
From the very first time I saw the previews for Avatar where I didn't know the details of the storyline, I was intrigued because it seemed like it was going to be a lot like Albion. After finally getting to see it and looking at the storyline and setting standing on their own rather than latching on to a game from my past that I've artificially connected to it, I can now say that it's a lot like Albion. The setting is almost entirely identical as of halfway through the game - humans land on a planet rich in rare resources but which is inconveniently populated by another intelligent species of tall cat-people. There is, of course, the fairly important whole idea of the avatars, which obviously isn't done in the game, but the whole style of the two of them share a lot of similarities, including ones I wasn't even expecting when the film started, like the glow of life in the plants of the forest and the idea of having a way to tie bodies together and hear their spirits, though in Avatar this seems to be part of the hair rather than the forehead. Even the first lines are spent talking about the main character's dreams of floating in cryogenic sleep. The film looks... wondrous. I was trying to think of words to describe it and that just about does it - I can certainly see why it's being called the mark of the next generation of CGI as Jurassic Park was before it, and I really haven't seen anything come close to this level before. You can easily forget that so much of the film is computer-generated - it's sort of like what the Final Fantasy film set out to do, except it works. The details of the creatures and plants on Then, just as you've absolutely fallen in love with it, in a remarkably familiar move, you are treated to a sequence of destruction that is easily the most difficult and horrifying scene to watch since Bambi's mother died when you were four, and which would be entirely appropriate as a Turing test to confirm that you have a soul. Again it's made all the more intense by the quality of the CGI - the facial expressions of the terrified and dying It has a running time of roughly eight hours but it really doesn't feel like it takes a long time, and that must be a good sign. It should also be mentioned that it's quite an impressive feat to have made a film that consists mostly of blue cat-people who don't tend to wear any... clothing, and yet not have it come off as fanservicey in any sort of way. However, perhaps this is because it's too late for me - maybe, in a few years' time, a load of new people on Furaffinity will be thinking back to going to see this film when they were 12 and realizing that this must have been where it all started going wrong. Rather like Albion, in fact. 2010-01-02 09:05:00 2 comments |