Avatar: Pandora passengers, get ready to take off

Avatar: Pandora passengers, get ready to take off

Imagination is like a vast sea. If we take into account that 35 trillion colors are in that sea, it will be very easy for you to catch the attraction of the resulting painting. Because with the first 20 minutes of the trailers falling into the internet environment, you can witness this definition in Avatar, which has succeeded in bringing the sense of curiosity to the people and taking its place in the movie theaters right now.

The film is shaped around the story of the Na’vi race living on a planet called Pandora, being exploited by earthly invaders. Actually, the only feature that distinguishes the film, which we are not so alien to, is the handling of it in 3D (3D), of course. The legendary director James Cameron, who shook the sci-fi universe dominated by the Star Wars since 1977 with the Terminator, and 25 years later he declared his kingdom in the infinity of his own imaginary universe, managed to captivate his audience once again with his film Avatar, the groundbreaking in the history of cinema.

As a matter of fact, the successful director, who has never avoided revealing the pessimistic technology and human relationship he has dealt with in his directing adventure until today, goes to show this feature to his fans once again with his latest film Avatar.

Avatar: Pandora passengers, get ready to take off

James Cameron, who directed the film and waiting for the development of the technology to transfer his dream to the screen years ago, is about a period when a race that lives with nature and defines themselves with the physical power of their planets is exposed to alien invasion. Besides, while telling about this period, it does not neglect to take advantage of the mysterious story of Gaia, the first goddess in Greek mythology.

Jake Sully, a semi-paralyzed war veteran, is sent among the Na’vi people, who have their own language and culture and live in an environment covered by peace and nature. A military company has created a program called Avatar to study this distant planet and its resources. With this program, people are transformed into half human half Na’vi by means of genetic engineering and sent to Pandora as missionary. Botanist Dr. Jake’s Avatar, created voluntarily with Grace Augustine, will be created, giving Jake a chance to use his paralyzed body in another form.

In fact, we can say that we are looking at this new world that we are foreigners through the eyes of a wheelchair veteran named Jake Sully. Because Jake regained his ability to walk, even though he was reborn in his avatar.

In the meantime, let’s mention in parentheses that the teacher-learner relationship between princess Neytiri, who is the main daughter of the film and one of Pandora’s beautiful females, turns into an emotional relationship in the future.

If you think of living on this planet called Pandora for three hours, you can strongly recommend that you travel to that magical journey of the world without losing time, at the point where the visuality is handled completely and where you find yourself swept from one place to another in that color aura. In short, do not let Pandora passengers.

Avatar Movie Poster (2009)

Avatar (2009)

Directed by: James Cameron
Starring: Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana, Sigourney Weaver, Michelle Rodriguez, Giovanni Ribisi, Joel David Moore, CCH Pounder, Peter Mensah, Laz Alonso, Stephen Lang, Jahnel Curfman, Lisa Roumain
Screenplay by: James Cameron
Production Design by: Rick Carter, Robert Stromberg
Cinematography by: Mauro Fiore
Film Editing by: James Cameron, John Refoua, Stephen E. Rivkin
Costume Design by: Mayes C. Rubeo, Deborah Lynn Scott
Set Decoration by: Kim Sinclair
Art Direction by: Nick Bassett, Robert Bavin, Simon Bright, Todd Cherniawsky, Jill Cormack, Stefan Dechant, Sean Haworth, Andy McLaren, Andrew Menzies, Kim Sinclair
Music by: James Horner
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for intense epic battle sequences and warfare, sensuality, language and some smoking.
Distributed by: 20th Century Fox
Release Date: December 18, 2009

Visits: 133