@Emperor_Taiki:
@ABWorsham:
I think Jurassic Park, for it’s time, was a greater achievement than Avatar. Jurassic Park is one of my top five theater movies of all time.
Jurassic Park is awesome. great movie, unique and terrifing adventure with real characters, fast action and funny dailogue. It also has Samuel L. Jackson.
I am still waiting to hear what was good about Avatar.
You make the point I was trying to make earlier about being able to step back from your own feelings about the movie. Are you unable to identify what is good and bad for yourself?
Besides I did say why I liked it.
@frimmel:
I enjoyed it. It is a fairly standard story but I rather like that particular story and it was told very well. I like stories where the ‘good guys’ win. I found myself very immersed and never questioned whether the Na’vii were ‘real’ and I was rooting for them out loud by the end. Cameron certainly understands the grammar of cinema.
It is a wonderful technical achievement even only seeing it 2D but I’d hardly say revolutionary. Although my GF said, “This must have been what it was like seeing Star Wars in 1977.”
It is a solid film by any objective cinematic standard.
But I’ll tack on…
All of the action scenes were terrific. They were well shot and well editied and that this was largely done ‘green screen’ is even more impressive. The scenes where Jake chooses and ‘breaks’ one of the dragons and then flys were invigorating and vertigo inducing. The times when Na’Vi and Humans were in the same shot were seamless.
Themes of where honor is to be found and navigating Faustian bargains while fairly standard are presented and handled well. It is easy to sympathize with Jake’s predicament seeking a reconciliation between the sides and trying to decide if his own goals are worth the price. Sam Worthington did a fine job in his role as Jake being confronted with this Faustian/soldier dilemma.
Sigourney Weaver was terrific as somebody trying to simply understand how Pandora worked which for sci-fi movie lingo they gave you enough that you didn’t feel it was McGuffin and not so much that the scriptwriters were just trying to make themselves sound smart. They kept it all internally consistent.
The film maker took a stand. “It is wrong to kill people and destroy their home simply because you want their stuff and think your need is more important than theirs.” He had something to say and said it without apology.