did, where he became more enraptured with movie-making technology than movie-making itself, which culminated in a mind-bogglingly expensive remake of Dances With Wolves… in space.

Now, Avatar is not a bad movie if you look at it in certain ways.  It is boasting a lot of visual muscle, although not of the “breathless” and “stunning” variety that the advertisements promised.  If you stick it out to the end, there’s a pretty groovy action sequence that is fully worth the price of a cinema ticket.  And the antagonist of the whole deal is one of the toughest pieces of villain leather that’s erupted from Hollywood since Alan Rickman in Prince of Thieves (“Cut out his heart… with a SPOON!”).  But Avatar is most certainly not a good movie, and deserves a bit of tsk-tsking for blowing planetfuls of money on  a budget to do what, if you’re honest about it, is basically an animated movie with a little bit of live action here and there.

The story even feels pretty limp, compared to Cameron’s past endeavors.  A crippled Marine ships out to an alien planet where he is simultaneously tasked with piloting an alien body (an “avatar”) to make peace with the locals and also to spy on them for a future attack.  The scientists (aka “the only good humans in this entire movie”) ask the former, the corporation/military the latter.  Said marine should be pulled back and forth between the two, but he barely emotes anything to give you the impression that he’s torn between loyalties.  He simply supports the military at first, then flips a switch at one point and starts helping out the scientists.  The guy is blander than generic pizza sauce, but he’s all we got, so I guess we try to imbue him with a bit of pretend personality to make it to the end credits.

As I said, this really is a beat-for-beat remake of the much better Dances With Wolves.  Both have a lonely military man who makes contact with the natives, learns their customs, becomes “one of them”, marries into the clan, then finds himself at odds with his former unit because of it.  The difference here is that, political correctness aside, Dances With Wolves had a lead character who was smart, actually did good things to help the tribe, and his fitting in made sense.  Avatar?  The marine doesn’t get into the tribe on his talents and good graces — he does so because (sigh) sacred tree seeds choose him.  Yes.  If Avatar can get you to swallow that bit of stellar storytelling, then the future is wide open for whatever else they want to shove down your throat.

Now, I’m not looking to make this a political rant, but the problem here is that James Cameron uses this entire movie as a blunt instrument to hammer in a two-prong message.  The first is that of environmentalism (business/mining/money = bad, bad, bad; trees = good, good, good), the second of imperialism (meanie humans pounding beautiful savages into the ground).  It’s not subtle, to say the least, and I lose a lot of respect for message movies that don’t even try to pretend that there’s a great deal of complicated issues, misunderstandings and wrong-doings on all sides.  No, here it’s a three-hour message of how stupid and uncaring 99% of planet-destroying, space smurf-killing humans are, and why we should all hug trees because they will suck the souls out of our bodies if given half the chance.

This isn’t even Dances With Wolves, that dealt with a real historical event — this is a pretend space fantasy where they’re trying to convince me to care that this is just as much a horrible act, because you just know we’d do it if given half the chance anyway, so we might as well start crying about it now.  It’s basic, dumb propaganda that weighs down the story — overwhelms the story, as a matter of fact.

Ahem.

Sorry.

As you can tell, Avatar got under my skin in a bad way, and agendas aside, there’s no great depth here.  It’s neon eye candy and technological achievements out the wazoo, but it’s also a half-baked story that’s trying to sell me on something with the tact of an infomercial spokesperson.

"Let's defect to the human side! They have Starbucks!"

Intermission!

  • Sigourney Weaver’s Avatar looks too much like her… definitely uncanny valley material, there
  • So did they ever explain why those mountains floated?  Is this the one planet in the galaxy that defies physics?
  • Worst inspirational speech ever.  “This is OUR land!”  Okay…
  • Be honest here: aren’t battle mechs, rocket helicopters and giant bombers way more cool than bows & arrows and giant butterflies?
  • It’s an alien race — quick, shove an apostrophe in their name!
  • The movie is 40% live action and 60% photo-realistic CGI. A lot of motion capture technology was used for the CGI scenes.
  • As of December 2009, with an alleged budget of US $280,000,000 (estimated), this is one of the most expensive movies ever made.
  • Avatars have five fingers or toes on their hand or foot, whereas the Na’vi only have four.

Groovy Quotes

Jake Sully: They’ve sent us a message… that they can take whatever they want. Well we will send them a message. That this… this is our land!

Jake Sully: Everything is backwards now, like out there is the true world and in here is the dream.

If You Liked This Movie, Try These

  • Dances With Wolves
  • Ferngully: The Last Rainforest
  • Aliens

Posted December 28, 2009 by Syp in Action, Adventure, Justin, Scifi

24 responses to Justin does Avatar

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  1. I am afraid you watched the movie in 2D and simply did not experience that this movie is told as a visual experience that makes a totally generic plot an experience. The noble savage and other salvaged elements from numerous videogames are just fluff, and they are indeed cliche to boot.

