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Subject: Cameron's Avatar: The emerging zeitgeist? Review by Come Carpentier de 
Gourdon

 


 

http://www.vijayvaani.com/FrmPublicDisplayArticle.aspx?id=1027

 

Cameron’s Avatar: The emerging zeitgeist?

 

Come Carpentier de Gourdon

 

10 January 2010

 

Every now and then, a book, a play, or film, marks a watershed in the landscape 
of culture when it represents most eloquently a growing and world-changing (or 
“epoch making” as Marxists used to say) awareness.

 

James Cameron’s Avatar may well be one of those symbolic milestones. As the 
hitherto most sophisticated result of the technologies of virtual reality and 
computerized design, it takes place in an already long line of wondrous special 
effects extravaganzas which include George Lucas’ Star Wars, Steven Spielberg’s 
ET and Close Encounters, Cameron’s own Terminator and sequels, the Harry Potter 
series, Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings’ trilogy and so many others.

 

Yet, the message of Avatar synthesizes some of the most powerful calls that 
mankind is hearing nowadays: the appeal for a new communion with nature on the 
cosmic scale, the yearning for disclosure about the reality of other life forms 
from outside our planet, and the eternal nostalgia for legends and mythology 
which formed civilization from its origins.

 

Cameron situates himself in the sphere of mythology when he creates his heroic 
saga on the imaginary planet Pandora - “all gifts” in Greek, but also the name 
of the Goddess (Mohini) who brought them to Prometheus. The name hints at the 
pantheistic worldview that prevails on it and that the author advocates - 
inhabited by the peaceful and empathic Na’vi, cat-like, slender, blue-skinned 
humanoids who live in symbiotic communion with the magnificent but dangerous 
ecosystem of a primeval forest.

 

It is this ecstatic communion that the film’s hero, a paraplegic former Marine 
called Jake Sully, sent by the RDA corporation to help explore Pandora through 
the bio-engineered Avatar created for his late brother, learns from them and 
gradually becomes one of them. Though the story is set in 2154, Cameron seems 
to assume that little will change in America or on Earth by then. Our planet 
has been presumably turned into a biological wasteland by our industry, the 
economy is still in very bad shape, the US is still fighting wars in many poor 
and hostile lands on behalf of giant corporations dedicated to exploiting 
natural resources, but wounded US soldiers are still neglected and financially 
unable to undergo reconstructive surgery for the injuries incurred in the line 
of duty.

 

The contrast between the penniless, paralyzed and depressive discarded 
mercenary of the earth’s richest nation and the boundlessly free and luminous 
Na’vi is one of the many ontological antitheses presented in the film.

 

In building Pandora’s fictional world, the author borrows from the legends and 
traditions of many “primitive” cultures, as most myth-makers have from the dawn 
of humanity, to create monuments as diverse as the Book of Gilgamesh, the 
Ramayana, the Iliad and Beowulf or Cuchulain. The Na’vi remind us of all bow 
and arrow wielding tribal peoples of warm climes, but they particularly evoke 
images of the blue-green divine heroes of ancient India, Rama and Krishna, 
whose wisdom and omniscience reflected their profound union with the Cosmic 
Whole which Cameron calls Eywa, the universal mother who embraces and comprises 
all creation, according to a concept embedded in Tantric philosophy.

 

Those people of the Pandoran forest will also remind people familiar with Indic 
culture, from Mongolia to Indonesia, of the Monkey people or Vanaras met by 
Rama and his companions in the deep woods of Central India, and who became his 
allies under the leadership of their king Sugriva and their champion Hanuman. 
However, the alien people created by Cameron are not modelled on a single 
historic or mythical race, but are inspired by many diverse shamanistic and 
pantheistic cultures.

 

The fact that in order to roam on Pandora freely and meet the Na’vi on their 
own terms, humans have to go into a state of conscious dream through the medium 
of a biological Avatar identical to the natives (contrary to the homonymous 
Internet creation, Cameron’s Avatar, like its Indic archetype is physical and 
alive) reminds us of the Dreamtime described by Australian aborigines or of the 
parallel worlds evoked by South American tribals and to which one can accede in 
sleep, with the help of hallucinogenic drugs such as the Ayahuasca just as 
Vedic Hindus and Avestan Iranians used the Soma  or Haoma plant.

