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James Cameron's Wizardry in 'Avatar' Movie Demands Being Witnessed on the Big Screen
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Avatar is a visually astonishing spectacle that demands being witnessed on the big screen. Its aesthetics tower considerably over its predictable storyline and mediocre dialogue, but James Cameron deserves props for seamlessly blending live action, 3-D and digital effects in creating his own virtual Eden, the planet Pandora.
It's been two hours since I saw the sneak preview, but lingering images of brilliantly illuminated translucent plants, strangely exotic and hostile creatures, flying mountains with waterfalls, and the big blue Na'vi inhabitants of Pandora still flicker in my mind like visual poetry.
James Cameron, Oscar winning director of "Titanic" and self proclaimed "King of the World," spent the GDP of a third world country, nearly $500 million, and a dozen years laboring on his dream project ultimately creating the technology he needed to fulfill his ambitious vision. His 3-D, "performance capture" technique - whereby he directs live actors who are then digitally rendered like Andy Serkis' performance as "Gollum" in 'Lord of the Rings' - is the new criterion for the medium, infusing the digital creations with such realism that most the times you forget you're looking at a painting.
For those expecting introspective and nuanced character arcs, intellectually stimulating narratives and memorable dialogue, you might surf your Netflix queue this weekend instead. Although Cameron has been slammed for his perfunctory dialogue since "Titanic," his characters [both real and digital] have usually been far more human, likable and believable than the soulless caricatures paraded on screen in the painful "Transformer" movies directed by Michael Bay. Cameron helped Sigourney Weaver get a rare Oscar nomination for playing an action heroine in "Aliens," made us care about Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio's marriage in "The Abyss," and inspired us to root for an Austrian, killing robot who is now the terminating the state of California as Governor. This is not a carte blanche excuse for some of the truly substandard dialogue and storyboard characters you'll witness in "Avatar." However, it is necessary to remind ourselves that Cameron always elevates - at least technologically - the blockbuster genre and cinematic medium, which far too often falls prey to gratuitous explosion porn, a redundant heavy metal soundtracks, and seizure inducing spastic editing.
In "Avatar," we follow the journey of our protagonist Jake, played ably by Australian actor Sam Worthington sporting a very dodgy American accent, a paralyzed marine grunt turned scientific guinea pig who "consciously" enters and physically controls his Na'vi Avatar [a synthetic version of the 10 ft tall, blue colored Pandora natives], which was created in a lab by fusing human and Na'vi DNA. He is commanded to infiltrate the Na'vi community, learn their "savage" ways, earn their trust, and report Intel to his military and corporate superiors who plan to rape and pillage the land to uncover the largest known quantities of Unobtainium, the most precious resource in the year 2154 for an energy depleted human population.
Predictably, Jake the reluctant colonizer, much like John Rolfe, falls in love with the beautiful Na'vi warrior princess and Pandoran Pocahontas, Neytiri, played exceptionally well by the athletic and expressive Zoe Saldana. After three short months under Neytiri's tutelage, Jake's avatar naturally evolves into an uber Alpha-Omega Na'vi male warrior and is welcomed to their clan as one of their own. Cameron rehashes the cliched Hollywood trope most recently seen in "Last Samurai" of the naive, ignorant White imperialist who befriends the savages, has a trans-formative epiphany, gains self awareness, mates with their hottest woman, and like a prodigy learns their fighting techniques and culture so quickly that he eventually ends up leading them.
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