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Moderators: sgt.null, dANdeLION
Well, I caught the irony of it all, but good to know it was all a clever ruse. I was starting to make the same gesture as in your avatar pic.dANdeLION wrote:Yeah, I was pulling a gag, accusing you of mis-characterization, while mis-characterizing you at the same time. What the hell, I figured it'd be more entertaining than going to see the movie.......Cagliostro wrote:Jeez, Dan, I can't tell if you are joking or not.
Yeah. The people at my theater clapped when Aragorn chopped Lurtz's head off. Talk about a real fight... Had Cameron done the fight the emotion would've been low to zero, and they'd have fought for 20 minutes on every conceivable piece of terrain--including two boats going over that waterfall.Cagliostro wrote:But mainly with the long drawn out fight sequence at the end. Can we eventually move from this action film trope of having to have the biggest bad guy show up at the end and drag the film out for another 15-20 minutes to finally show the guy get his? That's what I liked about the Fellowship of the Ring - while it wasn't the big baddie, it was Lurtz, the big disposable baddie of that film, that at first looked like a long drawn out fight sequence, and I was just settling in to be bored, when suddenly....ended.
Sorry about the brutal edit of your post, but these two statements are the ones that stood out to me the most. You decry the world, and praise a pretty bland movie, imo. I don't think the world is going to shit. I think movies are going to shit, and Avatar is a prime example of this. The world is just fine. Pretty awesome, actually. But there's lots of money to be made off the belief that it's going to shit. This movie seems to be pretty popular with people who think this way.Seareach wrote:The world's going to sh*t at the moment ...
Avatar was joy to me... To me it's a beautiful, wonderful delight.
Seareach wrote:I've heard criticisms of the movie being too similar to Pocahontas
Lol. Kurosawa's Ran actually was good and did some interesting stuff with Lear (improved it, even, by my estimation; Lear is not a fool anymore but a tyrannical, murderous despot fallen from grace; there's new themes of warfare and nihilism Kurosawa always does so well). Really; Avatar is more comparable with paper-thin epics from the 90s and last decade than a life statement masterwork made by arguably the Shakespeare of cinema.finn wrote:Try Kurasawa's RAN and substitute the characters with the names Goneril, Regan, Cordelia and King Lear! Lets not get started on The Magnificent Seven.
haha And for good reason.finn wrote:Is there anyone in any of the Avatar threads that has even suggested Shakespeare-like qualities to the story? None that I can recall.
This statement is kind of the equivalent of reading a book and loving it, based solely on the awesome cover art.finn wrote:The thing people have enjoyed is the whole new level of presentation that this movie and created, the new world that has replaced the deserts or Matte backdrops and is so far from polystyrene rocks and big guys in cossies lumbering about backlots. Avatar has presented a new world with different wonders of nature and has done so in a manner that holds together holistically and presents a working ecosystem from a different point of reference.... a magnificent feat.
I wouldn't say I don't enjoy nature. In fact, I quite enjoy nature a lot. But I'm human and live on Earth. I don't hold a lot of love for a red rock on Mars. It's not sentimental. It means nothing to me other than a) it's exotic and b) it's probably worth a lot of money. This is the kind of mentality I've been hearing about with this movie. "Ooooh, it looks shiny!" when in reality it's just a rock.finn wrote:I think people who enjoyed it would be the sort of people who enjoy getting out into the country, woodlands, mountains, coasts.... its not about dissatisfaction with their lot so much as a need to have some connection to nature. Japanese with shoe boxes for apartments keep bonsai, folks in cities keep plants, folk in offices keep cacti....there's a whole industry in office plants supply and maintenance.
So...basically you agree with me. But yet...you're arguing that it's a spectacular movie?finn wrote:There have been good stories presented in a terrible manner, this is a bland story presented in an explosively spectacular visual feast...
No, but I expect for a movie to be something great, it needs substance to it. When I read a book, I don't see any real visuals. The visuals are in my head. I don't need someone to draw for me what an orchid looks like to be able to see it. I don't paint a stunning piece of art and call it poetry.finn wrote:if people have appreciated the work that has gone into that and enjoyed the colours and sounds and scope of those visuals, how come they are somehow deficient..... do people really believe that people who have enjoyed this movie have done so because they are too dumb to spot a effete plotline?
And so we go back to this old hat trick. No, nothing is ever really "original". But some are more creative than others.finn wrote:Show me an original plot. Pretty much every basic storyline has been done before, the visual above (Pocahontis) could just as easily be A Man Called Horse or Dances with Wolves or Last Samurai....... strange no-one panned these in the same manner, in fact they were widely acclaimed Oscar winners! Most stories can be dissected and you'll find the same root in Dickens, Shakespeare, Aesop, Arabian Nights etc. Heroes and Princesses, Tramps and Thieves, Kings and Kingdoms, Warriors and wizards...... its all been done before...... so what? Do we stop making new movies? Try Kurasawa's RAN and substitute the characters with the names Goneril, Regan, Cordelia and King Lear! Lets not get started on The Magnificent Seven.
