Avatar: the most expensive piece of anti-American propaganda ever made

catman

Electoral Member
Sep 3, 2006
182
4
18
There is no denying the breathtaking visual beauty of the $400 million 3-D sci-fi epic Avatar. It is already a global box office smash, taking in more than $200 million worldwide in its opening weekend. The special effects are simply stunning, and some of the action sequences are spectacular.
But Avatar is also a distinctly political work of art, with a strong anti-American and anti-Western message. It can be read on several levels – a critique of the Iraq War, an assault on the US-led War on Terror, a slick morality tale about the ‘evils’ of Western imperialism, a futuristic take on the conquest of America and the treatment of native Americans – the list goes on.
As I blogged earlier, director James Cameron has made it abundantly clear that the film is linked to both the war in Iraq and the War on Terror. In an interview with The Times he declared:
“We went down a path that cost several hundreds of thousands of Iraqi lives. I don’t think the American people even know why it was done. So it’s all about opening your eyes.”

“We know what it feels like to launch the missiles. We don’t know what it feels like for them to land on our home soil, not in America. I think there’s a moral responsibility to understand that.”
The story is set in the year 2154, and centres on an attempt by a US conglomerate to exploit valuable mineral wealth on the planet of Pandora. In the background, earth is dying with limited resources, no doubt because a climate change deal could not be finalized at Copenhagen.
The American firm employs an army of marines to fight on its behalf against the Na’vi, who seem to be modeled loosely on native American tribes. Slogans such as “shock and awe” and “fighting terror with terror” are deployed to give the film a more contemporary feel. The US forces are portrayed in one-dimensional terms and are led by a sadistic general, while the Na’vi are spiritual, nature-loving and peaceful tribesmen at one with the earth and creation. Humanity is ultimately redeemed by a paraplegic soldier (played by Sam Worthington) who goes native and sides with the locals against his own people.
In many respects, Avatar is a highly manipulative film. When I saw the movie last night in a packed theatre, I was disturbed by the cheering from the audience towards the end when the humans – US soldiers fighting on behalf of an American corporation – were being wiped out by the Na’vi. Washington is one of the most liberal cities in America and you come to expect almost anything here – but still the roars of approval which greeted the on-screen killing of US military personnel were a shock to the system, especially at a time when the United States is engaged in a major war in Afghanistan.
Avatar is more than just a 160 minute-long cinematic thrill-ride. It is an intensely political vehicle with a distinct agenda. In fact I would describe it as one of the most left-wing films in the history of modern American cinema, and perhaps the most commercially successful political movie of our time. While the vast majority of cinemagoers will simply see it as popcorn entertainment, Avatar is at its heart a cynical and deeply unpatriotic propaganda piece, aimed squarely against American global power and the projection of US economic and military might across the world.

I gave it two thumbs up. :cool:

Avatar: the most expensive piece of anti-American propaganda ever made – Telegraph Blogs
 

china

Time Out
Jul 30, 2006
5,247
37
48
72
Ottawa ,Canada
Page 1 of 2

'Avatar' wows 'em worldwide

Global tally clocks in at $617.3 million

By Frank Segers
Dec 27, 2009, 07:25 PM ET


Related

'Avatar' wins second week in a row
Avatar -- Film Review
Gallery: 'Avatar' premiere
Commentary: 'Avatar' raises the bar in so many ways
James Cameron on 'Avatar's' potential success
EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Cameron on 'Avatar' as a PSA

Avatar” surprised no one by taking the No. 1 spot on the foreign circuit for the second weekend in a row.

But director James Cameron’s mega-budget epic raised eyebrows with its overseas boxoffice staying power, grossing $145 million -- a mere 12% drop from its opening weekend -- from 14,844 screens. It did well in its second week in the U.S. as well.

