Fantastic Fest: 'Avatar' - A Little Less Conversation, A Little More Action
Filed under: Action, Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Thrillers, RumorMonger, Fandom, 20th Century Fox, Movie Marketing, Fantastic Fest
Last night saw attendees of the Real D-sponsored Fantastic Fest greeted with an extended look at footage from James Cameron's forthcoming Avatar, and with it (for me at least) a more defined shift in expectations for the long-awaited film. The footage -- more often than not composed of extended scenes from Avatar Day -- still looks terrifically realized in 3-D, but the bits and pieces of story filled in by producer Jon Landau between scenes and the voice-over of Sam Worthington's character during them suggest something a little less... rapturous.
What I knew to be the future-set tale of Jake, a paraplegic solider (Worthington) granted the luxury of inhabiting an alien body on a far-off planet and then forced to choose sides between the natives he now knows and the military he always knew, turned into a quest for the mineral 'unobtainium' [sic?] on part of the humans and a journey for Jake to pick up where his identical twin brother (!) left off. On both counts, I say, "really?" The film is said to open with the line, "When I woke up in the V.A. hospital with a hole blown through my life, all I could think about was flying." The 3-D renders his eventual flight on Pandora a more breath-taking experience than such ham-fisted character development could hope to, and as much as Worthington's own performance comes through in the digital realm, I'm not entirely sure that we're looking at a particularly good performance come December.
(I do, however, reserve the right to eat my foot if that's the case when that time comes.)
Every scene as introduced by Landau was Jake's first time at something: his first security briefing (shown at Avatar Day), his first glimpse at his avatar body (new stuff), his first time inhabiting said body (A.D.), his first time landing on Pandora (new), his first time greeting the predators of Pandora (A.D.), love interest Neytiri's (Zoe Saldana) first seeing him (new), his first time seeing her (A.D.), Jake being greeted with sprites of some sort and thus gaining a renewed interest in Neytiri's eyes (new), Jake meeting their pet pterodactyl-like creatures (new) and Jake taming one of his own (A.D.). It was all then capped off with a similar montage to that shown at Avatar Day, with every other shot replaced by something we hadn't just been shown. We were shown maybe 15-20 minutes of footage in total, about 5 of which had been unseen before. (Besides those two scenes, much of the August footage was simply expanded.)
Given that the film is already estimated by Landau to run north of two-and-a-half hours, that's still not much to judge by. At the very least, Avatar is going to look great, but when someone describes with a straight face creatures called "viper wolves" in a movie not called Gentlemen Broncos, I'm taken out of the story in a way that 3-D can't quite restore.
(But it does look great...)
Miscellaneous notes:
-James Cameron wrote Avatar before Titanic, and the whole production has been an estimated fifteen years in the making. The decision to shoot it in 3-D came in 1999.
-Cameron wants to write a novel based in the same world as Avatar, likely to come out after the film does.
-What's the budget? "Yes," replied Landau.
-The film will be shown in 2.35:1 on 2-D screens to seem more epic, in 1.85:1 on 3-D screens to seem more immersive, and 1.43:1 on IMAX screens.
-That font is not technically Papyrus.










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-01-2009 @ 2:05PM
Reuben said...
So far that sounds like what I'm expecting. I hope to be proven wrong.
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10-01-2009 @ 2:36PM
gurv said...
The premise (human develops sympathy for aliens once he becomes, or starts to become, one of them) sounds a lot like District 9... except that District 9 was amazing and this looks, well, less than inspiring.
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10-01-2009 @ 3:30PM
Chet said...
This is James Cameron we're talking about here. I expect big bags of chewy eye candy and populist storytelling with broad strokes and no brow-furrowing ponderances.
The acting and story don't have to be brilliant, just serviceable. As long as it's not Transformers 2 stupid, I'll be satisfied.
Don't believe the hype, don't believe the haters. Whether great, good, or gag-me, it's still something you haven't seen before.
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10-01-2009 @ 4:08PM
Stan Winsome said...
Number one- it's totally Papyrus and it looks goofy. Number two- there's not been an event movie that looks more like a disaster in the making as this is shaping up to be...
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10-01-2009 @ 4:29PM
Tony le Stephanois said...
Count me worried but hoping for the best. Viper wolves, priceless.
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10-01-2009 @ 6:44PM
Conspiracy Brother said...
I have some faith in Cameron. I look at the man's track record and hope for the best. However, I thought the same way about Spielberg with Indy 4 and I was wrong. Horribly wrong!
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10-01-2009 @ 4:52PM
Mr.R said...
I agree, it sounded like the right time to tone down on computer effects on a major science fiction film in order to achieve that amazing feel of veracity that Aliens and T2 had. Sure, there is no going back to 100% stop motion clay but most images from Avatar simply fall into Play Station 2 game intervals. Discouraging to say the least.
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10-01-2009 @ 5:33PM
Frug said...
Let me see if I have Avatar's story right. The movie opens with a soldier being told that his wounds will keep him from ever walking again. This causes the soldier to enter a state of depression that is only relived when he told more advanced medical technology can get him back on his feet. Once again ambulatory this soldier is assigned to investigate an uncharted territory where he interacts and befriends the natives. However, when the military he serves begins seizing land and resources this soldier is forced to chose between his new friends and his old loyalties. That is without question the most original plot for a movie I have heard since Benjamin Button.
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10-01-2009 @ 10:10PM
Wayne said...
Unobtainium is what Oakley uses to make their sunglasses. They registered for the trademark, anyway.
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10-02-2009 @ 11:12PM
Brett Dale said...
Judging by all the reviews I have read, I guess all we can expect is just a great summer blockbuster with awesome efforts.
Very disappointing if this is the case.
Earlier in the year, I read that Avatar was game changing, that it will change cinema forever, that if will give you the feeling that your in the movie, and the jump in technology was equal to that of when they first added sound.
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