I thought the movie was too plain… too surface oriented. It was a visual spectacle, but there was no depth. This was due almost entirely to the storyline: it was very unoriginal and cliche. There was nothing new about the plot… it has been portrayed countless times in cinema and literature. It was predicatble. I felt like it was a mash up of Ferngully and Pocahontis. (I really love Ferngully by the way… and it is nearly as agenda oriented as Avatar.)
I really go for epic movies; movies with storylines and character angst that goes beyond action and simple resolution… movies that typically involve sequels/trilogies, but not necessarily. This movie was epic in its scope of plot: two sides opposing each other, one for good, one for evil. However that is where its epic quality ends, in its name. The substance to fill out the bill was never realized. The characters, as I said, were one dimensional; their motives and purpose were clear from the beginning of the movie. The only characters who grew through stuggle were Jake and Sigourney Weaver’s character… but even that struggle was inevitable in its course, a foregone conclusion.
I like stories where the good guys win also, but they must win at a price. The movie should be bitterssweet, to convey a sense of reality and consequence. (Though I suppose that could only be a preference… some people really enjoy “cotton candy” movies.) The struggle must also be realistic. While the Na’vii lost some major things in the movie… I didn’t feel it. I didn’t feel as though I could cheer for them because it was too obvious that I was supposed to. The political taint didn’t help, but … politics aside… the movie was flat. Special effects and good action won’t make up for that. Very few movies come near to being perfect in all categories of quality… I won’t say all the ones I previously listed were at the same level, but Avatar simply isn’t in the same league.
As Frimmel said, many of the movie’s aspects are standard: the story, the characters, the morals, the conflicts… (standard meaning average, typical, or possibly, for our purposes here, overused and recycled).
Then we have to ask… Why does such a standard movie garner excellent reviews and over a billion dollars in world sales? Is it because the populace has been so diluted by poor films, chock full of action, CGI and sex (not the case in Avatar), that standard themes are given more credit than something more original?
I don’t mind the filmmaker taking a stand… but the things Cameron wants to say become more clear than the story of the movie. Which is why I found it distracting. And rather condescending in its plain and “indisputable” presentation. He could at least take a stand a little more intelligently, more subtly. Unless, of course, he wanted blatant preaching… in that case,he did just fine.