Triple-digit opening grosses usually decline substantially in the ensuing weekend. A drop of less than 50% is considered positive by the industry. Distributor 20th Century Fox said “Avatar’s” relative miniscule decline “is even more impressive given theatre closures in many markets on Dec. 24 and/or Dec. 25.”

The film’s offshore cumulative total stands at $405 million. Worldwide tally clocks in at $617.3 million.

Not coincidentally, Fox reported yesterday that its 2009 overseas boxoffice take set a new industry record -- an estimated $2.263 billion, the highest of any Hollywood studio ever “with four more days to go.” (Warner Bros. previously held the foreign b.o. record set in 2007 of $2.240 billion.)

“Avatar’s” Japan opening generated $14.5 million from 1,114 screens while its Poland bow registered $1.8 million from 235 sites. Fox said the film finished No. 1 in 107 of the 108 territories it played on the weekend. It ranked No. 2 in India after a local language title.

The most receptive market is France where “Avatar’s” second weekend gross was $18.5 million from 1,114 sites for a per-screen average of $16,607. France cume stands at $48.4 million.

Fox says “Avatar” is after 10 days the studio’s best-grossing title ever in Korea (cume $29.5 million), Malaysia ($3.2 million), Indonesia ($2.4 million) and Vietnam. Notable are the numbers posted in some of the bigger markets: Spain ($12.1 million from 790 sites, cume $29.9 million) and Germany ($11.8 million from 1,495 screens, cume $32.2 million). The weekend U.K. gross was $6 million from 496 locations for a market cume of $29.6 million.

No. 2 title on the weekend was Fox’s “Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel,” with the singing chipmunks generating an animated $36.5 million from 5,492 screens in 42 markets. The distributor said that the sequel to 2007’s “Alvin and the Chipmunks” has “earned 215% of (the original’s) opening.”

“Squeakquel” finished second in at least 20 markets, and generated particularly strong numbers in the U.K. ($8.6 million from 487 screens. The comedy/fantasy has 25 foreign markets yet to play.

No. 3 was Warner Bros. “Sherlock Holmes,” an updating of the Arthur Conan Doyle literary detective with Robert Downey Jr. as Holmes and Jude Law as faithful assistant Dr. Watson. The film’s international launch began at 2,454 screens in 17 markets for a weekend tally of $26 million. Strongest market was Italy where the gross was $6 million from 451 sites for a $13,303 per screen average.

Related

'Avatar' wins second week in a row
Avatar -- Film Review
Gallery: 'Avatar' premiere
Commentary: 'Avatar' raises the bar in so many ways
James Cameron on 'Avatar's' potential success
EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Cameron on 'Avatar' as a PSA



No. 4 was Disney’s Animation’s “The Princess and the Frog,” which pushed its foreign take so far to $27 million thanks to a $7 million weekend from 2,500 sites in 17 territories. Disney said the title drew especially well in Italy where its weekend tally -- $2.9 million from 519 locations – was up 178% from the prior weekend’s take.

No. 5 was “the Twilight Saga: New Moon” with a weekend tally of $5.8 million from 4,233 situations in 67 territories. International cume stands at $389.3 million.

Opening overseas in 11 territories was writer-director Nancy Meyers’ romantic comedy “It’s Complicated” costarring Meryl Streep, Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin, which drew $5.4 million overall from 1,028 screens. Worldwide tally is $27.5 million.

France debut produced a No. 3 ranking in Paris, and $1.5 million from 362 sites in the market. Spain did better with $2.1 million drawn from 321 locations, enough for a No. 3 ranking. “It’s Complicated” will play 52 markets in the coming months with openings in the Middle East set for next weekend.

Sony’s “2012” pushed its foreign cume to $583.7 million thanks to a $5.1 million weekend at 4,300 screens in 75 markets. “Disney’s A Christmas Carol” with Jim Carrey as Ebenezer Scrooge registered $5 million on the weekend from 3,800 screens in 44 markets. Cume stands at $170 million making, according to Disney, the title from director Robert Zemeckis “the biggest Yuletide-themed release ever outside of North America.”

