I think I saw the first
Avatar
13 years ago.
But I don't remember anything about his argument.
Yes, you put on some glasses to fully enjoy your 3D shooting.
They say that it achieved the highest box office in the history of cinema.
In other words, all of Christ saw it.
Something to which its spectacular director is accustomed.
James Cameron also signed
Titanic, Terminator
and its sequel, and
Aliens.
It is obvious that he is someone who knows the formula for success, the tastes of the general public, the ability to generate infinite money with each of his projects.
I respect that ability, in some cases it has entertained me, although I have never had the feeling that it was offering me great cinema.
Something that does happen to me with some triumphant titles by Steven Spielberg or with all of David Lean's cinema, to name other monarchs of popular cinema, of great spectacle.
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James Cameron, king of technological cinema, returns with 'Avatar: the sense of water' 13 years later to burst the box office
Hollywood has again bet heavily on the continuation of
Avatar.
And it is clear that he is playing it.
If it doesn't devastate, if it doesn't get the regular viewer of the theaters to abandon their laziness and return to them, the ancestral business is going to get very crude.
They will always have Marvel and their succession of loud and inane nonsense, but if a director like James Cameron turns his back on commercial success, the signs of the apocalypse are as clear as they are alarming.
Avatar: The Sense of Water
lasts 190 minutes and they say it cost many bags of dollars.
And there is already continuity for the third, fourth and fifth part.
We are going to find avatars even in the soup.
As the characters and adventures that inhabited the first
Avatar have been erased from my memory,
I am not familiar with the ones that appear in the second one, but I deduce that they are the same.
And I lose myself with their identity and with what happens to them.
They are very rare beings, which apparently make up the Na'vi race.
They also face very strange marines.
The former survive underwater for much of the footage and are helped by a species of whales and transported by good dragons.
The protagonists are a family as supportive as heroic.
I try to put interest in its start, although almost everything is tiring for me.
And despite the noise and a music that does not rest, I perceive that the drowsiness begins to flood me.
And I'm fried.
I wake up twenty minutes later.
No feeling of guilt, although I can't comment on what happened on the screen during that pleasant time.
Yet in the final hour, which chronicles the last battle, I effortlessly manage to stay awake.
I entertain myself with what I see and hear.
It is clear, in the tradition of eternally confectionery Hollywood, that parents and children adore and protect each other, that everything will end well.
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It is elementary that James Cameron has told this story displaying wisdom in the technical aspects.
The special effects are dazzling.
It is taken for granted.
What I don't know is if the story is going to touch the hearts of the spectators, if they are going to enjoy it in a state of fascination.
It's not my case.
But I wish you the best of luck, as long as this helps keep movie theaters from disappearing.
Avatar: The Water Sense
Directed by:
James Cameron.
Cast:
Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldanha, Sigourney Weaver, Stephen Lang, Cliff Curtis, Kate Winslet.
Genre:
science fiction.
USA, 2022.
Duration:
192 minutes.
Premiere: December 16.
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