Dabanton said:Cassidy was being sarcastic. :lol
Oh thank God!
Dabanton said:Cassidy was being sarcastic. :lol
question, does the Thanator still sound like T Rex?Masaki_ said:hello, my name is masaki, here's my review of avatar
AVATAR KICKS ASS
10/10
CassidyIzABeast said:question, does the Thanator still sound like T Rex?
CassidyIzABeast said:
- Are you gonna go see it?
- Probably not.
I bet if they asked about Transformers he'd be foaming at the mouth. T.TMasaki_ said:HE'S PART OF THE PROBLEM
rhino4evr said:just want to add that i think its fucking hilarious that Ebert rated this 4 stars..and yet haters (who were somehow convinced he would trash it) still want to hate on it.
He even compared it to seeing Star Wars the first time..I mean if that doesn't get you just a little excited then you are truly joyless.
I was a doubter, and I ate my crow early, but some of you just refuse to take your medicine. All aboard the hype train!! toot toot.
Amir0x said:I hate Star Wars. Always have, since I was a child. I know, I lose some geek cred or some shit - I don't care. I thought it was cheesy and boring back then, and I still think it's cheesy and boring now.
Also some people seem to think that ones opinion is dictated by the whims of others. People like that are fantards and limpdicked mouthbreathers, not me. I am strongwilled enough to form my own opinions unaffected by the beliefs of others.
I form my opinion on what is right and wrong, nobody else. It's worth trying sometime, rhino.
Amir0x said:I hate Star Wars. Always have, since I was a child. I know, I lose some geek cred or some shit - I don't care. I thought it was cheesy and boring back then, and I still think it's cheesy and boring now.
rhino4ever said:yeah, after a sad statement like this, I don't really care about your opinion anymore.
Karma Kramer said:lol, man no wonder you are a mod, you sound just like the police
Amir0x said:it is good to know the police are the only ones who form their own opinions.
The truly sad thing is you thought I would care about this.
rhino4evr said:Like I said you are free to hate on the movie all you want,
Amir0x said:Zaptruder, that's the thing - I haven't hated this movie at all. I said the plot seems kinda lame and I hate the blue alien design. That's about it. I haven't made any remote judgment about the quality of the final product, except that it's the first time I haven't really been hyped for a James Cameron movie because of these reservations.
You miss the point. Seeing Star Wars when it first came out is one of those cultural touchstones an entire generation looks back on as a memorable breakthrough in film making. Don't like the movie? Fine. But it was a movie - an event - that defined a generation's film going experience. You can dislike that movie and still understand the example and what it meant.Amir0x said:I hate Star Wars. Always have, since I was a child. I know, I lose some geek cred or some shit - I don't care. I thought it was cheesy and boring back then, and I still think it's cheesy and boring now.
GhaleonEB said:You miss the point. Seeing Star Wars when it first came out is one of those cultural touchstones an entire generation looks back on as a memorable breakthrough in film making. Don't like the movie? Fine. But it was a movie - an event - that defined a generation's film going experience. You can dislike that movie and still understand the example and what it meant.
But you're a bit too wrapped up in yourself to see the larger point.
Zaptruder said:But I don't find my enthusiasm dulled... I'm just expecting a quality to the film that goes beyond a sum of these somewhat dubious elements. That so called James Cameron factor. It would seem that most of the reviews thus far have been reinforcing this idea. Maybe that's setting me up for disappointment, but at least it's going to get me into the (3D) theatre.
JGS said:I've seen a number of reviews that seem to suggest the movie's story is formulaic, but it kind of needs to be because even a little complexity would be overkill for this movie
JB1981 said:i've always enjoyed Drew McWeeney's (formerly Moriarty from AICN) writing.
Here is his review of Avatar:
http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/2008-12...cameron-s-avatar-delivers-transports-delights
Onix said:Did anyone see the Avatar Edition of Bones last week?