Sony’s “Did You Hear About the Morgans,” costarring Hugh Grant and Sarah Jessica Parker, got off to a lame offshore start in Australia by generating $1.1 million from 208 screens.

Paramount released on Boxing Day (Dec. 26) “The Lovely Bones,” the crime drama/fantasy directed by Peter Jackson and costarring Mark Wahlberg and Rachel Weisz, in Australia and New Zealand for a total of $730,000 from 93 locations.

“Old Dogs,” the Disney comedy with John Travolta and Robin Williams, pushed its overseas cume to $20 million thanks to a $3.5 million weekend at 1,500 screens in 18 territories.

France’s top-grossing local language title remains EuropaCorp. Distribution’s release of director/co-writer Luc Besson’s English-language animation hit, “Arthur e la vengeance de Maltazard.” Fourth weekend generated a No. 2 market ranking with $3 million drawn from 925 situations for a France cume of $25.4 million.

It’s official: “Up” with a $417 overseas total to date has surpassed 2007’s “Ratatouille” (cume of $414 million) to become the second highest-grossing Pixar/Disney title ever, trailing only 2003’s “Finding Nemo” ($527 million). Weekend action for “Up” in Japan, it’s final overseas market, was $2.6 million from 650 screens, hoisting its territorial cume to $32.2 million.

Three newcomers within the weekend’s top France 10 where all imports. Opening at No. 5 was Le Pacte’s release of “Rec 2,” a Spanish horror-thriller from co-directors Jaume Balaguero and Paco Plaza, which grabbed an estimated $1.5 million from 250 locations.

Finishing No. 6 was the British-Czech coproduction “Solomon Kane,” director Michael Michael Bassett’s adventure/fantasy released by Metropolitan Filmexport. Opening tally was an estimated $1.2 million from 300 sites.

Ranking No. 10 in France was Francis Coppola’s “Tetro,” a mystery-drama with Vincent Gallo. The Memento Film’s release opened to an estimated $650,000 from 200 screens.

Other international cumes: Sony’s “Zombieland,” $21.5 million; Mandate Int’l.’s “Saw VI,” $33.6 million; Universal’s “Couples Retreat,” $50.1 million; Studio Canal’s “R.T.T.,” $5.2 million in three rounds, France only; The Weinstein Co./Universal’s “Inglourious Basterds,” $198.3 million; Sony’s “Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs,” $79.4 million (thanks to a $3.8 million weekend at 1,085 screens in 26 markets); Paramount’s “Law Abiding Citizen,” $9.1 million; Pathe’s “Loup,” $5 million over three rounds in France only; Universal’s “Public Enemies,” $114.5 million; Paramount’s “Celda 221,” $12.7 million over eight rounds in Spain only); and Gaumont’s “Le dernier vol,” $2.8 million over two rounds, France only). « PREVIOUS PAGE1 | 2


'Avatar' wows 'em worldwide

Global tally clocks in at $617.3 million

By Frank Segers
Dec 27, 2009, 07:25 PM ET
Related

'Avatar' wins second week in a row
Avatar -- Film Review
Gallery: 'Avatar' premiere
Commentary: 'Avatar' raises the bar in so many ways
James Cameron on 'Avatar's' potential success
EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Cameron on 'Avatar' as a PSA

Avatar” surprised no one by taking the No. 1 spot on the foreign circuit for the second weekend in a row.

But director James Cameron’s mega-budget epic raised eyebrows with its overseas boxoffice staying power, grossing $145 million -- a mere 12% drop from its opening weekend -- from 14,844 screens. It did well in its second week in the U.S. as well.

Triple-digit opening grosses usually decline substantially in the ensuing weekend. A drop of less than 50% is considered positive by the industry. Distributor 20th Century Fox said “Avatar’s” relative miniscule decline “is even more impressive given theatre closures in many markets on Dec. 24 and/or Dec. 25.”