    But tree-hugging hippies?
    A comparison with Dance with Wolves? Someone started this comparison, and I have no idea how they got the idea. IMO it is rather Aliens II mixed with videogames, even MMOs in particular.

    You tried to bash stuff that everyone already praised before you came late to tell everyone the opposite. But you are actually a nice guy and bashing ain’t your thing, you are not mean enough to be entertaining while doing so. :)

    • Both Dances With Wolves and Avatar:

      * Star a wounded military man who is disillusioned with war
      * Military man heads off to a “new frontier”
      * Military man is assigned to a base in the middle of hostile territory
      * Natives are indicated to be murderous savages
      * Military man makes contact with the tribe and is tolerated
      * Military man is taught by a female of the tribe how to fit in (and, to a lesser extent, the language)
      * The tribe is seen as noble, naturalistic and compassionate
      * The “whites” are seen as ignorant, brutal and without redemption
      * Military man ends up fighting to protect the tribe
      * Military man ends up joining the tribe and marries the tribal girl
      * There’s a big hunt sequence (Buffalo/wind birds) in which the military man proves his worth
      * Military man’s former unit ends up labeling him as a traitor and imprisons him

      Yeah, I don’t see any similarities whatsoever…

      • You really did not get it, and if the scheme is well known to you and everyone else on this planet, does this make it bad by default? Nobody else gave a damn about the anti-war message, the preservation of nature and all that.

        Yes, it is the visuals that make this movie great. And how the basic and very generic elements you listed were executed.

        He used the new 3D technology very well, better than it was usual so far. I personally did not enjoy any 3D movie before, they were either cartoony or stuff like Beowulf and similar 3D movies by Zemeckis.

    • it’s dances with wolves in space. if you didn’t get that i guess you slept through the whole thing.

      not that i have any problem with ripping of other movies, nothing is original anyway, shakespeare wrote every story there is, and all that. but you have to do it right: stealing the good parts and improving the bad parts, turn cliches around (or deliberately keep them).
      but unfortunatly this movie was a cliche-fest, seen it before, seen it done BETTER before.
      the visuals may have been 3D, but the characters appeared to be stuck in one dimension: as justin says: people here are either good-good-good or bad-bad-bad. no grey area whatsoever.
      this has been the decade of moral ambigious heroes (who tend to stand in the shadows a lot, just so the audience knows they are dealing with a ‘daaaaark hero’), of heroes with emotions.

      however, i have to give this movie some credit for being the first ‘real’ bigscreen 3D-movie. with ‘real’ meaning that the 3D is used to emerge you in the movie, not to throw imaginary objects at the audience.
      but i doubt that fact alone will be enough for this movie to be remembered. do we remember the first movie with sound? the first movie with colors?

      i predict a serious problem for the investors in this movie: nobody will want to buy the 2D version on DVD (since the actual story, well, sucks), and by the time home-3D-systems arrive this little movie will be long forgotten.

    • I cant believe you dont see the Dances with Wolves connection here Longasc. It took me about 20 minutes of watching this to catch it. That and they ripped of Nagrand from World of Warcraft Burning Crusade. OR did Blizzard rip them off….HMMMMMMM!!!

  2. I can’t help but mention that I fell asleep during this movie.
    Twice.

  3. Just a FYI- it was Cameron himself who stated the Dances with Wolves connection. Soyeah.

  4. So basically…..

    Hippie-dippy propaganda, people suck, nature-is-awesome overall Craptacular snooze-a-thon for the first 2 hours and 20 minutes with a 40 minute final battle sequence of such mind-altering awesomeness that it will implode the very fabric of time itself…..

    Boot-leg copy it is.

    “remember sammy jankiss…..”

  5. *tiny voice* Um… I liked it. Like, a lot. Like really really really a lot. Like I had a big goofy grin on my face and was blinking back tears near the end. And judging from the reactions of the others around me as I left the theater, I wasn’t the only one. I’ll grant you that I haven’t seen ‘Dances with Wolves’, so I can’t say just how accurate the comparison is, but that aside, I honestly think it was one of the best movies I’ve seen in years. I’m not knocking anyone else’s opinions, but I’d just like to say that there ARE people, including myself, who think it’s a really incredible flick.

    • I totally agree with you, I loved it, and I didn’t even watch in 3D. All the way through I kept thinking this is so what Aion should have looked like (the Asmodian bits in particular, everyone went on about the gorgeous scenery and whatnot in Aion but Avatar just blew my mind.)

      Rant all you want about Humans being bad but it’s nice to see us being the enemy and showing some of our true nature for once rather than us defending ourselves from the super awesome intergalactic menace that threatens to destroy us all aaaaaaah.

