2 months pre-release and a month after its release, was the amount of time I was longing to watch, arguably the most anticipated movie of recent times. Getting tickets for Avatar in Bangalore was like mission impossible-5! Rave reviews and opinions from friends and some of the film critics alike, had increased my expectations 2 fold. And the fact that the movie had grossed around 5000 Crore worldwide in its first month only added to my soaring curiosity. I finally managed to get tickets after a month (Courtesy Solar Eclipse! - relatively lesser number of people come out that day). I was all pumped up with anticipation and the 3D glasses had almost turned me into a kid. I was exchanging my pair with my mom’s. I mean, come on! You wouldn’t want to watch a 3D movie for the first time in your life with a distorted pair of glasses, would you?
The genius of James Cameroon was well established after his last movie, the cult “Titanic”. So, I didn’t expect anything less than spectacular from his latest offering. But , did the movie stand up to my expectations? Yes and No! Let me make a disclaimer, at the outset. Each of us are entitled to our opinion and this is my individual opinion and I could be completely wrong! Avatar is an alien story. But, for once aliens here are not large headed or multi-colored or contorted-faced creatures but we, the humans! Earthlings have invaded a moon of the planet Polyphemus, called Pandora which has its own native species calle
d the Na’vi. The reason for this invasion is a precious mineral called Unobtanium. What stands between the humans and the Unobtanium now is the indigenous Na’vi population who dwell on a huge hometree that is on the largest Unobtanium reserve in the planet. The task at hand is to drive the Na’vis away from their place and two teams are at work for this endeavor. One, a military force whose major believes in “Shock and Awe” theory to exterminate the natives out, and the other, a team of scientists working on an “Avatar” program. Here Navi look-alikes are cloned and controlled by humans. This team believes in negotiating and convincing Na’vis to relocate their place, by being one of them. The protagonist of the story Jake is an ex-marine who has lost his limbs. Jake’s Avatar lands up inside the Na’vi land and becomes a part of them by learning and understanding their way of life with the help of a young Na’vi female Neytiri.
Soon he realizes the deep connection they have with their forest and the divine relationship they share with the nature. Finally Jake reveals that his real purpose of entering their land and lives was to make them understand that they are not safe in this place and to convince them to move away from the forest. Humans, people from the skies as they are called, launch an attack on the Na’vis. And predictably, Na’vis come together from all over Pandora and decide to fight back, under the leadership of “now enlightened” Jake. And more predictably they succeed.
Now, coming back to the question of whether the movie stood up to my expectations and my answer to that. Yes, because Avatar, technically was everything that I had imagined it to be and more. it’s a visual experience like no other! The meticulous attention paid to detailing is mind boggling. The illuminate
d ponds, the tree of souls and almost everything you see in Pandora is a visual spectacle. Hats off to the imagination of its creators. The amount of effort and painstaking time gone into creating every single creature in Pandora, right from a small insect to seeds of Eywa to every single shrub to the legendary floating mountains, is evident in every frame. It seems as though days or even months were spent in conceiving, creating and bringing each being to life on screen. How I wish, a quarter of that time was spent on making the storyline stronger and the screenplay more convincing! Usually science fiction movies or technically savvy movies fall pray to the stereotype of being just that- ”technically savvy but intellectually numb!” But I expected James Cameroon to break that jinx and come out with a movie which is not only brilliant technically but also has a backing of a powerful script. Sadly though, Avatar did not stand up to my expectation in this department. By no means can Avatar be called intellectually numb, but an over-simplified film. Avatar is a fairy tale at the end of the day, where an underdog takes on the mighty and wins eventually. The thing with any fairy tale is that everyone knows the ending. So, how will you make such a predictable outcome interesting and how will you make the story work? By making it as believable as possible I suppose. When we see Lagaan, we can believe that a group of farmers took on an English cricket team and humbled them in their own game. An Apocalypto works for the same reason. When it comes to Avatar, it is hard to digest the predictable climax where a bunch of Na’vis defe
at a lethal and sophisticated army with bows and arrows. Flying dragons pulling people out of the helicopters was almost cartoon movie style! It is this simplification of climax that was a lump that was too big to swallow. Not just the climax, scene where the Na’vi king easily accepts Jake’s plea to learn their culture and inducts him into their society, or the scene where army major decides to bring down the hometree based on just a video log from a sleepy Jake, is far fetched and hard to believe. If the makers had given more thought and come up with more solid sequences than these simplistic escape routes, Avatar would have been much more than a visual wonder. Also, some of the messages that Cameroon has tried to send out are too much on the face rather than subtle. Can you believe, in one of the dialogue, the army major actually says “We will fight terror with terror”.