:lol
I think the comparisons to Star Wars miss the point (including rhino's), which is what my post was about. Ebert didn't compare Avatar to Star Wars. He compared it to the experience of seeing Star Wars. It's as if someone said, "Holy shit, that was like being at Woodstock again," and you respond with, "Meh, I don't like the Rolling Stones."Amir0x said:rhino's point is the one I was referencing, not Eberts. He said "he compared it to Star Wars... if you can't get excited for that, you have no joy!" The problem is, Star Wars isn't an exciting or memorable event for me. And I don't form an opinion on movies based on how important they are for a generation, though clearly Star Wars was at least that.
At the end of the day, the only question is this: is it good or is it bad? That's how I am going to view it, not by how important it is to a legion of fanboys.
Heh. Speaking of which....JB1981 said:i've always enjoyed Drew McWeeney's (formerly Moriarty from AICN) writing.
Here is his review of Avatar:
http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/2008-12...cameron-s-avatar-delivers-transports-delights
In many ways, my anticipation for James Cameron's "Avatar" started in 1977, when I emerged from the darkness after my first viewing of the original "Star Wars."
I was seven years old, and my brain had just been rewired by what I saw on that screen. I didn't know how George Lucas discovered those alien planets and managed to get movie cameras to visit them, but I knew for a fact that I had left Earth and visited new places, met real aliens, and had a fantastic adventure. And the experience transformed me immediately into a cinema junkie in general, but specifically, it awakened a deeply-seeded love in me for the idea of world-building on film.
In the 32 years since then, I've read a lot of science-fiction and fantasy, both high-minded and pulp, and I've seen pretty much everything in those genres on film. I've watched the gradual refinement and evolution of special effects on film, and I've watched many filmmakers, including George Lucas, try to nail the same sort of giddy feeling of travel to a new world, and I've seen most of them fall short.
Yesterday morning, I got a hit of the real stuff for the first time in a long time.
Scalemail Ted said:Thread title needs to be updated.
Its currently at 89%
Solo said:I have no hype for this movie, and I love it.
he's a professional of coursenib95 said:They counted that Max guys review. But I thought it was sarcastic? Why is it being counted?
Max@GC said:Regarding an U.S. project THAT big and with so much money involved I think it is pretty risky to put that kind of criticism in it. I mean most Americans are pretty sensitive when it comes to topics that are against patriotism, aren´t they?
Mr. Sam said:Christ, getting tickets to see this in 3D is a fucking pain.
The Rollings Stones were not at Woodstock.GhaleonEB said:It's as if someone said, "Holy shit, that was like being at Woodstock again," and you respond with, "Meh, I don't like the Rolling Stones."
The bolded is where I'm at. I'll go see it, though, and I sicerely hope I like it.Zaptruder said:Well that's fair enough. At least you're making judgement on what can be seen.
To be fair, I think opinion on the design elements of the movie will to some extent affect your level of enjoyment of the movie.
Not necessarily cause you to hate the movie, but maybe not latch onto this movie as a second coming before and after.
Personally, I think the mech designs are pretty atrocious as well... and I'm not a big fan of 10feet tall somewhat feline blue aliens either. And the plot when summarized into a couple sentences does sound lame.
But I don't find my enthusiasm dulled... I'm just expecting a quality to the film that goes beyond a sum of these somewhat dubious elements. That so called James Cameron factor. It would seem that most of the reviews thus far have been reinforcing this idea. Maybe that's setting me up for disappointment, but at least it's going to get me into the (3D) theatre.
Gary Whitta said:BTW, Eli trailer attached to Avatar confirmed![]()
Gary Whitta said:BTW, Eli trailer attached to Avatar confirmed![]()
This is pretty much the reason why I'm waiting for this to hit blu-ray.Zaptruder said:Personally, I think the mech designs are pretty atrocious as well... and I'm not a big fan of 10feet tall somewhat feline blue aliens either. And the plot when summarized into a couple sentences does sound lame.