Home » Arts & Entertainment » Film » Currently Reading:

Avatar: Going blue to go green

February 3, 2010 Arts & Entertainment, Film 1 Comment

Article by: Derek Anderson

James Cameron’s Avatar has smashed down competition in theaters and reigns as the highest grossing movie of all time worldwide. The film brings the audience into the new world of Pandora, a moon that the human race wishes to harvest for an ultra-powerful mineral by the name of unobtanium. The indigenous people of Pandora, called the Na’vi,  live on top of the largest deposit of unobtanium on the moon and have no intentions of moving from their homes. This pushes the humans to fight for the resources and chaos ensues, involving warfare and death, which ultimately destroys the environment of Pandora and the culture of the Na’vi people.

Although the story is intriguing and the special effects are something from another world, there is a point that Cameron really wanted to drive home to his audience. It is the environment on Pandora Cameron wants people to see, being destroyed and ravished for minerals and resources, a mirror to reality and the present day world.

”I see it as a broader metaphor,” said Cameron in an interview with the Daily Telegraph. “Not so intensely politicized as some would make it, but rather that’s how we treat the natural world as well.”

Avatar is also the most expensive movie ever made. The new technology used to make the movie, 3D, is what cost the most, even delaying it years from when it was written back in 1994, because at that point in time the technology did not even exist. The new spin on 3D was to make it subtle and almost a second nature to the audience, immersing the crowd into the film. This 3D trick drops people right into the new world of Pandora.

The 3D factor makes Pandora a reality to the audience, which can only help Cameron’s attempts to say something about the environment.

”There’s a sense of entitlement – ‘We’re here, we’re big, we’ve got the guns, we’ve got the technology, we’ve got the brains, we therefore are entitled to every damn thing on this planet’,” said Cameron.       ”That’s not how it works and we’re going to find out the hard way if we don’t wise up and start seeking a life that’s in balance with the natural cycles of life on earth.”

Jake Sully, a paraplegic marine is entered into the mission on Pandora to interact with the Na’vi. His mind is input into an avatar, a close clone of a Na’vi. Once he begins to interact with the Na’vi and is taught their ways of life, he begins to become closer with the planet and the Na’vi people. Meanwhile, the humans are moving forward with their plans to destroy the Na’vi’s home, which happens to be a giant tree on top of the biggest unobtanium deposit on Pandora. They move forward with plans and destroy the tree as well as everything else in their paths. The scenes show Na’vi people dying in the chaos as the humans mercilessly bombard their ancient home with missiles, gas and fire.

The destruction of the Na’vi home represents what is happening to our planet right now. Cameron’s attempts to mirror our society now with the newer 3D technology warms the feelings the audience forms toward the Na’vi people. Not left with much but each other, a new leader, and the most sacred part of their culture, the Tree of Souls, the Na’vi people fight off the human attackers and begin to build again, starting from scratch. It is warnings like these Cameron pushed intensely in Avatar and upon the millions that have seen the new blockbuster. Many think the Na’vi have got it right.  Maybe society needs something like the most expensive film in history to open its eyes to something as simple as the nature that surrounds us on a daily basis.

Related posts:

  1. Construction Gangs: New documentary shows China’s ever-changing faceArticle By:  Shoshana Akins The Communication and Journalism Department’s Suffolk...
  2. Ference leads charge among green athletesPlayers from all four major sports leagues involved in protecting...
  3. Wes Anderson still fantasticArticle By: Derek Anderson Wes Anderson has done it again,...
  4. In film show “Nothing Is (Is Nothing) Sacred,” Nothing is SacredArticle By: Alex Sessa Experimental film is an area of...
  5. Where the Wild Things At Dawg?Article By: Ashley Maceli Maurice Sendak’s beloved children’s book of...

Currently there is "1 comment" on this Article:

  1. [...] Jame.. AVATAR’s a hit: Oscar-Bound, Ground-Breaking, a 3-D Sensation! | DesPardes… Avatar: Going blue to go green | Suffolk Journal Depressive Syndrome » Post-Avatar-Depression-Syndrome (PADS) | Reali.. Video game review: [...]




Comment on this Article:







This Week’s Journal

Also find us on:

Featured Stories

Why Operation Moshtarak is a responsible way to fight the war (Part I of II)

March 3, 2010

Why Operation Moshtarak is a responsible way to fight the war (Part I of II)

Article by: Alex Pearlman
“You have to understand that if you don’t do what you say, we’ll all be killed.” These are ominous words to anyone, but to General Stanley McChrystal, it’s nothing more than the truth. One of 450 tribal elders and scholars from the Helmand Province who gathered in Kabul earlier this month, readying [...]

Are video essays the new big thing?

March 3, 2010

Are video essays the new big thing?

Article by: Angela Bray
“Share a one-minute video that says something about you. Upload it to YouTube or another easily accessible Web site, and give us the URL. What you do or say is totally up to you.” One can only do so much in a minute.
This year for the prospective Class of 2014, Tufts University [...]

The Journal brings home the bronze

March 3, 2010

The Journal brings home the bronze

The Suffolk Journal’s office walls are peppered with awards. In the 1970s, apparently, this paper was really, really good. However, we haven’t won a big award since 1999 and we haven’t won an Associated Collegiate Press annual National College Journalism Convention award since 1979.
Well, we finally brought one home. Last Sunday, at the ACP’s annual [...]

Police Blotter March 03

March 3, 2010

Police Blotter March 03

Tuesday, February 23
7:25AM
NESAD
American Alarm called regarding the front doors of NESAD. Unit 22 and 17 responding. Nothing found. No report.
7:57 PM
Ridgeway Building
Unit 6 reports 2 makes arguing in front of 148 Cambridge Street possibly intoxicated. Units 41 and 39 responding. Unit 41 reports the individuals moved along without incident. No report.
Wednesday, February 24
18:38 AM
10 Somerset
Report of [...]

‘Island’ just another thriller

February 24, 2010

‘Island’ just another thriller

Article by: Cait O’Callaghan

Martin Scorsese teams up with Leonardo DiCaprio a fourth time in his new film Shutter Island (Paramount Pictures, 2010), the story of a Bostonian U.S Marshal’s investigation into the disappearance of a patient on an island that holds a mental hospital.
Taking place in 1954, DiCaprio plays U.S Marshal Teddy Daniels, who arrives [...]

Suffolk on Flickr

DSC_0842DSC_0873DSC_0945habitat_2DSC_0453thisIsWarLoveyBonesFoxpressimageBlatmanConsort and Distort - 1Consort and Distort - 2Consort and Distort - 3