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To: notes2005

Visually stunning it was, and so too lousy with hoary left-wing, anti-American, anti-Republican cliches.


2 posted on 01/03/2010 3:31:18 PM PST by Plutarch
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To: Plutarch
Visually stunning it was, and so too lousy with hoary left-wing, anti-American, anti-Republican cliches

Boy that's for sure. So, 150 years in the future, and people still referencing GW?

6 posted on 01/03/2010 3:35:25 PM PST by ecomcon
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To: Plutarch

I knew the story ahead of time, but walked out with my jaw dropping on the special effects. I really like where it put the bar.


26 posted on 01/03/2010 4:15:39 PM PST by Molon Labbie
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To: Plutarch

Republicans ARE those blue aliens, in harmony with their economic environment, but under threat from outside forces. The movie is great.


29 posted on 01/03/2010 4:19:01 PM PST by Tax Government (Democrats: dealers in economic crack.)
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To: Plutarch

Leftists are brilliant propagandists. They use cutting edge art and technology and throw in their leftist storyline as an unmentioned oh-by-the-way, and people soak in the message. Conservatism is completely absent on this very important playing field. Instead of trying to buy a football team, Limbaugh should buy a movie studio.


32 posted on 01/03/2010 4:24:59 PM PST by Huck (The Constitution is an outrageous insult to the men who fought the Revolution." -Patrick Henry)
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To: Plutarch

It didn’t look visually stunning to me from the commercials. The characters’ faces looked awful.


50 posted on 01/03/2010 5:35:23 PM PST by TheThinker ( Reverend Wright obviously cheered on 9/11. Did Obama?)
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To: Plutarch
I enjoyed the film a lot. Forget about the stupid story: it's stupid, and it'll only distract you from the spectacle which is well worth the price of a ticket. As someone else put it, would you rather fuss over a cliche storyline about not-very-smart blue people who dress like American Indians, fight with bows and arrows, live in trees, or sit back and watch dragons fly past floating mountains in 3D? There are only so many mythic plots a lazy scriptwriter can use without making his lazy audience think too hard. Why not use the dependable “White man joins the Indians and shows them how to defend themselves against civilization”. It's been around since before James Fenemore Cooper and worked well in “Dances With Wolves”. The left-wing nonsense was so obviously predictable and heavy-handed, I don't think there was a single person in the theater who took it seriously, especially young people.
52 posted on 01/03/2010 5:53:43 PM PST by PUGACHEV
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To: Plutarch; All
Guy by the name of Gregg Easterbrook tears apart its flimsy premise with ease:

xxxx

Outer-Space Cartoon Says Americans Are the Bad Guys:
"Millions for defense, not a sixpence for tribute," Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, once a delegate to the Constitutional Convention, said in 1796. "Millions for special effects, not a Starbucks gift card for writing," might be the motto of modern Hollywood, at least if "Avatar" is the exemplar. "Avatar" should have been marketed as a cartoon and best animated feature of 2009. The special effects were great -- though yours truly increasingly finds computer-drawn special effects boring, since they are so obviously fake. The script was as dull and predictable as the special effects were flashy. Maybe the dialogue sounded better in Na'vi.

Hardly anything was explained -- so let's start with why the whole plot was set in motion in the first place. Sinister humans are bent on removing peace-loving blue aliens from a point on Pandora above some minerals the sinister humans want to strip-mine; the peace-loving natives won't move because the place is sacred ground. Reader Bryan Law of Independence, Ohio, notes: "Even today, horizontal drilling means you don't have to destroy the surface above a resource to obtain it. So why wasn't the problem on Pandora solved by horizontal drilling? Don't tell me that 150 years from now, humanity has become capable of interstellar travel, yet forgotten a basic mining technique."

The mineral is an anti-gravity substance that floats. Midway through the movie, we learn there are entire mountains of it floating above Pandora. So why not mine the floating mountains, where no Pandorans live, rather than go to war with the natives? The clichéd super-heartless corporation that wants the mineral is depicted as obsessed by profit. War is a lot more expensive than mining! If profit is what motivates the corporation, war is the last thing it would want.

Because hardly anything in the movie is explained, we never find out what nation or organization has built a huge base on Pandora, then brought along an armada of combat aircraft. The Earth characters all look, act and talk like Americans -- in fact, slang hasn't changed in 150 years! But does this project have some kind of government approval, or is it an interplanetary criminal enterprise? It's hard to believe that 150 years from now, humanity's first interaction with another sentient species would be conducted without any public officials present, but that's what is depicted.

And who are the gun-toting fatigue-clad personnel commanded by the ultra-evil Colonel Quaritch -- are they regular military, mercenaries, private security contractors? Audiences never find out. They're just a bunch of trigger-happy killers who want to slaughter intelligent beings, and all of them but one do exactly what Colonel Quaritch says, even once it's clear Quaritch is insane. The colonel must work for somebody -- for the Pentagon, some government agency, for the corporation. So why isn't he subject to supervision? No organization would entrust a project costing trillions of dollars -- a town-sized facility has been built five light-years away -- to a single individual with unchecked power. You'd worry that the single individual would commit some huge blunder that wiped out your trillion-dollar investment, which ends up being exactly what happens. I found the colonel with absolute authority a lot more unrealistic than the floating mountains.

Then there's director James Cameron's view of military personnel. If I were a military man or woman, I would find "Avatar" insulting. With one exception, the helicopter pilot played by Michelle Rodriguez -- her character is twice referred to as a Marine, suggesting the military personnel are regular military, not mercenaries -- all the people in fatigues are brainless sadists. They want to kill, kill, kill the innocent. They can't wait to begin the next atrocity. It's true that the U.S. military has conducted atrocities, in Vietnam and during the Plains Indians wars. But slaughter of the innocent is rare in U.S. military annals. In "Avatar," it's the norm. The bloodthirsty military personnel readily comply with the colonel's orders to gun down natives. No one questions him -- though in martial law, a soldier not only may but must refuse an illegal order. Plus the military personnel are depicted as such utter morons -- not a brain in any of their heads -- that none notice the TOTALLY OBVIOUS detail that Pandora's unusual biology will be worth more than its minerals. Yes, movies traffic in absurd super-simplifications. But we're supposed to accept that of the deployment of several hundred, every soldier save one is a low-IQ cold-blooded murderer. A mysterious organization spends a trillion dollars to build a base in another star system -- then puts an obvious lunatic in complete command.

What does "Avatar" build up to? Watching the invading soldiers -- most of whom happen to be former American military personnel -- die is the big cathartic ending of the flick. Extended sequences show Americans being graphically slaughtered in the natives' counterattack. The deaths of aliens are depicted as heartbreaking tragedies, while the deaths of American security forces are depicted as a whooping good time. In Cameron's "Aliens," "The Abyss" and his television show "Dark Angel," U.S. military personnel are either the bad guys or complete idiots, often shown graphically slaughtered. Cameron is hardly the only commercial-film director to present watching evil U.S. soldiers slaughtered as popcorn-chomping suburban shopping mall fun: in the second "X-Men" flick, U.S. soldiers are the bad guys and graphically killed off. Films that criticize the military for its faults are one thing: When did watching depictions of U.S. soldiers dying become a form of fun?

xxxx

58 posted on 01/05/2010 1:18:46 PM PST by Ultra Sonic 007 (To view the FR@Alabama ping list, click on my profile!)
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