David,

 

You know, your colleague is right and I need to take a different look at how
I judge films.  All the young people today may not have seen Dances with
Wolves or Pocahontas.  In fact, Avatar or another contemporary film may
become their "Pocahontas".

 

I'm going to look at these films in a new light.  Thanks for the insightful
comments.

 

Regards

 

DBT

 <http://www.linkedin.com/in/douglasbtaylor> Profile

 

From: MoPo List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David
Kusumoto
Sent: Tuesday, February 16, 2010 2:16 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MOPO] AVATAR

 

** It's been a while I've written anything of length to MoPo; write it off
to being too swamped to get into the fights and what-nots during the past
5-6 months.  

** Meanwhile, you're right, Doug -- "Avatar's" story line has been done
1,000 times before, and that's my only objection to it.  "Avatar's" script
resembled "Dances With Wolves Meets the Blue Man Group" -- with the standard
theme of "money-grubbing corporations" raping the natural resources of a
planet populated by blue aliens -- whose every utterance is noble and
forcefully profound, e.g., like lines given to every Native American
character in Disney's "Pocahontas."  

** Anyway, I was put in my place by a former colleague and mother of two
kids who agreed with me -- but who told me -- (and she was right) -- "you
know, you and your historical film references makes you old and out of date
-- it makes everything you see today sound irrelevant with a "been there and
done that" feeling.  Well, that's not true for everything.  Zillions of
people are paying $15 to see 'Avatar' without your historical references;
they don't care about "Dances with Wolves" or "Pocahontas."  Even if they
did, those pictures were made 15-20 years ago, before today's movie goers
were born; they were made in ways that seem obsolete or less engaging to
kids today.  This doesn't mean old films are less important.  It just means
they're not important to young people YET.  Someday they'll like them.  Like
we did.  Geezuz, we weren't all born in 1920.  Young people buy WAY more
tickets than old people.  Remember how you used to go to every opening
night?  You don't anymore because you hate long lines.  You're not
supporting the industry and you're well past the 'sell-by' date for mass
entertainment.  So stay at home and watch PBS, TCM or HBO.  'Avatar" may not
be the best picture of the year, but it is historic and my kids loved it."  

** I thought about this tirade for a moment and I said, "you know, you're
right.  Most people coming out of 'Avatar' are having fun -- and I admit
it's astounding that a guy like James Cameron can knock out hit after
monster hit, while having total control of material that, unlike Spielberg,
always seems to strike industry watchers and the bean counters to have an
"iffy" quality -- BEFORE they're released.  Cameron's films never SEEM to
feel like they will be guaranteed box office gold until AFTER word-of-mouth
spreads."  

** The box-office receipts of Cameron's last three films including "True
Lies" -- have blown past everything Spielberg has done since 1993, including
"Jurassic Park," a film at the time I thought was a technological game
changer.  I just wonder whether "Avatar," even as a "game changer" -- has a
story/script worthy enough to be a Best Picture.  "Titanic" beat back those
same obstacles in 1997 with an old-fashioned, 1940s type love story that had
teenage girls returning in droves.  

** I liked low-budget picture, "The Hurt Locker" -- and was shocked that I
also enjoyed the true story of Baltimore Ravens tackle Michael Oher in
Sandra Bullock's "The Blind Side" -- but "Avatar" didn't hit me in the gut.
Honestly, the best performances I saw in 2009 came from Meryl Streep as
Julia Child in "Julie and Julia" and Christoph Waltz as the smooth Nazi in
"Inglourious Basterds."  

** If I had to root for a single picture, it might be "The Hurt Locker," but
only because I think it's the first picture about the war without a
political message; none of the actors "debate" why they're in Iraq.  There's
no sledgehammer message.  It's a strange film whereby the emotional
centerpiece is the adrenaline of survival; some soldiers have it and some
don't; this adrenaline is all that matters to the main character played by
Best Actor nominee Jeremy Renner.  I also thought "The Hurt Locker" was a
giant leap for action director Kathryn Bigelow, who's never done anything
like this.  If anything, its neutral political stance underscores how many
soldiers are ignorant of the politics of anything they're involved in.  They
just do their job.

