|
Avatar


Directed by: James Cameron
Starring: Sam Worthington
Genre:
Science Fiction
Run Time: 162
min.
Release Date:
December 2009
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
AVATAR is a visual feast. And at an estimated $280 million to
make, it had better be. James Cameron, best known for spending as much
money as he can on a project (see TITANIC and his other flicks
that have given him the nickname "The $200 million dollar man"), leads
the way again as writer/director. And with him comes Aussie actor Sam
Worthington who also starred in Cameron’s TERMINATOR SALVATION
film.
As stated at the beginning, this is a highly stylized, visual film
that has 3-D effects galore. You feel like you’re riding on the back of
some faraway creature as it dives through clouds, brushes the forest
tops, and skims floating cliff faces. It is this that
gives most, if not all, of the film’s entertainment punch. If you didn’t
see it in 3-D, then you’re missing out on the best part of the movie.
But where the film falls down is its story. This film is basically a
rip-off of two ideas: DANCES WITH WOLVES and Frank Herbert’s
lesser known Pandora series of books. In fact, Wes Studi, who
starred in Dances With Wolves as a tough Pawnee Indian, holds a
similar role here in Avatar as the roughshod Eytukan. Granted,
this is a space epic, but the transfer of ideas from Dances With
Wolves still holds very true: A white man comes into native country,
battles with them, learns to respect them, switches allegiances, helps
save the natives from complete annihilation. This is pure Dances With
Wolves.
As far as Frank Herbert’s Pandora series goes, there’s quite a few
similarities. The first big one is the planet. In both Frank’s and
Cameron’s universes, the planet is called Pandora. Nothing to get in a
fuss about since the mythology of Pandora is well known since the time
of the early Greeks. But where the similarities merge is with the planet
itself. In both universes, the planet is alive. Literally. And this
living force has a name. On Frank Herbert’s Pandora, it is a life force
known as Avata (hmmm, that sounds familiar too). On Cameron’s Pandora,
it is known as Eywa. Both planets are hostile to humans but are valuable
in their own way (for Frank Herbert it was the expansion of
humanity/consciousness, and for James Cameron a rich mineral source).
So for those out there that are touting how "original" this is, I
think you just haven’t remembered (or weren’t around) when
actor/director Kevin Costner filmed his western epic and/or haven’t read
Frank Herbert’s Pandora series (starting with Destination: Void
and going through The Ascension Factor).
All this being said, Avatar is entertaining. It has that
big-screen appeal and escapism that so many movie-goers pine for. And it
has some of the best visual effects you’ll ever see. But just don’t say
it’s "original."
(back to top) |
Image from Avatar

DVD cost: NOT YET AVAILABLE
Purchase: NOT YET AVAILABLE
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
As of December 2009, with
an alleged budget of US $280,000,000 (estimated), this is one of the
most expensive movies ever made.
Movie Quote: "Everything
is backwards now, like out there is the true world and in here is the
dream. "
Other Actors/Actresses
from Avatar
   |