~Kinggi~ said:Anyone know details about the behind-the-scenes content for the blu-ray release? I hope its like a 3 hour long documentary on the making-of.
Well, you never know. I mean one could hope. Longer the better.Scullibundo said:Based on how much behind the scenes stuff was shown before the movie was released, I'm pretty sure it will be at least three hours, if not more.
Yeah, the Tsu'tey scene is really something. I can see why the crew was mad when he decided to take it out. This is another reason why Im peeved that the Sturmbeast dinner didn't make it in, since it had a great Jake and Tsu'tey exchange.Rindain said:Just got back from seeing it in IMAX 3D.
I loved all the additions. Some of them I can see why Cameron cut them out in the first place for length or pacing, but they work just fine, adding some good depth. It'll be up to fans to decide for themselves which scenes they think improve the flow of the film, and which seem like they are one-beat-too-many.
I think it's a very hard decision Cameron had to make in cutting some of these...especially the Tsu'tey death scene. I see how it's inclusion provides another emotional climax to the story, taking away some of the power of the Neytiri holding human Jake scene, but it's such an awesome scene, I'm glad he let us see it.
Overall, amazing stuff.
I now want to see the Slinger, poison dart shooting plants, and the post-hunt party where Jake eats the psychadelic worm.
Of all of your films is there one you would like to have another shot at making?
I dont do a lot of navel gazing when it comes to the films that Ive already done. Im not into the whole revisionist thing that much, even though I do special editions. But when I do the special editions, like I did for The Abyss and for Terminator 2, my feeling is that you just do it the way you were going to do it back then. You dont second-guess how you would do it now. I can look back at the visual effects in Aliens, for example, and how much better we could do the Alien Queen now as a CG character; and how limited that film seems to me in terms of technique. But it doesnt create an urge in me to go back and try to fix that movie because its completely a creature of its time. Every movie is a technological snapshot of the moment it was made.
Was there any sense of nostalgia when the Piranha movie came out last weekend?
Zero. Youve got to remember: I worked on Piranha 2 for a few days and got fired off of it; I dont put it on my official filmography. So theres no sort of fond connection for me whatsoever. In fact, I would go even farther and say that... I tend almost never to throw other films under the bus, but that is exactly an example of what we should not be doing in 3-D. Because it just cheapens the medium and reminds you of the bad 3-D horror films from the 70s and 80s, like Friday the 13th 3-D. When movies got to the bottom of the barrel of their creativity and at the last gasp of their financial lifespan, they did a 3-D version to get the last few drops of blood out of the turnip. And thats not whats happening now with 3-D. It is a renaissanceright now the biggest and the best films are being made in 3-D. Martin Scorsese is making a film in 3-D. Disneys biggest film of the yearTron: Legacyis coming out in 3-D. So its a whole new ballgame.
The Avatar sequel will be back on Pandora. You once said that the sequels would take place on the other moons of Polyphemus.
There will be a bigger world in the second and the third film. Both within Pandora youll see different environments, including the ocean. And eventually, over the story-arc of the second and third film, you will see other worlds as well.
Do you have a name for the sequel yet? Are you just going to call it Avatar 2?
No, no. With Terminator 2 we called it T2: Judgment Day. We actually started that whole thing with the alpha numeric coding for movies with that film. Generally speaking, I think a movie should have its own identity. I doubt we will call it Avatar 2.
Is The Last Train from Hiroshima your next project?
Last Train from Hiroshima is a book that I optioned as a research source for a film that I would like to make about the atomic bombings in Japan ... at some point in the future. But its not something that Im active with right now.
Dead said:Watch it be The Dive![]()
Memphis Reigns said:Other worlds in the sequels? The Na'vi aren't space faring so would the humans take them there?? Maybe hi-jack some shuttles?
jett said:Will you just stop it with Battle Angel? Jesus.
Avatar 2, bitches. Face reality.
Looks like the sequel to Planet Earth.Dead said:![]()
Cameron says in addition to the 16 minute longer cut (that includes the newly finished Earth opening), there will also be 45 minutes of other deleted scenes
Dead said:![]()
Cameron says in addition to the 16 minute longer cut (that includes the newly finished Earth opening), there will also be 45 minutes of other deleted scenes
2 weeks since Resident Evil will be taking away the IMAX and 3D screens when it releases.ryutaro's mama said:How long is it in theaters?
Zero. Youve got to remember: I worked on Piranha 2 for a few days and got fired off of it; I dont put it on my official filmography. So theres no sort of fond connection for me whatsoever. In fact, I would go even farther and say that... I tend almost never to throw other films under the bus, but that is exactly an example of what we should not be doing in 3-D. Because it just cheapens the medium and reminds you of the bad 3-D horror films from the 70s and 80s, like Friday the 13th 3-D. When movies got to the bottom of the barrel of their creativity and at the last gasp of their financial lifespan, they did a 3-D version to get the last few drops of blood out of the turnip. And thats not whats happening now with 3-D. It is a renaissanceright now the biggest and the best films are being made in 3-D. Martin Scorsese is making a film in 3-D. Disneys biggest film of the yearTron: Legacyis coming out in 3-D. So its a whole new ballgame.
:lol :lol I want an avatar sized picture of JC with the paint on.Scullibundo said:
jett said:Will you just stop it with Battle Angel? Jesus.
Avatar 2, bitches. Face reality.
Rindain said:I'm thinking more and more that Battle Angel might be next - he could get it done much faster than Avatar 2.
