Avatar. Avatar. Avatar. How I long to love and hate you.
Love first:
I loved Pandora, the distant world of the Na’vi. It was beautiful and visually stunning in every way. I agree with what everyone and their Mama is saying about the gorgeous effects and the realness of the Na’vi.
As an escape, as a fun thing to do alongside my hubby, it was great fun. I didn’t mind the plot, no it wasn’t *The Usual Suspects* but it was an adequate plot. I’d actually love to see it again. For effects, plot and overall entertainment value, I give it an A+. And another $6.50 if I could see it again.
Now, what I didn’t like:
I gotta say, it did feel like the movie that’s been done again, and again and again. It feels the classic story of white people decide they want such and such land, send a dude over, he changes his mind & saves the day. I’m not so much offended by the movie as LOTS of others are, as much as I am just sick of the same old regurgitation of history.
There’s an excellent article about this on MSN’s homepage about how Some Detect Subtext of Racism in \’Avatar.\’ I think it lays out all the drama surrounding the film pretty well.
The one thing that frustrates me about James Cameron’s response is this: How hard is it (as the Director of a movie like this) to say “you know, I can see where you all are coming from. I may not agree with you. I had these intentions, but I can definetly understand your perspective given the history of the United States in regards to whites stealing land from the Natives, bringing with us people we stole from Africa.”
Or something like that. It irks me to no end when we (as a country) have a hard time fessing up to the HORRIBLE, AWFUL, INCONCEIVABLY evil ways our so-called “great” country came into existence.
In the car on the way home Dave and I talked about all this. Understanding how James clearly was showing the selfishness of the humans and what greed (coupled with power and money) can do to destroy entire people groups. I can see how it’d be easy for him to defend his white savior character -Jake Sully- given that truth. I’m trying to see it from his perspective. But he also needs to see history through the eyes of minorities and maybe he would be a little bit quicker on the uptake to see why folks are upset.
I may sound angry, but no I’m not. I’m like 3, maybe 5 years past angry. I’m just frustrated that a movie like Avatar can come out and then be defended as “good intentions” without throwing reality a bone.
This whole thing reminds me of last years, Transformers 2 where Director, Michael Bay defended his use of two idiotic robots voiced by black actors, who spoke in urban lingo, who went around swearing and beating each other up. Bay said it was in the name of “comedy.” Comedy schmomedy. Is he serious?
Couldn’t he just be honest and say the robots were playing to a stereotype of black men that people want to see and believe? The same stereotype that keeps black men disproportionately displayed (and I do use that word purposely) in the local news and in shows like Cops where the Writer/Director/Producer has openly admitted (see Bowling for Columbine) to this because “that is what America believes about black men.”
And isn’t that what Avatar is playing to as well? Is it playing to what the white audience of America -and perhaps the world audience as well- wants to believe about white men? The knight in shining armor will come and rescue us all?
Again, I liked the movie. A lot. In fact, I think you should go see it. It’s worth your money & it’s worth it in 3-D & even better in IMAX.
I think my friend Sriram Sridharan said it pretty well in his facebook status update which doubled as a letter to the Director / Writer of ‘Avatar.’
“Dear James, Thanks for Avatar. I enjoyed the effects, visual effort at creating a world. FYI: Modernism died in the 80s. Epic plots with unflawed heroes, oppressors becoming rescuers and simplistic evil are last millennium. Your grand set design, cutting edge CGI try hard to compensate for flaccid plot. And perhaps… …write characters that break out of the Jack and oh Jake(homophones much?) mold? I am just saying.”
It’s a love / hate relationship with me & this flick.
3-D was flippin' Sweet Mother of Pearl!









{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }
Hi Grace,
All I can say to you is this: Dude, if you loved it, that’s GREAT. You have to get over the small stuff. Who cares how James Cameron responds (or doesn’t respond) to the question? If you enjoyed the art, you have to enjoy the art and not sweat over how some crazy, billionaire movie maker speaks to the *very important* points raised in the movie. Literally hundreds, if not thousands, of people helped to contribute to all that this movie is. Screw James Cameron. Take the movie for what it’s worth – an absolutely enjoyable, visually elegant piece of entertainment.
Cheers,
KK
I agree with you about the beauty of the artwork and the existence of similar stories. When I walked out of the theater, my first thoughts were that it was a great sci-fi remake of the movie Dances with Wolves.
Thanks for your insight…I had not really thought beyond the generic nature of the movie to the social implications it may address.
Karen,
Actually because of Dave (and largely b/c of our faith) wev’e both grown to be more thoughtful about entertainment in general. Meaning, I don’t want to sit passively and ingest whatever message a tv show or movie or song or book or commercial or blinking ad on an internet page may be giving me. I want to be aware of what message its trying to send and be able to figure out what the truth is before I sign the dotted line to believe what 5-6 people sitting in a room decide what I should believe about something. (or what I should buy or whatever).
And for me, racial subtexts in films is NOT a little thing and I cannot look past it. I can forgive it, but I at least want to discuss it. And I rest in the merit of many many people seeing the same thing about this film. It plays into so many stereotypes and it’s worth a good look at the message it’s sending. It’s also worth looking into when so many ethnic minorities are crying foul. I don’t ever want to dismiss that just b/c he’s made something visually stunning. Hitler also built a great empire but at what cost? (I’m not comparing Cameron to Hitler like’s he an evil genocidal killer or anything fyi. Just the idea of things looking nice and being successful don’t always equal right, per se).
I just feel it would be sooooooo refreshing for movie directors to be honest about some of the underlying messages they are trying to portray. I’ve come to realize I probably won’t get that, but I can at least fight for it in the one place I have a voice, eh?
Anyway, I hope that it explains the questions I’m asking about the film. i.e. Is this movie right or wrong? (remains to be seen) Is it worth watching anyway (of course) Is it something to discuss to provide further insight into the human condition (yeah, I think so).
-g
Thanks Grace, I saw Avatar this weekend and did like it. However afterward I kept thinking about the history of us (when I saw “us” I mean me) American/European’s taking the land of the Native Americans. You were able to articulate some things I was feeling but not really understanding. Thanks, and love your blog!
Saw the movie. Loved it. Just a note which nobody seems to mention (also, SPOILER ALERT!! DON’T READ THIS IF YOU HAVEN’T SEEN THE MOVIE!!!) – in the end, it’s the Na’vi princess who kills the villan, saves the white man and saves the day, because the hottie white man was unable to get any of it done properly.
April – I loved that you got in there that he was a hottie!
That’s MY sister!
Grace – loved the movie (1st 3D movie ever and it ROCKED), though the plot was nothing new. I must say that I watched the movie thinking about all the politcal undertones. Talk about painting the military in a bad light! Military = bad. Scientist = good and noble. While I’m not at all patriotic, I did think it was a very blatant one sided/insulting view of the military. Also, I thought the Na’vi people were almost too perfect. It didn’t feel at all to me like a white man saving a race. To me, it felt much more like a military man coming to the realization that what he was originally fighting for was wrong and there was something bigger and more important to fight for (though we agree – nothing new).
Just my thoughts. Honestly, I just wanted to give April a high five for the hottie remark.