BakugekiNZ said:I logged in for the first time in SO LONG just to call you out on this.
The WHOLE POINT humans are on Pandora is to mine the mineral that has STRANGE PROPERTIES, the result of which is that things FLOAT, presumably which can be used on Earth for a variety of things (hence valuable enough to travel to Alpha Centauri to obtain).
The rocks were "floating" because they were very light because they contain this mineral + vines.
If you didn't understand this, you probably weren't paying attention at all. They make sure its very very understandable (e.g. the corporate guying fiddling with the floating shard of it).
I am disgusted, I can see why someone might dislike aspects of the movie and could make a reasoned argument, but you sir, and just a plain hater.
Just disgusted.
Haha yeah who was doozing in the theater again? The little scrap of whatevernium was floating because it was in a fucking floater. The big tree was supposed to lie in top of the biggest chunk of that material. Did the area have anything floating around?
*logs out for another 6 months*
Thank god.
I think Pandora, and the Na'vi are so similar to Earth and humans because they are meant to represent us. In the film the bad guys are these super over the top, single focus, blind by greed people, I don't think they're meant to represent what humanity would become, I think they're just the worst aspects of society amplified. Where as the Na'vi are the best elements of humanity amplified. Pandora isn't so dissimilar to an ocean bed without an ocean at times.
I really don't agree. The humans in the movie were so clearly this b&w representation of America. I got strong native american vibes from the top brass of Navi. Pocahontas pretty much. I mean it's pretty clear what the movies message was. "We are bad, we are destroying earth, learn something from the primitive tribes mkay".
I find that it's really hard for me to get impressed with CGI nowadays. Probably because it's everywhere and the animated characters tend to have this universal feel to them and the way they express themselves. Like strong theatrics. I love gollum though and probably because he was so heavily dependant of the real life actor Serkis. I watch LotR movies regularly and the effects haven't really aged too much. Sure the lighting especially looks bland when compared to Avatar, but I'd say LotR will most definately stand the test of time better than Avatar.