Does anyone think that Fantasia is any less magnificent, any less of a classic because it has NO plot at all? Perhaps we should not attend fireworks displays because there is a lack of intellectual substance in the presentation!
I think the movie itself is stupid, but if others can enjoy it so be it. Revelatory stuff, huh?finn wrote:do people really believe that people who have enjoyed this movie have done so because they are too dumb to spot a effete plotline?
Ironically, Avatar is pretty much an artistic firework of flash, and that's why I'll never watch it again. Here's the little gem at the earth's core of my point: Avatar does not, like Shakespeare, take its origin ideas and make them its own. What was the origin story for Hamlet? Who cares! Hamlet obsoletes the origin story! I didn't feel that with Avatar. I felt it only transmuted it into sci-fi swords and sorcery (swords and sorcery that the LOTR movies did far better).finn wrote:Does anyone think that Fantasia is any less magnificent, any less of a classic because it has NO plot at all? Perhaps we should not attend fireworks displays because there is a lack of intellectual substance in the presentation!
No it is not, regardless of how condescending and trivialising your remark attempts to be.JazFusion wrote:This statement is kind of the equivalent of reading a book and loving it, based solely on the awesome cover art.finn wrote:The thing people have enjoyed is the whole new level of presentation that this movie and created, the new world that has replaced the deserts or Matte backdrops and is so far from polystyrene rocks and big guys in cossies lumbering about backlots. Avatar has presented a new world with different wonders of nature and has done so in a manner that holds together holistically and presents a working ecosystem from a different point of reference.... a magnificent feat.
.......and I never said how you should keep yours either: what exactly is your point here?JazFusion wrote:Did I trespass onto hallowed ground and should be beaten for my trangressions? It was just an opinion. Specifically, my opinion. I never said how you should keep yours.
Is it that I/we are not living up to your expectations?JazFusion wrote:No, but I expect for a movie to be something great, it needs substance to it.
For you and your expectations and perspectives they might have been, but for Russians and Chinese and Aussies and Kiwis and Brits and French and Germans its probably unlikely that they were viewed as Native Americans; I think that probably only an American perspective which likely puts that view in the minority.JazFusion wrote:As for the "world" of Avatar....yes, it was pretty generic. The Na'vi were nothing but alien Native Americans or maybe some tribal Africans.
By all means have your expectations and views and mentality, I'm not criticising them, but equally I have mine and many of the people who have enjoyed this movie seem to be victims in this thread of a bit of snobbery about what is and is not a good movie. For you it doesn't ring your bells, but for others it does...I'm not dissing your dislike of it but I'm not really prepared to let you diss my liking it because you feel your levels of expectation and somehow superior to mine. They are clearly different, but I am not saying you're mentality is clearly one thing or another, or that the movie is on a plane where you are clearly not sensitive enough to travel to, or you are more likely to think a certain way because you do not like Avatar. In return I'd like to enjoy the same courtesy.JazFusion wrote:I wouldn't say I don't enjoy nature. In fact, I quite enjoy nature a lot. But I'm human and live on Earth. I don't hold a lot of love for a red rock on Mars. It's not sentimental. It means nothing to me other than a) it's exotic and b) it's probably worth a lot of money. This is the kind of mentality I've been hearing about with this movie. "Ooooh, it looks shiny!" when in reality it's just a rock.
Well not quite I guess as you then wrote....Lord Foul wrote: I'm done.
But I can live with that, never really asked for more.....Lord Foul wrote: I think the movie itself is stupid, but if others can enjoy it so be it. Revelatory stuff, huh?
You misunderstand; I was joking "I'm done" in relation to my semi-angry, declarative tone at the end of that post (where the words were all in bold).finn wrote:Well not quite I guess as you then wrote....Lord Foul wrote: I'm done.But I can live with that, never really asked for more.....Lord Foul wrote: I think the movie itself is stupid, but if others can enjoy it so be it. Revelatory stuff, huh?
You misunderstand; I was joking "I'm done" in relation to my semi-angry, declarative tone at the end of that post (where the words were all in bold).finn wrote:Well not quite I guess as you then wrote....Lord Foul wrote: I'm done.But I can live with that, never really asked for more.....Lord Foul wrote: I think the movie itself is stupid, but if others can enjoy it so be it. Revelatory stuff, huh?