Expendable.
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silverbullet1080 said:This is pretty much the reason why I'm waiting for this to hit blu-ray.
Don't worry then,
the mechs don't even come into play until very late in the film
silverbullet1080 said:This is pretty much the reason why I'm waiting for this to hit blu-ray.
I think the the opposite way: I have the feeling that Avatar is something that has to be experienced in the theatre and I'd regret not seeing it that way. My hype is rising, only 4 days now. :O It will be my first 3D movie ever, yay!silverbullet1080 said:This is pretty much the reason why I'm waiting for this to hit blu-ray.
DieNgamers said:It will be my first 3D movie ever, yay!
Let's put it this way. There was a running gag on the internet when the first details of the film leaked out that Avatar would "f*** your eyeballs". That ain't quite how it works.
Avatar will meet your eyeballs in a chance encounter at a chic Parisian street café, pull them on to the back of a Vespa and whisk them to a fine restaurant.
It will then bring them to a sumptuous hotel, carry them over the threshold of the Presidential Suite, lay them down on fresh silk sheets...
And give them the hardest r*dger- ing since Tiger Woods' wife last said: "I'll be out of town for a week, honeybun. Be good."
Father_Brain said:Ebert also gave overwhelmingly positive reviews to Titan A.E., Knowing, and Watchmen; his review for the first of those compared it to Star Wars as well. He has a demonstrated tendency to give gushing praise every few years to some visually impressive genre film that doesn't actually deserve it - c'mon, Dark City was good, but was it really the best film of 1998?
I won't be able to say whether Ebert overrated Avatar until I see it. But as great a critic as he is, his judgment is by no means unimpeachable - especially when it comes to this kind of film.
Branduil said:I think the biggest difference between Miyazaki and Cameron is that Miyazaki's villains and conflicts aren't just cardboard cutouts.
Snowman Prophet of Doom said:Well, Ebert has given very, very positive reviews to past James Cameron movies, so he is clearly a fan of James Cameron's style of filmmaking.
Neither the aliens nor the terminator are even really characters... they're more like forces of nature. But that's not that point, I was referring to human characters. Though even the animal gods in Princess Mononoke have more depth than the human villains in Aliens or Titanic.PrivateWHudson said:Yep, I can't belive how lifeless those aliens were. And christ, the fucking terminator was so bland you'd think he was a robot or something.
Scullibundo said:Except True Lies. Also, I really like his Aliens review, where he says it left him feeling horrible and exhausted and panicked exiting the cinema, yet couldn't deny the quality of the film to be able to do that.
Father_Brain said:Ebert also gave overwhelmingly positive reviews to Titan A.E., Knowing, and Watchmen; his review for the first of those compared it to Star Wars as well. He has a demonstrated tendency to give gushing praise every few years to some visually impressive genre film that doesn't actually deserve it - c'mon, Dark City was good, but was it really the best film of 1998?
I won't be able to say whether Ebert overrated Avatar until I see it. But as great a critic as he is, his judgment is by no means unimpeachable - especially when it comes to this kind of film.
Branduil said:Neither the aliens nor the terminator are even really characters... they're more like forces of nature. But that's not that point, I was referring to human characters. Though even the animal gods in Princess Mononoke have more depth than the human villains in Aliens or Titanic.
Really? I don't see slimy capitalist as an underrepresented archetype in cinema. Well executed but not the same thing as having depth. A character like Lady Eboshi is much rarer.Scullibundo said:Paul Reiser says lets not arbitrarily make any rash decisions here.
Very underrated villain. Cowardly, veiled villain that is as slimy and fucking evil as the worst of them. Very atypical bad guy.
The way his character was revealed gradually, and the skillful way it was played, gave it a depth that extends well beyond caricature. As with Hicks, Ripley, Bishop, Newt and others. Cameron's character work is generally excellent.Branduil said:Really? I don't see slimy capitalist as an underrepresented archetype in cinema. Well executed but not the same thing as having depth. A character like Lady Eboshi is much rarer.
Scullibundo said:Paul Reiser says lets not arbitrarily make any rash decisions here.
Very underrated villain. Cowardly, veiled villain that is as slimy and fucking evil as the worst of them. Very atypical bad guy.
Scullibundo said:Paul Reiser says lets not arbitrarily make any rash decisions here.
Very underrated villain. Cowardly, veiled villain that is as slimy and fucking evil as the worst of them. Very atypical bad guy.
GhaleonEB said:The way his character was revealed gradually, and the skillful way it was played, gave it a depth that extends well beyond caricature. As with Hicks, Ripley, Bishop, Newt and others. Cameron's character work is generally excellent.