Battle Angel has:
1) More live action and a good deal less CGI, so it wouldn't take as long to make.
2) A completed script (Avatar 2 script hasn't been started)
3) Tons of preproduction artwork, CG models, and animation tests completed.
I can easily see Cameron making it next.
Scullibundo said:...What might tempt him toward Battle Angel is that challenge of blending live-action and CG characters together believably across an entire movie (which he has stated doing that small scene with Neytiri cradling Jake was a huge help toward that process for Battle Angel)...
No. I'm thinking it was never filmed, and probably never made it past the script, kinda like a lot of things in the battle.Scullibundo said:For those that have seen the rerelease (which I'll be seeing today), do we seeWayneFleet cut Tsu'tey's cue?
Scullibundo said:I have nfi what Tricky is referring to. The Thanator vs AMPsuit attack was as it originally was as far as I can remember.
No, there was a new bit added where the Thanator grabs the AMP suit and Neytiri growls at the face of Quaritch. This bit was in one of the old TV commercials but never made the original theatrical cut.Scullibundo said:Can't say that I can remember the Sturmbeast hunt music as that isn't where my head was at the time. I was hoping it would go longer as well as it felt a bit cut short after one swoop and shot from Jake.
But yeah, its definitely the extra little shots that made it worthwhile. Like when he's stepping past the waterfall and you see the rocks falling away and how slippery it is.
I can say that I noticed some new nice musical cues, but I can't remember where they were.
I have nfi what Tricky is referring to. The Thanator vs AMPsuit attack was as it originally was as far as I can remember.
There definitely seemed to be more time between the bits of dialogue in the scene where Quaritch tells Jake he's going to terminate the mission - as if to show Quaritch analysing him longer, though maybe it was just my imagination.
Dead said:No, there was a new bit added where the Thanator grabs the AMP suit and Neytiri growls at the face of Quaritch. This bit was in one of the old TV commercials but never made the original theatrical cut.
Sturmbeast hunt felt short because it should have continued into the Dinner Party. That scene better be in teh blu-ray cut
Confirming the rumors, Panasonic has announced that the 3D version of the 'Avatar' Blu-ray disc will arrive in December as an exclusive available only to owners of the company's 3D TVs.
As first reported by TWICE:
At launch, running through an undisclosed period of time, the disc will only be available to consumers who purchase a Panasonic 3D Viera plasma TV. The promotional offer will likely take the form of a variety of bundles onto the purchase of Viera 3D TVs and related equipment, although exact details are still to be announced, the company said.
Currently available qualifying TVs include the TC-PVT20/25 series, which has been available starting in April, and the recently announced TC-PGT25 series.
CNET spoke with a Panasonic representative who confirmed that current owners of Panasonic 3D TVs would also have access to the offer. Details are still being worked out as to exactly how, and whether or not the disc will be free. According to the TWICE report, it's also unclear whether Panasonic would make the disc available to customers who purchase only a Panasonic Blu-ray player or Blu-ray home-theater system.
Although the Panasonic rep could not confirm it to CNET, we suspect that this initial release of "Avatar" will be largely devoid of special features such as commentaries and featurettes. The 2D Blu-ray version available now is similarly "bare-bones," as are current 3D Blu-ray exclusives--including "Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs" and "Coraline" from Panasonic, and "Monsters vs. Aliens" from Samsung. Along with Sony's "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs," the sole 3D Blu-ray available in stores, these animated children's titles comprise the extent of the current 3D Blu-ray catalog, which would likely make "Avatar" the first live-action 3D Blu-ray movie available in the US.
Exclusivity, though annoying for early adopters seeking 3D content, is the norm in this first year of 3D's widespread availability in the home. Similar exclusive deals for 3D sporting events include the U.S. Open on DirecTV, The Masters on Comcast and a few other cable providers, and an NFL preseason game between the New York Giants and the New England Patriots on Verizon's Fios network.
Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-20015478-1.html#ixzz0yNpKsk8g
Aren't commentaries really small in size?Scullibundo said:I'm not really miffed since the chances are its going to be a bare-bones 3D release and that I won't have a 3D TV for a long time.
I've also been thinking about the image quality on the November bluray release of Avatar, since the barebones edition squeezed every drop of memory out of the last BD, I wonder how the image quality will compare with an extra 17 or so minutes + possible directors commentary ontop of that for the new one.
That's exactly how I felt watching this shit in 3D for the first time.Meus Renaissance said:Saw this on Blu-ray earlier tonight on a huge screen. Honestly, I feel like we've been treated to be the generation to witness how stunning this film looks
Veidt said:That's exactly how I felt watching this shit in 3D for the first time.
GhaleonEB said:$751,001,139
Finally got over $750m domestic. Just had to sandbag a little bit before Titanic comes back.
Heading to see the extended cut in a few hours.
Now JAMES CAMERON is making another 3D movie about thousands of people whose homes are endangered by construction of a dam.
The director has thrown his weight behind a campaign to stop a hydroelectric from being built on the Xingu River, an Amazon tributary which will displace up to 16,000 people.
But last week Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva approved the controversial plans.
Now James plans to highlight the plight of local tribes by shooting a movie about their lives.
In an interview with a Brazilian paper he said: "I want to return to meet some of the leaders of the Xikrin-Kayapo tribe who invited me.
"I want to take a 3D camera to film how they live, their culture."
The dam will cause flooding in the rivers banks making it impossible for the Amazonian Indians to stay.
The film-maker has previously shot a short piece about the threatened tribes, and plans to include it as an extra on his forthcoming Avatar DVD.