This is not meant as an insult but were you on some sort of substances while you saw this? I seriously ask because I'd probably like the film more if I was high somehow at the time.
I guess I'll expect you not to talk to me anymore though, right?![]()
Maybe I should have made it more clear but I think that if you went into this movie and didn't have a good time then you might have to re-examine some things about yourself.
I just have to really wonder about people that walked out of it unsatisfied. I mean really it's like we're from 2 different planets and I cannot relate to your outlook/perspective at all if that's how things are.
Maybe I should have made it more clear but I think that if you went into this movie and didn't have a good time then you might have to re-examine some things about yourself. Take a chill pill and relax. No I wasn't on anything when I saw this film. I was just happy to be there and thought it was fun. I'm not into movies where stuff explodes constantly but I thought this movie had some explosions mixed with a decent story line, a quality message, and a brilliantly crafted world. And I enjoyed it thoroughly. I just have to really wonder about people that walked out of it unsatisfied. I mean really it's like we're from 2 different planets and I cannot relate to your outlook/perspective at all if that's how things are.
If "Watchmen" proved one thing, it's that you can never have enough blue schlong. Short of being flashed by some random stalker dressed up as Papa Smurf, the next likeliest place you'll find it is on the upcoming "Avatar" DVD & Blu-ray.
Director James Cameron tells The Telegraph that the home video version of the film will include several deleted scenes that were excised from the theatrical version in order to keep the film's PG-13 rating. One such scene was an extended version of Jake Sully and Ney'tiri's love scene under the tree.
"We had it in and we cut it out. So that will be something for the special edition DVD, if you want to see how they have sex" says Cameron. Does this mean someone had to apply motion capture dots to Sam Worthington's manhood? No, rather the 'synching' process that the Na'vi do with other beings on the planet is done between the two characters in this.
Zoe Saldana, who played Ney'tiri, said "It was a very funny scene to shoot because there were so many technical things that sometimes you have to keep in mind that paying attention to all those might disrupt the fluidity of how a scene is supposed to take place. Because Jim was shooting for a PG-13 rating, we couldn’t move in certain directions. The motion would look a little too past the PG-13 rating standards. So it was really funny for Sam and me. We had a lot of giggles there."
If "Watchmen" proved one thing, it's that you can never have enough blue schlong. Short of being flashed by some random stalker dressed up as Papa Smurf, the next likeliest place you'll find it is on the upcoming "Avatar" DVD & Blu-ray.
Director James Cameron tells The Telegraph that the home video version of the film will include several deleted scenes that were excised from the theatrical version in order to keep the film's PG-13 rating. One such scene was an extended version of Jake Sully and Ney'tiri's love scene under the tree.
"We had it in and we cut it out. So that will be something for the special edition DVD, if you want to see how they have sex" says Cameron. Does this mean someone had to apply motion capture dots to Sam Worthington's manhood? No, rather the 'synching' process that the Na'vi do with other beings on the planet is done between the two characters in this.
Zoe Saldana, who played Ney'tiri, said "It was a very funny scene to shoot because there were so many technical things that sometimes you have to keep in mind that paying attention to all those might disrupt the fluidity of how a scene is supposed to take place. Because Jim was shooting for a PG-13 rating, we couldn’t move in certain directions. The motion would look a little too past the PG-13 rating standards. So it was really funny for Sam and me. We had a lot of giggles there."
Avatar perfection causing depression
AN IDYLLIC planet populated by blue aliens is an ideal setting for cinematic escapism. But the world of the sci-fi epic Avatar is so perfect people have admitted being plagued by depression and suicidal thoughts at not being able to visit the planet.
Set in the future when Earth's resources have been depleted, director James Cameron's film tells the story of a corporation trying to mine a rare mineral.
The humans clash with the natives - a peace-loving race of 7ft tall, blue-skinned creatures called the Na'vi, who exist in perfect harmony with nature.
Fans have flooded the internet with their confused feelings. On the site Avatar Forums, the topic 'Ways to cope with the depression of the dream of Pandora being intangible' has more than 1,000 posts.
In a similar forum, one user wrote: "When I woke up this morning after watching Avatar for the first time yesterday, the world seemed grey. It just seems so meaningless.
"I still don't really see any reason to keep doing things at all. I live in a dying world."
On another site, one fan was even more affected, admitting: "I even contemplate suicide thinking that if I do it I will be rebirthed in a world similar to Pandora."
On the Avatar site Naviblue, a fan calling himself Jorba has even asked others to join him in starting a real Na'vi tribe.