      • Precisely – there are eighty bazillion movies starring noble humanity against the eeeeeeeevil booga-booga aliens. If recent pop culture tends to go a bit over the top in portraying the opposite to be the case, so what? Turn-about is fair play.
        I’m not getting your reference to ‘Aion’, by the way. Is this something I should have heard of?

    • Only if you play MMOs (and then follow them at that ^^) would you know what Aion is; basically it was game that was overhyped in just about every aspect, and everyone said that some areas in it were gorgeous and stuff like that. When I saw Avatar I was reminded of some of the pictures of the game…Avatar just looked a whole lot better.

      • Ah. Well, yeah, I don’t play MMOs (by which you mean online RPGs, right?), so as you said, there’s no reason why I would have heard of it.
        What Avatar kind of reminded me of, in certain respects, was ‘the Dark Crystal’. Very different in terms of general tone, of course, but both are set on alien worlds with the overall look strongly influenced by underwater flora and fauna. (Also, although I doubt this was intentional, there is a slight facial resemblance between the Gelflings of that film and the Na’vi of Avatar.)

    • Firstly, agree with you 100%. Avatar was a fantastic film and twice I caught myself litteraly staring with dropped jaw at the screen, something that’s never happened before. The story is good, most of the criticisms I’ve seen don’t seem to be relevant (prime example, the military would have wiped out the Na’vi with super-duper weapons. Possibly but that wasn’t the military, just private contractors) and I don’t agree at all with the view that says you’re bashed over the head with that message. The company guy lost control of the situation(a company, let us not forget, that put a LOT of money into experimental science to find a peaceful solution) and as so easily happens in high-pressure sdangerous ituations things went south in a hurry.

      But what I really wanted to say is I hate, hate hate hate what the Internet has become these days if you’re the disenting voice. I know exactly what you mean by *tiny voice*, dare to speak out or, god forbid, actually try for a debate and in most corners of the net you’ll get jumped on in a heartbeat if you go against perceived wisdom. Pathetic really and a great shame. Oh well, the crtics by-and-large agree with you, the box office CERTAINLY agrees with you and every single one of my friends that’s seen it agrees with you.

      • Well, to be fair, MRFH is actually pretty good about that. I’ve yet to see a dissenting voice here that got pounced upon by people bellowing ‘NO YOU ARE WRONG’ – this is a pretty friendly site. Still, I agree with you that the Net can certainly become a bit of a pep rally for people of a certain point of view.

  6. Pingback: Movie News « Mutant Reviewers From Hell

  7. The movie is only the 5th movie, all time, to have grossed over 1 billion world wide (and it has only been out – going on 3 weeks)… Obviously, your not alone Deneb.

    • Oh yeah, I know. It’s just that I’d only just gotten back from the theater when I wrote that, still feeling generally euphoric and full of goodwill towards all mankind, and all of a sudden, everybody seemed to be beating up on this thing that I’d enjoyed so much. It kinda gave me that ‘little sad puppy’ feeling, ya know? ‘But… but… I LIKED it… *lip trembles*’

  8. Borrowing from different sources is basically fine; I’d just like to know which sources are acknowledged in the credits. Anyone?

    Here’s the list of similarities for the oft mentioned Call Me Joe:

    *paraplegic man is one of the few suitable to control an avatar
    *control is telepathic, enabled by expensive hi-tech
    *avatar is grown artificially
    *avatar is blue and has a tail
    *takes place at the frontier
    *… on a gas giant/the moon of a gas giant
    *… with alien physics
    *dangerous native predators
    *scouting mission
    *tension between hero and organisation sending him
    *hero happily becomes a permanent alien
    *… which wasn’t thought possible or desirable before

    I don’t know if some of the more interesting concepts, like the difference between brain, mind, ego and identity, the privacy of thought and the compatibility and resilience of minds have made it into the movie.

    Find more compelling arguments for further possible sources (be sure to search for “Maanerek” in the comments there.): http://www.locusmag.com/Reviews/2009/12/all-energy-is-borrowed-review-of-avatar.html

  9. I was wondering why I didn’t care for Avatar all that much and at first I thought it was because it ripped of Dances With Wolves, but then I remembered that The Last Samurai also ripped off DWW (even more so than Avatar) but I LIKED The Last Samurai, because the last Samurai had ninjas, and ninjas automatically make everything ten times cooler (think about it; Sleepless in Seattle–with ninjas! You’d watch that movie wouldn’t you).

    So I think if Avatar had just had some ninjas, I could have gotten on board.

  10. Pingback: Movie News « Mutant Reviewers From Hell

  11. Weregeek reveals the truth about Avatar

    http://www.weregeek.com/2010/02/10/

  12. Pingback: Movie News « Mutant Reviewers From Hell

  13. Pingback: Al does Avatar « Mutant Reviewers From Hell

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