The film’s offshore cumulative total stands at $405 million. Worldwide tally clocks in at $617.3 million.

Not coincidentally, Fox reported yesterday that its 2009 overseas boxoffice take set a new industry record -- an estimated $2.263 billion, the highest of any Hollywood studio ever “with four more days to go.” (Warner Bros. previously held the foreign b.o. record set in 2007 of $2.240 billion.)

“Avatar’s” Japan opening generated $14.5 million from 1,114 screens while its Poland bow registered $1.8 million from 235 sites. Fox said the film finished No. 1 in 107 of the 108 territories it played on the weekend. It ranked No. 2 in India after a local language title.

The most receptive market is France where “Avatar’s” second weekend gross was $18.5 million from 1,114 sites for a per-screen average of $16,607. France cume stands at $48.4 million.

Fox says “Avatar” is after 10 days the studio’s best-grossing title ever in Korea (cume $29.5 million), Malaysia ($3.2 million), Indonesia ($2.4 million) and Vietnam. Notable are the numbers posted in some of the bigger markets: Spain ($12.1 million from 790 sites, cume $29.9 million) and Germany ($11.8 million from 1,495 screens, cume $32.2 million). The weekend U.K. gross was $6 million from 496 locations for a market cume of $29.6 million.

No. 2 title on the weekend was Fox’s “Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel,” with the singing chipmunks generating an animated $36.5 million from 5,492 screens in 42 markets. The distributor said that the sequel to 2007’s “Alvin and the Chipmunks” has “earned 215% of (the original’s) opening.”

“Squeakquel” finished second in at least 20 markets, and generated particularly strong numbers in the U.K. ($8.6 million from 487 screens. The comedy/fantasy has 25 foreign markets yet to play.

No. 3 was Warner Bros. “Sherlock Holmes,” an updating of the Arthur Conan Doyle literary detective with Robert Downey Jr. as Holmes and Jude Law as faithful assistant Dr. Watson. The film’s international launch began at 2,454 screens in 17 markets for a weekend tally of $26 million. Strongest market was Italy where the gross was $6 million from 451 sites for a $13,303 per screen average.





No. 4 was Disney’s Animation’s “The Princess and the Frog,” which pushed its foreign take so far to $27 million thanks to a $7 million weekend from 2,500 sites in 17 territories. Disney said the title drew especially well in Italy where its weekend tally -- $2.9 million from 519 locations – was up 178% from the prior weekend’s take.

No. 5 was “the Twilight Saga: New Moon” with a weekend tally of $5.8 million from 4,233 situations in 67 territories. International cume stands at $389.3 million.

Opening overseas in 11 territories was writer-director Nancy Meyers’ romantic comedy “It’s Complicated” costarring Meryl Streep, Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin, which drew $5.4 million overall from 1,028 screens. Worldwide tally is $27.5 million.

France debut produced a No. 3 ranking in Paris, and $1.5 million from 362 sites in the market. Spain did better with $2.1 million drawn from 321 locations, enough for a No. 3 ranking. “It’s Complicated” will play 52 markets in the coming months with openings in the Middle East set for next weekend.

Sony’s “2012” pushed its foreign cume to $583.7 million thanks to a $5.1 million weekend at 4,300 screens in 75 markets. “Disney’s A Christmas Carol” with Jim Carrey as Ebenezer Scrooge registered $5 million on the weekend from 3,800 screens in 44 markets. Cume stands at $170 million making, according to Disney, the title from director Robert Zemeckis “the biggest Yuletide-themed release ever outside of North America.”

Sony’s “Did You Hear About the Morgans,” costarring Hugh Grant and Sarah Jessica Parker, got off to a lame offshore start in Australia by generating $1.1 million from 208 screens.

Paramount released on Boxing Day (Dec. 26) “The Lovely Bones,” the crime drama/fantasy directed by Peter Jackson and costarring Mark Wahlberg and Rachel Weisz, in Australia and New Zealand for a total of $730,000 from 93 locations.