He's given these little moments that lull you into thinking he's a really decent guy ("You had your chance, Goreman.")Shrinnan said:I actually even kind of liked him when he was first introduced (and then I gradually began to dislike him more and more when it was revealed what he did and what he was trying to do). For that to happen, the character had to have been amazing.
rhino4evr said:but like I said..this stuff is void for me..anyone that doesn't enjoy films like the original Star Wars Trilogy has no reason to be in a Sci-Fi Movie Blockbuster discussion in the first place.
GhaleonEB said:He's given these little moments that lull you into thinking he's a really decent guy ("You had your chance, Goreman.")
Cameron has done cartoony villains (Titanic, anyone?) but Burke wasn't one of them.
"caring" about reviews does not mean people can't make up their own mind about something. I respect Ebert (and a handful of other reviewers), and so when they review something positively, I take that as a recommendation. You make that sound like anyone who takes recommendations similarly are bound and sworn to love it. I really don't comprehend what you're trying to say. Most people base their opinion of stuff on their opinion; this does not make you special.I honestly don't care what you think, or anyone else thinks. That's what gives me the freedom to make my own informed opinions about everything.
Amir0x said::lol
It's so amusing that people come around saying that I have to make my opinion louder or I think my opinion is fact, and yet here is someone who legitimately thinks that if someone didn't enjoy Star Wars that somehow they shouldn't be allowed to post about any sci fi movies
This is someone being serious too, not sarcastic or anything.
I've seen a trillion sci fi movies many of which I liked - including James Cameron's own Aliens - and yet, because I didn't like this sacred cow Star Wars, I shouldn't be allowed to comment on any sci fi movie ever.
This is what I mean, though. People want their own opinions reinforced. They don't want to hear negativity about anything they like. To put it simply, because they're so feeble minded that they are unable to completely enjoy something that someone else may be negative about. EVERYONE has to like EVERYTHING about what they love, or else it's somehow raining on their parades. And this perception then turns into what they believe to be "trolling." "That person must be TROLLING it, after all, if he can't feel what I feel! How is it possible that something I love so much can have someone who doesn't? He MUST be trolling!"
I honestly don't care what you think, or anyone else thinks. That's what gives me the freedom to make my own informed opinions about everything. I only dislike ignorance. And when people were lashing out against Ebert because they thought he MIGHT not give the movie a good score - and then were made to look silly when he gave it a GREAT score - that's the type of shit I do care about.
GhaleonEB said:"caring" about reviews does not mean people can't make up their own mind about something. I respect Ebert (and a handful of other reviewers), and so when they review something positively, I take that as a recommendation. You make that sound like anyone who takes recommendations similarly are bound and sworn to love it. I really don't comprehend what you're trying to say. Most people base their opinion of stuff on their opinion; this does not make you special.
rhino4evr said:this is so obvious..OF COURSE you dont know if you will like a film until you see it. Why do people confuse pre-release hype and actual personal consensus? Its not like Ebert is the only critic giving the film a good review...some of you are really grasping at straws here.
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::lol
It's so amusing that people come around saying that I have to make my opinion louder or I think my opinion is fact, and yet here is someone who legitimately thinks that if someone didn't enjoy Star Wars that somehow they shouldn't be allowed to post about any sci fi movies
This is someone being serious too, not sarcastic or anything.
I've seen a trillion sci fi movies many of which I liked - including James Cameron's own Aliens - and yet, because I didn't like this sacred cow Star Wars, I shouldn't be allowed to comment on any sci fi movie ever.
This is what I mean, though. People want their own opinions reinforced. They don't want to hear negativity about anything they like. To put it simply, because they're so feeble minded that they are unable to completely enjoy something that someone else may be negative about. EVERYONE has to like EVERYTHING about what they love, or else it's somehow raining on their parades. And this perception then turns into what they believe to be "trolling." "That person must be TROLLING it, after all, if he can't feel what I feel! How is it possible that something I love so much can have someone who doesn't? He MUST be trolling!"
I honestly don't care what you think, or anyone else thinks. That's what gives me the freedom to make my own informed opinions about everything. I only dislike ignorance. And when people were lashing out against Ebert because they thought he MIGHT not give the movie a good score - and then were made to look silly when he gave it a GREAT score - that's the type of shit I do care about.
Dabookerman said:I love it when people have arguments about opinions. It's like trying to swim up a waterfall.
Furret said:The reason not liking Star Wars comes across as so weird in a discussion of sci-fi/fantasy (it's much more the latter) cinema is because it's the lynch pin of the whole genre.
Whatever you think of its quality it's as important as Birth of a Nation, Citizen Kane and Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs to cinema.
Your stance on the film seems so perverse to others because all the genre films (you could easily argue all blockbusters as a whole) that have come after it owe it so much, and creators such as James Cameron have been so heavily influenced by it.