 

Like the Vedic peoples, but also like many other ancient races on all 
continents, the Na’vi are said to go through a ritual process of second birth 
(samsrkt dvija) which ushers them in as full members of the social and 
universal community of life and soul.

 

The metaphysical question raised by the cosmology of the Invisible has occupied 
much of Buddhist and Hindu thought over millennia since there is reason to 
question the “rational” assumption that only the facts experienced in our 
waking state are real. Many ancient religious systems relied on the opposite 
conclusion, which the Spanish writer Calderon de la Barca expressed in five 
words: “La vida es un sueno”: life is a dream! Other traditions teach that the 
other worlds we sometimes visit in trance or sleep are as material and actual 
as our sphere of familiar awareness.

 

Until we accept and integrate fully the parallel universes that we can visit 
only in the various subtle and psychic dimensions of our selves, we are doomed 
to living tragic lives in blindness and “quiet desperation”. For the Na’vi, 
becoming aware of this transcendent reality is “seeing” the truth of another 
person’s being. The reference to the symbolism of darsana in Indian psychology 
and philosophy is transparent.

 

Avatar dares to proclaim defiantly what many people in the West, and especially 
in the USA, are still afraid to admit. Cameron squarely points to the American 
military forces and the associated “private security companies” as the major 
agents in today’s world of uncontrolled corporate greed in all its brutal 
destructiveness. The film builds towards a cathartic massacre of the Pentagon’s 
robotic mercenaries and the utter annihilation (history repeats itself many a 
time!) of its space age war machine, personified by a Colonel whose face and 
gait mirror those of the many warlords who regularly appear in the news, from 
Odierno and Petraeus to McChrystal, just as his corporate army represents 
Blackwater, Triple Canopy and other such outfits created to privatise war and 
occupation. The polar opposition between the gracefulness of the native people 
of the Planet Pandora, the luminous and willowy Na’vi and the mechanical 
ugliness of the human killing machines is as striking as it is expected to be 
in a myth which is made up of allegories and signs.

 

The humanoid natives of Pandora look more than a bit like some of the Aliens 
described by several witnesses from the 1947 Roswell incident until recent 
times. Their four-fingered hands seem modelled after the tetradactyle 
extremities that at least some of the Greys or Zetas are reported to have. Such 
evocations are hardly surprising in ET-aware Hollywood, all the more from a 
director who authored the film Aliens in 1986.

 

The sort of  intuitive intelligence that the Na’vi demonstrate in their 
collective, beehive-like harmony, reminded me of a striking observation made by 
Whitley Strieber once about the “visitors” who have appeared to him at various 
occasions in his life: “animals far more intelligent than us”. The Na’vi’s 
fusional connection with the horse-like quadruped and the flying dragons they 
ride – as the bluish God Vishnu flies on the giant bird Garuda - through the 
merger of the tips of their respective capillary appendices is at once 
technologically inspired (fiber-optics and hints of David Cronenberg’s 
Existenz) and related to the Indian and Chinese belief that the brain is rooted 
in the cosmic oversoul through the pituitary seventh cakra at the crown of the 
head and also through the Kundalini coiled at the base of the spine as a 
vestigial tail.

 

As the polar opposite those fluid, intuitive lifeforms, Colonel Miles Quaritch, 
commander of the Company’s private army, the SecFor, is a mixture of 
Nietzsche’s “beast” and of a ruthless, calculating and emotionally deaf and 
dumb weapon of mass destruction. He uses the well worn Pentagon jargon which 
has become so recognizable during the last decade of “pre-emptive” wars: 
“killing the hostiles”, “minimizing casualties”, “winning hearts and minds”. He 
is unquestioningly committed to carrying out his mission, which is to allow 
“free market access” to the corporation to extract the precious mineral 
Unobtainium (a metaphor for oil or any other coveted mineral) from Pandora’s 
soil, and he regards all unfamiliar lifeforms as dangerous nuisances that must 
be “domesticated” or eliminated at any cost if and when they cannot be simply 
ignored.

