Etoh*the*Greato wrote:For everyone arguing on behalf of originality in film, I encourage you to pick up Joseph Campbell's The Hero With a Thousand Faces. This was a brilliant work pointedly arguing the strong cultural identities we share through stories world wide, and how key elements of those stories have remained largely unchanged for thousands of years.
See I don't mind that so much. I realize that "there is nothing new under the sun" and a lot of stories are variations on old stories. That still doesn't excuse blatant ripping-off and straight plagiarism I'd even say.
I said it before, and I'll say it again. Star Wars and The Hidden Fortress. They have a lot of similarities, and it's very clear that The Hidden Fortress greatly inspired Star Wars. However Star Wars is not exactly like The Hidden Fortress, but in space.
Seriously are we going to go with the "It's okay if it's exactly like other things because nothing is original!" bit? Isn't that what's killing the anime industry right now, a flood of carbon-copy titles that are unoriginal and bland? You can have variation on a single thing you know. Hamburgers from Fuddrucker's a lot better than hamburgers from McDonald's. They're both hamburgers, but Fuddrucker's puts more effort and care into it. They know a hamburger is a staple food but they at least try to make it as good as they can. If they had the same attitude to burgers that James Cameron apparently has to film, they'd be a McDonald's clone.
See what I'm saying? Even if it's not original it can still be done well, and with good variations. But as I said, Avatar didn't even TRY. It didn't even put forth any effort into trying to have something different and unique. What if the main character totally got into his role as an infiltrator for the colonel and betrayed the Na'vi? Hey that would've been something unique and different! It wouldn't have been original but it would have been a fresh take on the "white man becomes member of different culture" thing. It would have at the very least shattered audience expectations, and been somewhat engaging.
But no, he didn't put forth effort. He was perfectly content to take the scripts from other movies and not even change a thing about them. And the worst part is
James Cameron can make good movies. Terminator 2 was great! It wasn't all that original, but it was still unique and interesting enough to make it good. Same thing with Aliens, it wasn't original at all but still managed to be engaging and different enough to separate it from other similar tales.
Here's the question. If Avatar had been done with regular hand-drawn animation, would it still hold the same esteem in people's minds? Or would it be dismissed as "an unoriginal story with nothing interesting going for it?" If you can't honestly say you'd enjoy Avatar as much without the huge budget, then it's a way of saying style is worth more than substance.
And that's not ALWAYS a bad thing, I saw Independence Day in theaters. There's nothing wrong with popcorn munchers, and as I said, this movie wasn't terrible, it was just average. But I make no excuses for its vapidness and worthlessness. It's nothing more than a movie that was entertaining but too long and too pretentious. I'm not saying no one can enjoy it or that they have to think it's bad, but instead I'm saying why people seem to be making a bigger deal out of this than it needs to have been.
If the movie had been humble and honest like Independence Day I probably wouldn't be so hard on it. Instead of "HEY THIS WILL CHANGE THE FACE OF SCI FI FOREVER" it just went "Hey the White House blows up and Will Smith punches an alien in the face, what do you want from us? It's mindless entertainment." I'm also stating reasons why people think it's so AMAZING rather than the average summer escapism it is, and why they feel the need to see it more than once. Seriously who saw ID4 more than once? Nobody. Why would anyone watch Avatar more than once? It certainly isn't for the story! Thus like I said it's only that people are entranced by pretty pictures. Again, style over substance. Why people look at the hot Victoria's Secret model rather than the average-looking woman with a great personality.
The new 3D camera invented by Cameron, in showcasing that 3D can be more than just a gimmick
But it IS just a gimmick. So it makes the world appear to have depth, when it doesn't. So? That's a gimmick. Just as gimmicky as "Hey, with the Wii remote you'll feel like you're ACTUALLY SWINGING A SWORD when you wave the controller around!" And I'm not saying that motion sensing or 3D is bad, it's fine for what it is...a cheap thrill. But it's certainly not some new advent of technology and it's nothing more than just a gimmick designed to make people go "Oooh ahhhh."
At least in Universal Studios, when I saw the Muppets in 3D, Kermit made sure to say "Don't worry, we won't do any cheap 3D thrills" and Fozzie comes up and goes "WOOOO CHEAP 3D THRILLS!" and proceeds to use a yo-yo and one of those noisemakers you blow in that unfurls and even squirts some water (and the seats have like water squirters on the back so when he does that you get squirted with a bit of water). They know it's a gimmick and they have fun with it. I can get behind that.