All said and done Avatar is still recommended as must watch despite its shortcomings for the sheer vision and imagination of one man, James Cameroon. Just that, it could have been much more than what it is, had he given more importance to the basic element of story telling, a strong script. I walked out of the theatre into the chilly atmosphere of Bangalore with a mixed feeling of satisfaction and disappointment in my heart.
The genius of James Cameroon was well established after his last movie, the cult “Titanic”. So, I didn’t expect anything less than spectacular from his latest offering. But , did the movie stand up to my expectations? Yes and No! Let me make a disclaimer, at the outset. Each of us are entitled to our opinion and this is my individual opinion and I could be completely wrong! Avatar is an alien story. But, for once aliens here are not large headed or multi-colored or contorted-faced creatures but we, the humans! Earthlings have invaded a moon of the planet Polyphemus, called Pandora which has its own native species calle


Now, coming back to the question of whether the movie stood up to my expectations and my answer to that. Yes, because Avatar, technically was everything that I had imagined it to be and more. it’s a visual experience like no other! The meticulous attention paid to detailing is mind boggling. The illuminate


All said and done Avatar is still recommended as must watch despite its shortcomings for the sheer vision and imagination of one man, James Cameroon. Just that, it could have been much more than what it is, had he given more importance to the basic element of story telling, a strong script. I walked out of the theatre into the chilly atmosphere of Bangalore with a mixed feeling of satisfaction and disappointment in my heart.
a perfect write up!! you have an alternate career path to follow if need be :) if i had read this blog before i watched the movie..i probably might not have watched the movie with so much expectations.
ReplyDeleteI loved the movie.. watched it twice actually.. i told this to someone who hadn't watched it and got a question in response to it as " Is it Difficult to Understand??" the ans is no as you have put it the story is simple.. but its simplicity is its beauty.. i guess the maker wanted us to concentrate more on the beauty of Pandora than the story itself!!!
ReplyDelete@Nandu.. kruthi is right.. you have good alternative career option..just imagine.. watching a movie.. writing reviews and getting payed by the paper for that.. wat do you think?? ;)
Wow :) that's an amazing review.. I especially liked wen u told that making the storyline believable is the best way a predictable movie can be made palpable.. Although i haven't watched the movie, I perfectly know what I can look forward to if i decide to watch it :)
ReplyDeleteBrilliant piece of writing dude.. keep it up!
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ReplyDelete"Insightful" is the word maga. A clean article which backs up opinions with ample reasoning. Imagery is apt and adds to the overall theme - not to mention the effort that went to gathering the info. Unobtainium the name of the element itself is comical :-). Found my thoughts echoed in this. And thats what a review should do - viewers shd relate to it. BTW, I liked the part of flying dragons pulling out people. Banshees were the ones who clinched victory – albeit slightly should I say, stretched? ;-)
ReplyDeletei did not find anything wrong with the movie, maybe coz i was overawed by the special effects..like you say the storyline was over-simplified, but i feel there s nothing wrong with that. many science fictions that happens..
ReplyDeleteanyway i thoroughly enjoyed ur blog. and concur with kruthi n megha abt the alternate career path..good job maga! :)
Agree with you on the weak script part- with so much of time and money being spent on the SFX, JC probably glossed over the script.I mean, could one come up with a more unimaginative name for the element that causes all the hulla gulla in the first place? Anyway, a detailed and enjoyable review, maga.Keep at it.
ReplyDelete