Saturday, January 23, 2010

How To Make Really Good Popcorn

Avatar (2009)

Year: 2009
Length: 160
Source: U.S.
Color: C
Genre: Action, Sci-Fi, Thriller

Production:
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, Giant Studios, Lightstorm Entertainment
Prohibited: No

Directed by: James Cameron



Well finally I am reviewing Avatar, the latest prodigy made in Cameron.
from the beginning, the hype that was created around this movie: monstrous. Go see this movie hall is how to prepare to make love to a woman like Scarlett Johansson or Megan Fox ... actual performance anxiety! The media, critics and box office data have made us think of us before a masterpiece of cinema, which would revolutionize history forever, but ... this is so.
James Cameron has a particular value, which is to keep what he says. After fifteen years in the making (The project was shelved in favor of a more "simple" Titanic (1997) - still in the top of the list of collections of all time, with about 150 million dollars of waste from the "blue giant" - because the technology not allowed to be in harmony with his will), about three hundred million dollars of budget and six years for the mere creation of "The Volume" (revolutionary new system of performance capture, which replaces the traditional motion capture) is able to produce a work which, in my humble opinion, keeps what he said: "Avatar will be the biggest revolution in cinema after the transition to sound and color."

We are faced with a product that is indeed a piece blockbuster, but it's also a dream (this page) that Cameron gives us directly from his head. Just thinking that everything is Pandora has grown in his mind for three decades, should give you idea of \u200b\u200ba director (and man) is this.

But we go beyond and enter the film. The story was quickly battered by critics because it is basically the only point on which you can cling to in all honesty. Someone said it was too similar to Pocahontas (1995). I see and raise with Dances with Wolves (1990) , Ferngully - The Adventures of Zak and Crysta (1992) and Last Samurai (2003) .
Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) is an ex-Marine who is sent on Pandora to perform searches through a remote-controlled alien body called Avatar. Here he is asked to infiltrate the population Na'vi and earn their trust and then report their every move: this will allow them to wage a major offensive against the peaceful race to uproot them from their territory from which it can then extract the ' unobtanium , mineral that is traded at astronomical prices. Here the brave Jake begin to know and love the culture and the beautiful Na'vi Neytiri (Zoe Saldana), ended up having to choose on whose side you fight.
trite, obvious and repetitive, yes, but not when you see through the eyes of Cameron.
He has not made a film, has created a world, a universe, something "alive" in every respect: even the greeting of the population has a not-so-that the spiritual ... "I see you."
Cameron has created a universe populated by a huge variety of animals, insects, amphibians, elephants and predators. The flora is lush and varied: each branch or leaf is perfect and well-defined, characterized by a story that everyone in this world seem to love and respect.
Cameron has created a population with its traditions, its rituals, fears and faith. A world that is constantly filled with energy hippie / new age that seems suggest a concept that should be there very much to heart at this moment: "we are the world we live in and all that surrounds us."
The film is pure action, there is no time for boredom. A flash after another leads the viewer on a journey that eventually will not want to return.
The script is not perfect and the script is smudged - because it's all already seen and reviewed, it would be impossible to do something wrong. The solutions adopted by Cameron film are of the highest level, as well as the perfection of three-dimensional, totally different than any other film seen before.

Avatar is not just a movie, is an experience. An experience that must live film and 3D, for sure. Why are these 160 minutes of film history will never come again in the room (although I'm willing to bet that there will remain a long time) and you could seriously regret not having lived.
In conclusion, after the announcement of a follow-up by Cameron, let me say one thing: congratulations James.

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