Wed, 16 Dec 2009
(CNS) - 162 minutesIn theaters December 18, 2009
Rating: PG-13, Science fiction thriller
At
the risk of damning with faint praise, let me start by pegging Avatar
the best 3-D movie ever made. That said, however, we true movie lovers
could easily live without 3-D entirely.
Which brings us to Avatar, a terrific 2-D movie as well.
Director
James Cameron took lots of heat when he quoted from his own movie and
declared himself the "king of the world" upon winning his Oscar for
Titanic, the highest-grossing movie of all time.
Well, now he'd like to be king of another world. And he comes pretty darn close: Avatar is a majestic out-of-this-world fantasy.
A
science fiction extravaganza, Avatar builds on the motion-capture
process and creates an alien planet (actually a moon), Pandora, in the
22nd century, several decades after a mining colony has been
established there by occupying-force humans.
Sam
Worthington (Terminator Salvation) stars as Jake Sully, a disabled
former Marine who has lost the use of his legs and is confined to a
wheelchair. But he's still active and is recruited to take his late
twin brother's place and travel light years to Pandora, where a
multinational corporation is mining a rare mineral, Unobtainium, that
might hold the key to Earth's energy crisis.
Because
the atmosphere on Pandora is toxic to humans, the Avatar program links
the consciousness of human "drivers" with remotely-controlled avatars
(called "dreamwalkers"), genetically-engineered hybrids of humans and
indigenous Pandora natives, the Na'vi, humanoids who live in harmony
with nature and are enviously tall, enviously lean, and distractingly
blue-skinned.
The corporate honchos would
like the Na'vi to relocate so they can obtain the Unobtainium. But the
Na'vi don't want to leave their homes. And they're not interested
enough in anything the alien invaders -- that is, the humans -- might
tempt them with by way of a bribe.
Sigourney
Weaver plays the lead scientist. She's cranky and skeptical of
paraplegic Jake's ability and dexterity, but she agrees to give him a
shot inside the coffin-like avatar cocoon. Thus does Jake regain the
use of his legs, at least when he's running around in a ten-foot-tall
blue body.
And thus is he recruited by the
colony's head of security (Stephen Lang) to infiltrate the Na'vi to
gain valuable information for the humans, who are led by Giovanni
Ribisi as the corporate bigwig in charge who wants the land that the
Na'vi live on and will stop at nothing to get it.
Once
in what looks like a rainforest, Jake is rescued by a female Na'vi
named Neytiri (Zoe Saltana), the daughter of the tribal leader, and he
soon comes to fall for her and identify himself as a member of their
tribe.
So Jake is pulled in two directions
as his human superiors heat up their attempts to drive the Na'vi out,
and war between the machine gun-wielding humans and the
bow-and-arrow-toting Na'vi begins to appear inevitable.
This otherwise good soldier now finds himself literally going native.
In
Aliens-meets-Titanic fashion, writer-director Cameron's Avatar combines
adventure, romance, and tragedy. But his story is structured like many
a classic western, with a subtext of anti-militarism and
anti-imperialism reproachfulness that suggests a number of recent and
current parallels in the real world.
The
narrative is timeless and familiar, but the film still feels
cutting-edge fresh. Cameron (The Terminator, Terminator 2: Judgment
Day, The Abyss) makes us know we're in good hands right away, engaging
our wide-eyed-wonder response within minutes as we ebarek on our
eye-opening journey to a new world. Later, he masterfully juggles
superbly staged action sequences with sensitive romantic scenes.
Throughout,
he sprinkles fleeting echoes of his earlier films and, yes, he does
overstay his welcome a bit (running time is over 2-1/2 hours) in the
extended battle, with its genocidal undercurrent, that takes up most of
the third act. But by then we're so invested in the characters' welfare
and the outcome that it's only momentarily bothersome.
The
3-D element never detracts from the narrative or from the relationships
among the characters. It is also, by the way, not only unobtrusive but
completely unnecessary to the enjoyment of Avatar. At no time, however,
does the film turn into the one-dimensional video game that it might
have in the hands of a lesser director.
As
for the motion-capture process, however, it finally seems fully
realized: the computer-generated characters' faces, with their golden
eyes, are fully expressive now as an important part of this thrillingly
immersive experience.
Avatar is
a stunningly photo-realistic, thoroughly engrossing sci-fi epic. Once
again, as with Titanic, James Cameron emerges triumphant despite our
preliminary fears about Pandora's box.
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