Heretofore, the escape has always been via technology, and Mendelsohn tries to make out a case that the Na'vi, notwithstanding their appearance of tribal primitiveness, are actually technological wonders. That, it seems to me, misses the point. What Avatar demonstrates is the triumph of natural technology, so to speak, over the hardware that has beguiled Cameron in his earlier films. What the movie offers is spiritual transcendence--for the Sullied Jake, for Grace Augustine, for the bemused 3-D audiences...for flawed humanity. Whether you think this is a deep message or a shallow and derivative one, Christian idealism or manipulative Hollywood paganism, it has shown an impressive ability to get under peoples' skin.
Avatarred and feathered
Heretofore, the escape has always been via technology, and Mendelsohn tries to make out a case that the Na'vi, notwithstanding their appearance of tribal primitiveness, are actually technological wonders. That, it seems to me, misses the point. What Avatar demonstrates is the triumph of natural technology, so to speak, over the hardware that has beguiled Cameron in his earlier films. What the movie offers is spiritual transcendence--for the Sullied Jake, for Grace Augustine, for the bemused 3-D audiences...for flawed humanity. Whether you think this is a deep message or a shallow and derivative one, Christian idealism or manipulative Hollywood paganism, it has shown an impressive ability to get under peoples' skin.
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The spirituality theme in Avatar seems like an interesting subject to think about. Can't say the movie got the best plot, but there are much underlying sub-plots that's worth to explore.