How you can like the progency but not, on at least some level, the progenitor seems improbable at best and purposefully antagonistic at worst.
Amir0x said:It is true there are plenty of movies that are, at the very least, influenced by what Star Wars did.
It is not true, however, that there have not been a billion movies that have come out that have been infinitely better than the "master", so-to-speak, and that one must like the source at least a "little" in order to like what came after.
I do not like Star Wars. Since the first time I saw it as a little kid, to the many times I've sat down to repeat view it up through adulthood, I've always felt the same. This is cheesy. This is boring. This is not even particularly directed well. The script is kinda awful. I am not the least bit interested in these characters or these worlds. The history is retarded.
So, you can say that I do not like the genre as it originally was. I like the genre as it became. I like many films in the genre now that have done things so, so much better. Everything from the special effects from the writing itself has been in a litany of films which are, in my opinion, far superior.
That is not "antagonistic." One does not need to like Star Wars to like what came after and did things better.
Scullibundo said:Are you trying to suggest its impossible to swim up a waterfall? I submit that you are weak willed!
Amir0x said:It is true there are plenty of movies that are, at the very least, influenced by what Star Wars did.
It is not true, however, that there have not been a billion movies that have come out that have been infinitely better than the "master", so-to-speak, and that one must like the source at least a "little" in order to like what came after.
I do not like Star Wars. Since the first time I saw it as a little kid, to the many times I've sat down to repeat view it up through adulthood, I've always felt the same. This is cheesy. This is boring. This is not even particularly directed well. The script is kinda awful. I am not the least bit interested in these characters or these worlds. The history is retarded.
So, you can say that I do not like the genre as it originally was. I like the genre as it became. I like many films in the genre now that have done things so, so much better. Everything from the special effects from the writing itself has been in a litany of films which are, in my opinion, far superior.
That is not "antagonistic." One does not need to like Star Wars to like what came after and did things better.
For the record, my favorite sci-fi movie is Gattaca.
Furret said:I didn't say you needed to like Star Wars to like what came after, I merely said it was highly improbable that you wouldn't.
I'm curious to know what other genre films you would claim to be a "million times better" than Star Wars though, in terms of the internal consistency of the universe, the charm of its characters and the quality of its storytelling (read Ebert or any other high brow review of the original before you splutter at this last point).
The fact that the only example you've given is Gattaca, with which it has not one single thing in common, seem highly peculiar.
(Obviously I'm talking about the original trilogy here - specifically the first two films).
:lolAmir0x said:I know it, which is why I am trying to point out that the only reason GhaleonEB seems to be arguing against me is because he thinks I'm attacking AVATAR.
Reading through, I missed an exchange that was kinda important. We were arguing the same thing. This is what I get for trying to run multiple conversations at once. :lolAmir0x said:well ok, it's kinda hard to imagine why else you'd be getting this completely wrong interpretation of my posts in this topic, but i have no qualms admitting I'm wrong if that's not your problem.
Edit: I type 120wpm
Amir0x said:"For the record, my favorite sci-fi movies are Gattaca, followed by Blade Runner, 2001: Space Odyssey, Aliens, Back to the Future, etc etc"
I put a list of my favorites in the original post.
And yes, I know you're talking about the original film. Again, your problem is that because you like it, you fail to be able to comprehend that this isn't interesting to someone else. It is suddenly "improbable" or even "impossible" that someone can't see this about films you like, especially if they like what came after! I don't believe the characters were charming or well written. I always found the universe absurd and frankly a little retarded. C3PO and R2D2 always had me laughing, talking garbage cans with bad designs.
As with any good sci-fi movie, you have to at first be interested in the world it is building. I was never for a moment interested in the creatures and characters the world presented, and so the cheesy writing and the the entire plot premise fell short to me. I don't think this is a bizarre opinion, a lot of people I know feel the same thing. It's simply that because I'm a forum where a lot of geeks reside, it's like taking a shot at a golden idol.
It's not like I'm inventing this opinion for this thread to be "antagonistic". Here are a list of posts from a while ago where I discuss my consistent opinion of not liking Star Wars: 1, 2, 3 etc.
I never got that spark when watching Star Wars. I always bored me to tears. The special effects never did it for me. The writing never did it for me, nor the characters or the universe. The directing never did it for me.
So, how can I like it?
On the other hand, I love the universe created by Firefly. I loved the universe created by Doctor Who. Or Aliens. Or 2001. Or Gattaca. But on top of liking the world's built, I ALSO liked the writing, or the visuals, or the wide list of other aspects that appeal to me about cinema. These movies appeal to me, and I like them because they are good. I don't think this about Star Wars.