“Old Dogs,” the Disney comedy with John Travolta and Robin Williams, pushed its overseas cume to $20 million thanks to a $3.5 million weekend at 1,500 screens in 18 territories.

France’s top-grossing local language title remains EuropaCorp. Distribution’s release of director/co-writer Luc Besson’s English-language animation hit, “Arthur e la vengeance de Maltazard.” Fourth weekend generated a No. 2 market ranking with $3 million drawn from 925 situations for a France cume of $25.4 million.

It’s official: “Up” with a $417 overseas total to date has surpassed 2007’s “Ratatouille” (cume of $414 million) to become the second highest-grossing Pixar/Disney title ever, trailing only 2003’s “Finding Nemo” ($527 million). Weekend action for “Up” in Japan, it’s final overseas market, was $2.6 million from 650 screens, hoisting its territorial cume to $32.2 million.

Three newcomers within the weekend’s top France 10 where all imports. Opening at No. 5 was Le Pacte’s release of “Rec 2,” a Spanish horror-thriller from co-directors Jaume Balaguero and Paco Plaza, which grabbed an estimated $1.5 million from 250 locations.

Finishing No. 6 was the British-Czech coproduction “Solomon Kane,” director Michael Michael Bassett’s adventure/fantasy released by Metropolitan Filmexport. Opening tally was an estimated $1.2 million from 300 sites.

Ranking No. 10 in France was Francis Coppola’s “Tetro,” a mystery-drama with Vincent Gallo. The Memento Film’s release opened to an estimated $650,000 from 200 screens.

Other international cumes: Sony’s “Zombieland,” $21.5 million; Mandate Int’l.’s “Saw VI,” $33.6 million; Universal’s “Couples Retreat,” $50.1 million; Studio Canal’s “R.T.T.,” $5.2 million in three rounds, France only; The Weinstein Co./Universal’s “Inglourious Basterds,” $198.3 million; Sony’s “Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs,” $79.4 million (thanks to a $3.8 million weekend at 1,085 screens in 26 markets); Paramount’s “Law Abiding Citizen,” $9.1 million; Pathe’s “Loup,” $5 million over three rounds in France only; Universal’s “Public Enemies,” $114.5 million; Paramount’s “Celda 221,” $12.7 million over eight rounds in Spain only); and Gaumont’s “Le dernier vol,” $2.8 million over two rounds, France only).
 

AnnaG

Hall of Fame Member
Jul 5, 2009
17,507
117
63
I think I'll watch it just for the graphics. (What can I say, I'm easily awestruck). lol
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Avatar was the same commercial junk as usual. Steroidized for the cheezebrger brigades. High tech smoke and mirrors masking base infantile dialogue and a storyline as old as film. Hero from away saves savages, the sun comes out, everyone lives happily ever after. We got sucked in again, pass the greasy popcorn please.
 

TheJokkette

New Member
Mar 2, 2010
17
0
1
Calgary
I did see this as James Cameron's way of showing an elite run country like the U.S trying to dominate the world to whatever cost. Also it showed distinctly the human bombardments on planet earth. What I truly believe he is trying to say is, that we should unite, push aside whatever differences and salvage what we can of this earth.

Again, Cameron's Avatar was unoriginal, absurd it took him ten years, although somewhat understandable. Avatar reminds me greatly of Pocahontas, is that Anti-American propaganda too?
 

FiveParadox

Governor General
Dec 20, 2005
5,875
43
48
Vancouver, BC
I only saw it tonight, I thought it was brilliant.

And you know what, even if it was deeply political, the message was a very valid one.

Let’s hope our politicians have time every now and then for a movie.
 

Edwina

New Member
Mar 4, 2010
2
0
1
I saw twice.Oh my god this movie avatar was out standing and lot of guys who saw this movie enjoy the faction movie experience well