How James Cameron wasted my time: Difference between revisions

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James Cameron could be putting his formidable talents to use making films which startle us with their originality.
James Cameron could be putting his formidable talents to use making films which startle us with their originality.


Instead he pours all his energies into tedious predictable stories.   
Instead he pours all his energies into tedious predictable dogma.   


Never mind that "Save the Earth" is a worthy goal.  We've seen that movie, over and over, each reflecting its era, from "The Plow That Broke the Plains" (1936) to "On the Beach" (1959) to "Silent Running" (1972), "Soylent Greene" (1973), and "Logan's Run" (1976), through "Erin Brockovich" (2000), "An Inconvenient Truth" (2006) and "Beasts of the Southern Wild" (2012) to "A Perfect Planet" (2021).
Never mind that "Save the Earth" is a worthy goal.  We've seen that movie, over and over, each reflecting its era, from "The Plow That Broke the Plains" (1936) to "On the Beach" (1959) to "Silent Running" (1972), "Soylent Greene" (1973), and "Logan's Run" (1976), through "Erin Brockovich" (2000), "An Inconvenient Truth" (2006), and "Beasts of the Southern Wild" (2012), to "A Perfect Planet" (2021).


What does "Avatar" do that, say, "Snowpiercer" doesn't do?  Other than leave a cloying scent of glycerin tears in my nostrils?
What does "Avatar" (2009) do that, say, "Snowpiercer" (2013) doesn't do?  Other than leave a cloying scent of glycerin tears in my nostrils?


Don't get me started on the "Pocahontas in Space" metaphor.  Save that rant for another essay.
And don't get me started on Avatar's "Pocahontas in Space" metaphor.  Save that rant for another essay.


Epilogue:  Perhaps I should watch "Titanic" (1997).  At the time of its release, turning up one's nose at such things was fashionable among my crowd.  Or at least, turning up one's nose at young Leonardo DiCaprio was fashionable.  But since then I have come to appreciate DiCaprio's talent (he was excellent in "Don't Look Up" (2021)).
Epilogue:  Perhaps I should watch "Titanic" (1997).  At the time of its release, turning up one's nose at such things was fashionable among my crowd.  Or at least, turning up one's nose at young Leonardo DiCaprio was fashionable.  But since then I have come to appreciate DiCaprio's talent (he was excellent in "Don't Look Up" (2021)).
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== External links ==
== External links ==


* [ Post] @ Twitter (13 January 2023)
* [https://www.facebook.com/cluttergardella/posts/pfbid08PWoGeJ336mVJupy45b3zJtTzgdPXAihyop9oUF1gnQn3dPp8YMJjEA9zrwgPKmVl?comment_id=3348459465442761 Comment] @ Facebook (13 January 2023)
 
* [] @ Wikipedia
* [] @ Wikipedia
 
* @ YouTube
* @ YouTube
 


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[[Category:Fiction (nonfiction)]]
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[[Category:James Cameron (nonfiction)]]
[[Category:James Cameron (nonfiction)]]


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Latest revision as of 06:52, 13 January 2023

James Cameron could be putting his formidable talents to use making films which startle us with their originality.

Instead he pours all his energies into tedious predictable dogma.

Never mind that "Save the Earth" is a worthy goal. We've seen that movie, over and over, each reflecting its era, from "The Plow That Broke the Plains" (1936) to "On the Beach" (1959) to "Silent Running" (1972), "Soylent Greene" (1973), and "Logan's Run" (1976), through "Erin Brockovich" (2000), "An Inconvenient Truth" (2006), and "Beasts of the Southern Wild" (2012), to "A Perfect Planet" (2021).

What does "Avatar" (2009) do that, say, "Snowpiercer" (2013) doesn't do? Other than leave a cloying scent of glycerin tears in my nostrils?

And don't get me started on Avatar's "Pocahontas in Space" metaphor. Save that rant for another essay.

Epilogue: Perhaps I should watch "Titanic" (1997). At the time of its release, turning up one's nose at such things was fashionable among my crowd. Or at least, turning up one's nose at young Leonardo DiCaprio was fashionable. But since then I have come to appreciate DiCaprio's talent (he was excellent in "Don't Look Up" (2021)).

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  • Comment @ Facebook (13 January 2023)