Hero with 1000 faces. Avatar ferait presque date. J’ai fini par voir le film de James Cameron.
C’est une expérience visuelle étonnante, jamais à proprement parler esthétique, je n’ai pas ressenti la moindre émotion de cette nature, mais j’ai sans cesse songé aux potentialités encore inexplorées qui frémissaient de toute part. Le cinéma ne pourra jamais plus être le même. Depuis des années, je ne fréquente plus les salles obscures. Déjà parce qu’avec les enfants c’est un peu plus compliqué mais ce n’est pas une raison suffisante. En vérité, je m’ennuie au cinéma. Cinéma Tous les réalisateurs qui s’apprêtent à sortir des films d’action en 2D doivent se morfondre.
Certains nous feront le coup de la photo argentique par rapport à la photo numérique. En prime, Cameron donne de l’air à toute une industrie. Je suis sûr que le cinéma d’auteur peut s’emparer de la technique. Fabulation Avatar est un western avec le Blanc qui se fait initier par les Indiens et qui finit par se battre avec eux contre les Blancs. Écologie Star War Pas d’humour.
Vinvin. Avatar ferait presque date. Avatar « A Philosopher's Blog. James Cameron‘s upcoming film Avatar (not to be confused with Nickelodeon‘s Avatar) is already drawing a great deal of criticism. This is despite the fact that the film is not yet finished. While it is reasonable to criticize what is known about the film (it is expensive and not yet done) it is not reasonable to make judgments about the quality of the film itself until it has been finished and seen.
From what I have seen of the film, it does seem to draw heavily from existing sources. First, people are making the obvious connection to Dances With Wolves. However, it is even more appropriate to go back before that movie and compare Avatar’s core plot device with that of the (original) Outer Limits episode Chameleon. Of course, it is rather difficult to create a movie that does not draw from some pre-existing source. Second, comparisons are being drawn to the Vietnam war (and other conflicts). Naturally, there is also some criticism of the cost of the movie.
Like this: Like Loading... SPOILERS: Understanding the deeper meaning of Avatar “…some of the darkest chapters in the history of my world involved the forced relocation of a small group of people to satisfy the demands of a large one…” Jean-Luc Picard, Star Trek Insurrection All the writeups I’ve seen about Avatar have focused on the timeframe it took to make it (something like 10 years), the cost (most expensive film ever made), the CGI (the most realistic CGI and motion capture ever), the 3D (yes you get to use those cool glasses), the fantastical imagination of James Cameron (the world presented is fully formed and utterly believable) or the theme of mother earth and symbiosis with the life around us.
In my mind, the film is not really about any of those things. It is in fact about what Jean-Luc Picard says in Insurrection and I have quoted at the top of this post. It is about what all great works of art are about – the fallibility of the human condition. Does this sound at all familiar to anyone? Have those people become desperate? Read my (naive?) Avatar - Frames /sing.