Avatar (12A)

Film

Fantasy films

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Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>2/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5
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Time Out says

Tue Dec 15 2009

There’s a line from ‘Jurassic Park’ that echoed hauntingly through this critic’s head as ‘Avatar’ unfolded: ‘Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.’ James Cameron is one of those scientists: so in love with the technology, with the possibilities, that he never pauses to reflect upon the practicalities of cinema, of storytelling, of connecting with an audience.

That quote is doubly relevant when one considers the cultural similarities between these two blockbusters, both of which justified massive expense by promising a quantum leap forward in visual effects. But where Spielberg utilised technology in the service of a tight, witty script, Cameron is simply out to astound. There are moments when you almost expect Sam Worthington’s moody, ever-present voiceover to be replaced by the self-styled king of the world yelling at his audience: ‘Are you awestruck now? How about now? Now?’

When his scientist brother is killed a week before shipping out to the distant planet Pandora, wheelchair-bound US Marine Jake Sully (Worthington) is offered the chance to go in his place. On Pandora, Jake meets his avatar, a remote-controlled host body generated from his brother’s DNA and designed to blend in among the native Na’vi, a race of nine-foot blue hunter-gatherers living in peaceful harmony with their homeworld, Native American style.

Or rather, Native Californian: Na’vi civilisation is a mishmash of half-formed Hollywood ideas about the supposed superiority of ‘primitive’ cultures, tossing around buzzwords like ‘spirit’ and ‘energy’ without ever approaching a cohesive set of beliefs. But ‘all this tree-hugging shit’, as Jake describes it, is only the most obvious defect in Cameron’s dire, cliché-ridden script. From the bluntly expositional nature of the early scenes to the gung-ho, sub-‘Aliens’ banter of Jake’s fellow soldiers, this is screenwriting on autopilot, cobbling together unripe ideas without a scrap of originality or emotional resonance.

It’s hard to fault ‘Avatar’ as an immersive visual experience. Pandora and its luridly coloured inhabitants are beautifully designed, though none of this ever feels remotely real. But this was supposed to be the movie that changed the face of filmmaking forever. Ultimately, Cameron’s signature achievement may have been to prove, beyond a shadow of a doubt, the oldest of all Hollywood maxims: all the money in the world is no subsitute for fresh ideas and a solid script.
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Release details

Rated:

12A

UK release:

Thu Dec 17 2009

Duration:

161 mins

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (355 ratings)
  • Worth seeing the iMAX 3D version for the technology, but you need only stay for the first half hour: the 1 D story and characters need no longer. As a visual experience there are some nice bits (like the seeds floating in front of you) but the technology is along way from giving 'presence' (i.e. the feeling you are actually there).

    eye633 Sat Feb 13 2010
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • Yeah, In short - The worst outcome of Avatar is a massive self-ridicule of the critics that puts them right where they belong. Down the toilet.

    Surdin Sat Feb 13 2010
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • Avatar unveils the saddest picture of film critics in decades. In order to praise this shallow, 2D, unimaginative, generic "world", the majority of respected and experienced critics had to throw down the toilet all their previous film education so they could hold the candle in the dark while Cameron performs an additional lobotomy on the already over-lobotomized audience. The hypnotized general audience will always bow under the burden of the pompous, constant, direct PR attacks of the studios but that's where the critics should stand their ground. Now it seems their ground is as big as Pandora.

    Yeahs Sat Feb 13 2010
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • You sure that wasn't just an imprint form those heavy 3D glasses?

    Wayne S Fri Feb 12 2010
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • Best film this year, no this decade, oh hang on it's only 2010. Nevermind; a must see anyway - far more than just your usual cannon fodder. Not since I first saw Terminator 2 did I come away from the cinema with 'wow' written all over my face

    Chris Fri Feb 12 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • The 'Avatar' experience is like watching 'Krull' twice - through a kaleidoscope.

    Porco Thu Feb 11 2010
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  • That's true. But its still marginally less tiresome than Avatar.

    frank Thu Feb 11 2010
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • This conversation has become tiresome.

    Dieter Thu Feb 11 2010
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • Absolutely brilliant film, best one ive seen in ages, possibly years, a must see while its still at the big screen, ive seen it in 2d and 3d, you MUST SEE IT IN 3D, its like you are actually there in the jungle with them, exxcellent story, fantastic CGI, go see it.....!

    anthony croft Thu Feb 11 2010
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  • Liked the film. Five stars just to spite Wayne S..

    tonio Wed Feb 10 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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