It takes a hell of a lot of nerve for a man to stand up at the Oscarcast and proclaim himself King of the World. James Cameron just got re-elected – Roger Egbert, Movie Critic.
There are times when you come out of the cinema hall wondering at what just happened in your life in the last 3 hours. Sometimes it’s a powerful riveting story, sometimes its a great laugh fest, and sometimes it’s just magic.
This movie, Avatar, is the last of the category. Magic. As entertainment it is brilliant. For riveting depth of script, it could have done better.
The quick review – I’ll keep spoilers to the minimum. Unless you watched it in 2d….
This is a movie about the US Army forces entering a new land to plunder the precious mineral resources needed back on earth to survive. But every planet doesn’t spread its legs freely. There is resistance. In the form of a race 10 feet tall with blue skin on the planet Pandora called Na’vi. The story then follows the battle of one conquering army and the others refusing to be whores, to their murderous plunder. Sound familiar? Exiled British conquering the Native Indians perhaps?
What this movie made me think was about the extent to which we have plundered nature. To make everything our own. To seek to control resources that don’t belong to us. Instead of a diplomatic solution we exhibit that which requires no brains, Brawns.
In Management, there is the stick and carrot tactic- employed with children too. You show a carrot lead the people away or you drive them out by using force with the stick. It does leave you with a sick feeling in the mouth to see how the latter is shown in the movie.
Man can co exist with nature. Man can live peacefully without showing his aggression. This doesn’t fly into the US corps philosophy who seek to bend the will. Seek, Crush and Destroy.
The Scientists of the bunch want to discover, learn and form an alliance. The soldiers (theres no “misunderestimated” me here) want to conquer the resources by brute force, as the Westerners have often proven adapt at doing. There are many battles subtly placed that keep ones attention.
And at the center of this is Jake Sully, paralysed below the waist, retired Marine of the U.S Army. His brother had taken part in a training where he was given a very expensive “Avatar”. This is akin to the matrix where you plug yourself “into the system” and you take on the smell, feel and emotions of a 10 foot blue Na’vi body. The “Avatar”. These are how the Night Elves would be like in Warcraft 3. There is a host of creatures that seek to still territorial ownership as well on the planet.
The story of Avatar is not entirely new. And to a large extent falls into the Hindi Movie formula of love, family, running around trees and good vs evil. This isn’t something you haven’t seen before.
What you haven’t seen before
What James Cameron excels himself at is innovation. This is what excites me. He has a fertile imagination. And has combined brilliant cinematics into a good storyline. The last time I felt the same rush of visual awe take over where during the Matrix Series. And the Lord of the Rings. I watched too much of Star Trek so Star Wars wasn’t appealing enough. I know.
This is why you MUST watch it in 3d. The flora and fauna, the trees, the chase scenes on the dragon-like birds and pandorian panthers. Here’s a shot.

This is 2d. Imagine that racing at you in 3D. Cameron in this movie has invented a new camera, said to revolutionise cinema going. Invented a new language, called Na’vi. Written a book on the biology of Pandora. So much so that the Pandorapedia, said to be released, is in itself a full compilation of authentic research translated. That is dedication to your movie. He wanted to make this in 1994. We weren’t ready then.
Unlike a lot of bullshit directors today who make up shit, James Cameron spent over 5 years researching this.
An astrophysicist reviewed Avatar and gave it a thumbs up. Think about that someone who is deep in physics approves of the elements put together. And it is this reason James Cameron is a visionary.
I’ll do a detailed why James Cameron’s life inspires me post tomorrow, but I had to get this out of the way. This was a perfect way to spend New Years eve. Spend time being fascinated by riveting visuals and going back wondering what you’d give to be Jake’s Avatar. Flexibility, strength of spirit and more importantly, Neytiri.
Here’s wishing each and every one of you a Very happy new year.
May you get everything you seek, as long as it’s not unobtainable mineral on a planet in the year 2154, because I would then side with the Na’vi.
Posted via email from Kage’s Pages.