^ ..
I think im going this weekend, if not the next. with family and some friends the 3d one. I've seen the trailer though. did you guys watched it in 3D? cause here we can watch ''normally'' as well
Here in Brazil we are talking about much of this movie. They say the picture is perfect. I saw the trailer and really thought it was very beautiful, colorful and wonderful special effects. I'm very curious to watch.
Yes, I will. :yes:you should watch it :yes:
it's worth it.
Yes, I will. :yes:
If this movie compete in any category at the Oscar, will have many chances to win. :wild:
I do not know but this film will be competing for the Oscar?
I'm not following the competitors to the Oscar.i think its too late im afraid for it to qualify
The Na'vi wear dreadlocks and African-style jewellery (Picture: 20th Century Fox) Avatar was a spectacle, I’ll grant you that. The film’s 230-million-dollar budget guaranteed extravagant and often beautiful 3D special effects. But as I left the cinema last night, I couldn’t help questioning the weird mind behind it all. Was it James Cameron’s intention to be so nauseatingly patronising? And how could the famously Left-wing director have failed to pick up on his film’s racist subtext?
I won’t spoil the plot, but here’s the basic set-up: a group of mercenary humans have colonised a faraway planet, called Pandora, in order to extract an enormously valuable mineral found there. Pandora’s “natives” – a race of tall, blue-skinned aliens called the Na’vi – live on an area of land which is set to be mined. They won’t relocate, so the humans attack. But the Na’vi aren’t your average extra-terrestrials. Blue skin aside, they’re essentially a childish pastiche of the “ethnic”, with recognisably human features.
They wear Maasai-style necklaces and beaded jewellery which Cameron has borrowed from tribal East Africa. Their long, dark hair is dreadlocked. Their clothes are apparently Amerindian. They are armed with bows and poisoned arrows, and wear facepaint into battle. The main Na’vi characters are voiced by four black actors: Zoë Saldaña, C. C. H. Pounder, Laz Alonso and Peter Mensah; as well as one Cherokee, Wes Studi. The evil humans, needless to say, are white, male and middle-aged. James Cameron has been very open about the politics behind Avatar.
LOVED IT.
It was a beautiful film. The scenery was gorgeous. Stunning visuals!! And the action scenes are bad-ass!!
It's a piece of film and ALL films impart different messages to different minds. It gets political, the main character is a marine and there is a war. You can't escape the politics in that. This is James Cameron's film, and as with any film or piece of art, the maker's bias will come through - as will the viewers. You can't help what you see in it - it's the nature of expression. Different for all.
I wish Michael could have seen this. He would have loved it - MicHill it reminded me of earth song too!
i don't know how MJ would feel...i don't know if any of us know that..maybe he would, maybe not...but, i would hope i wouldn't be fooled into thinking a movie is something it's not...i like MJ's messages...but i know, pretty much beforehand, what he's saying, before he says it. i don't wanna be tricked...
what...? umm not like he would have loved seeing the beautiful nature destroyed or anything...
have you seen the movie?
it was just the atmosphere of Pandora was BEAUTIFUL.
since mike loved nature i was just thinking he would have loved that movie.
and seeing the nature getting destroyed was similar to MJ's message in the Earth Song....
i think that might be also what StarSecret meant...
ughh..please pleaseee don't turn it into a discussion about racism of whatever? Please.
I saw the movie today and it was amaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaazing, really! Genius work, it really was a masterpiece. I believe they will make a second one. I simply LOVED the movie, it was beautiful, the trees, everything!
ughh..please pleaseee don't turn it into a discussion about racism of whatever? Please.