i didn't really have any desire to see this, but mom wanted to watch it for christmas so i went. my ex-wife and her sister LOVED the first one and she dragged me along with her like 5 times in the theatre and then she bought the dvd and my son (who was like 5 at the time or something) LOVED watching the movie with the blue people... so i was AAAAALLLLL done with avatar a long time ago. but i actually enjoyed this one way more than the first one. the story was simple, but it wasn't derivative the way the first one was.
it's not a perfect movie by any stretch, but i did feel the pacing was really well done. it was a long movie but i don't think it ever FELT like a long movie. but... i think the first one balanced the visuals a lot better. what i mean is, in the first one there was a good balance between all the stunning visuals and the regular human stuff. the same way a story has a certain rhythm to it, with peaks and valleys that allows you to sort of gather your wits... the first avatar gave you moments of visual wonder and then moments of familiarity so you could sort of center yourself agian. with this one, there was so little human familiarity... everything was visually stunning all the time, so there was never a sort of reset point...
maybe that doesn't make sense, but i just mean that, visually, if everything is wondrous, then nothing is. after like 30 minutes everything i was seeing was normal, despite the movie CLEARLY telling me to be in awe. i just couldn't get there because EVERYTHING was awe-inspiring, so nothing became awe-inspiring.
i know that visual and special effects artists say that the best compliment you can give them is while watching the credits and it starts listing off the special effects team, you say, "what? this movie didn't have any special effects..." they WANT you to think everything they did wasn't even noticeable, that it blended in perfectly with the rest of the scene...
but with this movie i just kept feeling awful about all the time and effort that those people put in to make this movie visually stunning and i couldn't even process 90% of what they were actually doing. i missed SO much because the baseline the movie presented was that all these amazing, woundrous things are normal. the story didn't necessarily say that, but visually that's what i got. anyway, this is too long.