** But my gut feeling is the 9 films going against "Avatar" -- all have the
"Gandhi" hex hung around their necks.  That is, if any picture OTHER than
"Avatar" wins -- it will be a dubious distinction akin to "Forrest Gump"
beating "The Shawshank Redemption" and "Pulp Fiction" in 1994; "Shakespeare
in Love" beating "Saving Private Ryan" in 1998; "Chariots of Fire" beating
"Reds" and "Raiders of the Lost Ark" in 1981; "Ordinary People" beating
"Raging Bull" in 1980; "Platoon" beating " Woody Allen's "Hannah and Her
Sisters" in 1986; "The English Patient" beating "Fargo" in 1996; "Dances
with Wolves" beating "Goodfellas" in 1990 and "Gandhi" beating "E.T" in 1982
and on and on.  I remember being angry when Oliver Stone's "Platoon" beat
Woody Allen's "Hannah" in '86, the latter film much decorated in the
all-important acting and screenplay categories.  And last week, I put on
"Shawshank" on the DVD player and my wife and I were in tears all over
again.  Still a great picture.  

** I know the Oscars are such bullshit (and not the original point of Doug
and Kirby's posts below) -- and I know these trophies are laden with the
"politics of their day" -- which have proven time and again that the
Academy's choices do not a classic make.  But if "Avatar" loses, I sense
many will feel like they've witnessed the "crime of the century," further
exposing the gulf between the Academy and popular sentiment (arguably as
they should be) -- but over a picture that is not only a box-office smash,
but has also received good-to-great reviews.  I won't mind if "Avatar" wins
because I do know people who think despite its high-school-ish script (esp.
the romance) -- that the picture is a critical and commercial juggernaut
that should NOT be denied the biggest prize on March 7, which has forced
many production companies to re-tool their future releases to integrate the
3D format in a "non-intrusive" way, which is "Avatar's" biggest strength.

** Despite 10 Best Picture nominees, I'm kind of indifferent this year, not
one film screams "stupendous."  But I was emotionally responsive to 5 of the
nearly 35 films released in 2009, one of which is not even among the 10
nominees:  "The Hurt Locker," "The Blind Side," "Up," "Inglourious Basterds"
(despite its excesses) -- and "The (500) Days of Summer," the latter which I
thought was going to be a stupid, sophomoric young-love beach film -- but
turned out to be a new way of telling a story about a broken urban romance
that doesn't get near a beach or a keg-party.  Wonderful surprise.

** A digression -- I did not object to "Annie Hall" beating "Star Wars" in
1977.  "Annie Hall" was a film I saw in contemporaneous release and I did
feel at the time that it broke new ground for Woody Allen and for the "urban
comedy genre" in a different way that "Star Wars" broke bigger ground for
family entertainment the same year.  But I also vividly remember going to
work the next day.  My work mates asked me, with great incredulity, "Star
Wars lost to Annie WHAT?  Your movie choices SUCK."  I loved both films but
I've never forgotten how that experience exposed me as a high-button,
stuck-up, holier-than-thou  snob.  -d.

> Date: Mon, 15 Feb 2010 23:31:56 -0500
> From: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: AVATAR
> To: [email protected]
> 
> Much better script than Titanic, although a story line we've seen 1,000
> times the last 90 years.
> 
> I've haven't seen anything better this year. I had high hopes for Hurt
> Locker, but it just doesn't pack the punch to compete.
> 
> Regards
> 
> DBT
> Profile
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: MoPo List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kirby
McDaniel
> Sent: Monday, February 15, 2010 11:18 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [MOPO] AVATAR
> 
> Here's my reaction.
> 
> I finally saw it.
> 
> Spectacularly realized. Doesn't lag much. Screenwriting is a little
> stilted at times while trying to explain things to audience 8 to 80, but
> that's quibbling.  Gorgeous in 3D on the full IMAX screen. 3D is some of
the best I've ever
> seen in that it seems to be "of a piece" with the film after a while. Very
beautiful to
> look at.  Reminded me at various times of aspects of other films -
LAWRENCE OF ARABIA,
> ALIENS, of course, THE STAR WARS stuff, naturally, although without the
Flash
> Gordon cornball factor, especially RETURN OF THE JEDI with it's scenes of
the ewoks.
> And BAMBI of all things -- I was looking at some of the color in the
Disney
> animation the other day, and some of the same coloration and tone in
AVATAR.
> So huge in its palette that one just simply has to hand it to James
Cameron - he 
> must be some kind of superman. The film is laden with messages, but it's
> all stuff I can pretty much get behind. What surprised me was how touching
> it was at times.
> 
> Oh yeah, really cute people. And they're blue. It's not easy being blue.
> 
> Kirby McDaniel
> MovieArt Original Film Posters
> P.O. Box 4419
> Austin TX 78765-4419
> 512 479 6680 www.movieart.net
> mobile 512 589 5112

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