 

That very attitude is made manifest in the policies enforced by the US and many 
other governments which consist in systematically ignoring and denying the 
presence of “Alien” life, especially that which strikes us as being far more 
evolutionarily advanced than our own. Those who are minimally aware of the 
Ufological reality realize that Cameron, like most in Hollywood, is not duped 
by the current political-scientific-military consensus and is making in his 
film an appeal for disclosure.

 

Quaritch reports to a wimpish, self-absorbed and infantile corporate boss of 
RDA, Parker Selfridge – a George W Bush to Quaritch’s Cheney or Rumsfeld - and 
they both have a conflictual rapport with the scientist, Grace Augustine, 
played by Sigourney Weaver, who serves the operatives of the 
military-industrial complex in her research on Pandora in spite of her moral 
reservations. Yet, they finance her work so that she needs them to carry out 
her investigations. The ambiguous role of scientists as handmaidens of their 
corporate paymasters (somewhat like the missionaries of the colonial ages) is 
illustrated quite tellingly.

 

Another parallel is drawn between the wondrously strange and intensely alive 
but somewhat ethereal world of Pandora and the high tech, ugly and depressing 
artificial habitat in which the earthly invaders are imprisoned. Where is 
reality? In the scientifically controlled, drably military environment of the 
occupiers (where the only entertainment available is the mini-golf used by the 
corporate boss) or in the fantastic wilderness of Pandora, inaccessible to 
humans outside their heavily insulated and armoured aircraft and “exoskeletons” 
(dubbed AMP for “Amplified Motion Platforms”).

 

The reference to the US bases set up in many countries and thoroughly cut off 
from the outside world, making the American soldiers and administrators the 
real aliens for the rest of mankind, is obvious, and the Na’vi are virtual 
icons of all the native peoples subjugated and massacred by colonizers, from 
the Aztecs, Incas and Patagonians to the Bantus, the Red Indians, and the 
aboriginal Australians.

 

The analogy with the Vietnamese, Iraqis or Afghans is not so transparent 
because those martyred people are not “pristine” children of Nature, though the 
attitude of the US occupiers towards them is similar to that of most 
conquistadors of yore, but as the hero of the film points out, those alien 
people cannot be won over with baubles or “light beer” or even by giving them 
American education and teaching them English. The endeavour of the conquerors 
is tragically flawed and is bound to fail, but not without causing immense 
destruction.

 

Predictably, the target of Colonel Queritch after he has destroyed the “tree of 
voices” (“first, cut off the target people from their source of traditional 
wisdom” seems to be the rule followed by colonialists and missionaries) and the 
“hometree” of the Na’vi (which disintegrates in a manner intentionally 
reminiscent of the World Trade Centre’s destruction in 2001 and happens to 
stand on the largest deposit of Unobtainium), is to “preemptively” take out the 
soul tree, Cameron’s allusion to the Aswattha of Indian mythology (and to the 
Nordic Yggdrasil) which, as Augustine tries to explain to the dismissive 
colonel and the bemused corporate executive, lies at the core of the planet’s 
bio-botanical neural network. She provides thereby a graphic image of the 
phenomenon of non-locality explained by quantum entanglement in contemporary 
physics as it applies to the eco-sphere, but such a holistic perspective is 
predictably beyond the grasp of her mentally autistic listeners, bent on quick 
territorial conquest and financial profit.

 

Cameron makes it clear that the only option for survival and for the 
preservation of our environment is to overthrow the tyranny of finance and 
technology enforced by the warlords of the Pentagon and their soldiers of 
fortune and misfortune. His film is a rousing call for defiance and rebellion 
that many in the US civilian and military sectors may eventually heed, and it 
is symbolically enlightening and also inevitable that he should conceive an 
iconography reminiscent of the Hindu sacred epics in order to convey this 
radical and apocalyptic message. What splendid depictions of the Indian myths 
and legends could be made nowadays by using the stereoscopic and virtual camera 
“motion capture” techniques, aptly called “3D Fusion Camera System”, pioneered 
in Avatar!

 

The author is Convener, Editorial Board, World Affairs Journal

 

 

 

 

 

 

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