Thursday, January 21, 2010

Avatar - the modern drama

The Chinese government has pulled Avatar out of an estimated 1500 theatres in China, substituting the film with a biography of Confucious. While arguably, cinemagoers are better off with this switch, the motives behind the move are more sinister; many commentators believe that it is an attempt to nip in the bud any unrest that might be building up as a result of popular association of the Avatar storyline with the struggles of Chinese against land grabbing real estate developers. (China's Avatar restrictions cause a stir - Wall Street Journal)

Elsewhere, the L'Observatore Romano, the Vatican mouthpiece, slammed the film as endorsing a return to "neo paganism" , or the worship of nature over God, a view that they say is endorsed by the Pope (the Pope watches movies?? who knew!!.) Not to be outdone, the American conservative media has also jumped on this bandwagon, one reviewer calling the film anti  American in its "... hatred of the military and American institutions, and the notion that to be human is just way uncool.." (John Podhoretz, The Weekly Standard)

James Cameron's Avatar: The Na'vi Quest Seriously?? We are talking about the film with the giant blue people right?? The one you needed to wear those comical cardboard glasses to watch? The one with flying mountains, dragonlike creatures for transport, lack of substantial clothing for the main protagonists and a giant tree as the main point of conflict? The real green metaphor in the film is the amount of moolah that the producers of the film have generated, and the colour of envy in the faces of the competition.
 
The only real risk that this film poses to mankind is the prospect of a lineup of sequels and a slew of knockoffs in which we will be forced to endure cliche-ed storylines and even more dazzling special effects as substitutes for great storytelling and real human emotion.

2 comments:

Elisa @ Globetrotting in Heels said...

wow, sounds like some people need to get a life and stop taking everything so seriously. And the efforts by the new Pope to promote religious intolerance by dissing anything that may encourage anyone to even sympathize with any other kind of religious/spiritual views? Despicable.

Wide Eyed Gypsy said...

Yeah, I was surprised. And I wonder how much editing and censoring they'd have to do to make a hollywood film palatable to Vatican sensibilities!

Post a Comment

 

Wide Eyed Gypsy Design by Insight © 2009