Posted on 12/13/2009 2:22:55 PM PST by SeekAndFind
Absent from the big screen for over a decade now, Oscar-winning director James Cameron returns armed with a reported half-billion dollars, a story hes been desperate to tell for 15 years, and the very latest in cutting-edge visual technology. The result is Avatar, a sanctimonious thud of a movie so infested with one-dimensional characters and PC clichés that not a single plot turn small or large surprises. I call it the liberal tell, where the early and obvious politics of the film gives away the entire story before the second act begins, and Avatar might be the sorriest example of this yet. For all the time and money and technology that went into its making, the thing that matters most character and story are strictly Afterschool Special.
What a crushing disappointment from one of our most original and imaginative filmmakers.
Set in 2154, Avatar is a thinly disguised, heavy-handed and simplistic sci-fi fantasy/allegory critical of America from our founding straight through to the Iraq War. Sam Worthington is Jake Sully, a paraplegic Marine Corporal sent to the planet Pandora after the untimely death of his brother. In a plot-thread built up to promise much that never pays off, Sully has none of the training his brother benefitted by: years of schooling in the Avatar Program to prepare him to infiltrate the indigenous species of Pandora called the Navi, who are the only things between Earths RDA (Resources Development Administration) and a precious energy resource ironically called Unobtainium.
(Excerpt) Read more at bighollywood.breitbart.com ...
Here’s another review of the movie — AVATAR :
http://hollywood-elsewhere.com/2009/12/not_right-wing.php
Not Right-Wing Friendly
The political import of Avatar — and there’s no waving this aspect away because it’s right in your face start to finish, and especially in the third act — is ardently left. It is pro-indigenous native, anti-corporate, anti-imperialist, anti-U.S. Iraq War effort, anti-U.S.-in-Afghanistan (and anti-troop-surge-in-that-country, or strongly against the thinking of President Barack Obama and Gen. Stanley McChrystal), anti-rightie, anti-Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld, etc.
Yes, it’s very teenaged adolescent in its super-imaginative wacko visions and exuberant energy levels, but politically it’s pure Che Guevara (more the Motorcycle Diaries or Che-in-Cuba version than Che in Bolivia), Naom Chomsky, Hugo Chavez, Howard Zinn, Gore Vidal, Oliver Stone, etc. Cameron is an earth-hugging lefty from way back (the flagrant despise-the-arrogant-rich current in Titanic being but one example) so this should come as no surprise to anyone. I for one am cheered and heartened.
If Sarah Palin sees Avatar and then sits down and actually thinks about what it’s saying (which is always a dicey proposition, I admit), she’ll hate this movie. Because Avatar hates her and her kind. Some righties will pretend to like it (”great popcorn flick! took my kids!”), but they’d have to be in major denial mode not to recognize that Avatar is much more MSNBC than Fox News. It really spits on the Fox News philosophy/worldview. If Cameron had for some inane reason put a Fox News-type character in the film, he/she would end up with a Na’vi arrow through his/her chest, trust me.
Call it the most flamboyant, costliest, grandest left-liberal super-movie anyone’s ever seen — a political tract that cost Rupert Murdoch God knows how many hundreds of millions to make and yet is totally pro-loincloth, pro-native, despise-the-greedy, hug-the-earth, worship-the-earth, down with the soulless short-end, down with the us-first, masters-of-the-universe thinking behind the Goldman Sachs/Timothy Geithner culture and up with the eternal/spiritual in all cultures and all corners of the globe. The tragedy of the Vietnam War echoes all through this film. Somewhere Ho Chi Minh is smiling.
Cameron explains the anti-imperialist current to John Anderson in a forthcoming N.Y. Times Sunday piece: “I’m...a child of the ‘60s. There’s a part of me who wants to put a daisy in the end of the gun barrel. I believe in peace through superior firepower, but on the other hand I abhor the abuse of power and creeping imperialism disguised as patriotism. Some of these things you can’t raise without being called unpatriotic, but I think it’s very patriotic to question a system that needs to be corralled, or it becomes Rome.”
Spoiler: I leave it to the community to decide whether there’s a huge 9/11 metaphor in Avatar or not, but I felt one (although politically it makes no sense in the context of the film.) Call it a reverse 9/11 image. I’m not talking about the destruction of a man-made super-structure but a natural one. I’ll leave it at that and wait for reactions.
I’ll pass and watch The Longest Day again instead.
10-4 that!!!
From what I’ve heard, the plot sounds like it’s just Pocahontas in space.
dances with smurfs
Specially if the 10 foot tall space babe is quiet, respects her man, does not clobber them with cooking utensils, like skillets, and does not blame every problem in the universe on them.
parsy, who is scared of earth women
Not relative, but I love how spell check just can't recognize "Obama", haha.
Why not make a movie about a rational civilization that simply buys the unobtainium? I don’t think that movie would cost 300 million dollars to make.
If true it will take awhile to break even. Who had all that cash to toss around? Libtards don’t work, conservatives who do have been insulted by this bunch.
Ferngully 2, staring Cameron the Insane Fruit Bat.
James Cameron=Mort Liddy for all the Atlas Shrugged followers.
It’s funny how pretty much every character in that book exists today in some form.
I read that Cameron revoked his application for U.S. citizenship when Bush was elected.
bump with no comment
I hope it fails in a big way. But people are probably too stupid to be annoyed by the blatant preaching and hatred of themselves.
Interesting what Orson Scott Card had to say about Cameron as well:
“Mickey from St. Louis: What was it like working with James Cameron on the novelization of “The Abyss”?
OC: Hell on wheels. He was very nice to me, because I could afford to walk away. But he made everyone around him miserable, and his unkindness did nothing to improve the film in any way. Nor did it motivate people to work faster or better. And unless he changes his way of working with people, I hope he never directs anything of mine. In fact, now that this is in print, I can fairly guarantee that he will never direct anything of mine. Life is too short to collaborate with selfish, cruel people.”
http://timp.net/osclistgallery/transcript990831.htm
Somehow I’m not surprised...
I predict in four weeks we will get the usual hand ringing articles wondering why such a work of art so bombed at the box office. Why the rubes didn’t put down ten dollars on such an obvious liberal masterpiece!
Oh the humanity!
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