Totenkindly
@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
- Messages
- 52,185
- MBTI Type
- BELF
- Enneagram
- 594
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/sp
Saw Avatar: The Way of Water today.
Very reminiscent of the first film -- a weird kind of experience that is visually stunning, with average and occasionally clunky dialogue, and nothing that blows you away plot-wise, but still managing to feel emotionally satisfying on a lot of levels and rewatchable. Worthington is a little better than his prior appearance, I don't feel like Neytiri gets as much to do until the final act (where she just goes completely feral and wreaks a lot of damage), and there are a lot of characters introduced for this film which -- since they are writing the story beats for all of them together -- should have payoffs later in the series. The villains are still on the nose -- not only do they raze large sections of forests and kill mother nature, they also are associated with whaling crews harvesting the great pacifists for brain fluid that stops human aging apparently -- but at least there's nothing as clunky sounding as the unexplained "unobtainium," they at least had the sense to use sensible language. We also get more of a sense that Planet Earth really is dying (Jake says in the first film to Eywa that "the sky people killed their Mother") and humans are looking to establish footholds on Pandora to transplant the species and colonize.
At least it felt like there was some unique stuff in this film. For example, Payakan the rogue "whale" ... there are lot of interesting questions raised, like the nature of pacifism and whether it's better to fight for what you love or die for what you believe. Personally, as far as practical outcome matters, pacifism only works if it's a minority of resistors; can you really afford to be a pacifist if EVERYONE is a pacifist, because it will lead to your extermination otherwise? (Unless of course your beliefs matter more than survival.)
Weaver's character is also interesting and I think will play a bigger role as the series unfolds, including the actuality of her existence. I am also feeling like they have an actual arc in the works for Quaritch.
I was indifferent to most of the first half hour, but it was a film that I felt got more and more engaging as it went. And of course, the 3D visuals and sound were positively amazing. It makes a cold grey drab December day look really bland in comparison.
I was moved enough to shed some tears at time, so... good thing?
---
The other thing that shed tears... the trailer for the next Spiderverse film. I don't know, but it just felt so powerful to me. I really got choked up watching it.
Very reminiscent of the first film -- a weird kind of experience that is visually stunning, with average and occasionally clunky dialogue, and nothing that blows you away plot-wise, but still managing to feel emotionally satisfying on a lot of levels and rewatchable. Worthington is a little better than his prior appearance, I don't feel like Neytiri gets as much to do until the final act (where she just goes completely feral and wreaks a lot of damage), and there are a lot of characters introduced for this film which -- since they are writing the story beats for all of them together -- should have payoffs later in the series. The villains are still on the nose -- not only do they raze large sections of forests and kill mother nature, they also are associated with whaling crews harvesting the great pacifists for brain fluid that stops human aging apparently -- but at least there's nothing as clunky sounding as the unexplained "unobtainium," they at least had the sense to use sensible language. We also get more of a sense that Planet Earth really is dying (Jake says in the first film to Eywa that "the sky people killed their Mother") and humans are looking to establish footholds on Pandora to transplant the species and colonize.
At least it felt like there was some unique stuff in this film. For example, Payakan the rogue "whale" ... there are lot of interesting questions raised, like the nature of pacifism and whether it's better to fight for what you love or die for what you believe. Personally, as far as practical outcome matters, pacifism only works if it's a minority of resistors; can you really afford to be a pacifist if EVERYONE is a pacifist, because it will lead to your extermination otherwise? (Unless of course your beliefs matter more than survival.)
Weaver's character is also interesting and I think will play a bigger role as the series unfolds, including the actuality of her existence. I am also feeling like they have an actual arc in the works for Quaritch.
I was indifferent to most of the first half hour, but it was a film that I felt got more and more engaging as it went. And of course, the 3D visuals and sound were positively amazing. It makes a cold grey drab December day look really bland in comparison.
I was moved enough to shed some tears at time, so... good thing?
---
The other thing that shed tears... the trailer for the next Spiderverse film. I don't know, but it just felt so powerful to me. I really got choked up watching it.