Well, I finally saw it. I must say I was a bit underwhelmed, especially after all the hype. Are the environments beautiful and well-rendered? Absolutely. Do they look virtually photoreal at all times? Unfortunately not, but a reasonable amount of the time I suppose they do. Are there some glaring flaws? Absolutely. Well, glaring to me at least. But the visuals aren't really what disappointed me so much, at least not the computer graphics.
Instead it was the 3D and IMAX theater I saw it in and, as I have now heard from others who have seen it elsewhere, this does not seem to be entirely unique to me. The 3D effect does work, but it makes a 70 foot tall screen look a lot smaller (still big, but not nearly as impressive), and worst of all it makes almost everything look slightly fuzzy at all times. This was really disappointing considering I paid extra not only for IMAX but also for 3D. So now I am thinking I might see it in 2D in a regular theater to see the comparison.
The other thing that was disappointing, though expected, was the story and dialog. But honestly I did not expect how really pretty bad it would be. This is a movie that borrows more than just a little from many better movies that came before, from Dances With Wolves to The Matrix to Braveheart and many more, and they're not just general concepts or little things, there are some pretty blatantly copied things.
Visually, as I said it was fairly impressive, but I didn't find it to be hugely creative. The main alien race was so humanoid it was almost not worth calling them alien (I imagine this was to keep them as easy to empathize with as possible), and all the creatures of the planet seemed to basically be versions of Earth creatures with a couple extra limbs and reptilian skin. There is a dog analog, bird analog, horse analog, and so on. All stick to the same formula - take away all the hair (one wonders if this was a rendering issue), add some limbs, make the face more scary/toothy, and you're done. Nevermind the creation of totally unique species. Heck some even had the same name as Earth creatures - lemur, for example.
And the vegetation? Why 50% or more of it looked almost exactly like our vegetation. It was only at night that much of it looked different, and that was just glowing. Beautiful, yes, but honestly not that creative IMHO.
So yeah, Avatar is maybe a small landmark in the evolution of 3D, but not as large as anyone thought I think. Pirates of the Caribbean still impressed me more, and even Benjamin Button, despite not totally succeeding at suspension of disbelief, still had a harder task and accomplished it better I think.
Still, I will probably see it again and line Cameron's pockets even more, just to satisfy my curiosity about 3D vs. 2D. Given the great hype at CES this year about 3D coming to the home, I'm quite curious to see just how it affects the quality of presentation. If it's as bad as I fear, I have strong doubts that 3D will become popular at home any time soon. But do keep my experience of the softening 3D effect in mind when considering my opinion of the visuals. Perhaps I'll be more impressed when I see it in 2D...
- Oshyan