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Tag Archive for Avatar

New Under the Sun… Thoughts on Avatar

What the hell do I say about Avatar that hasn’t already been ranted upon? I made some comments and predictions a couple of posts ago, before I went to go see the film, and now that I have seen the digital extravaganza that is Cameron’s latest Opus, my opinions, particularly regarding simplicity of story as a choice, rather than a travesty, remain unchanged. In a film as visually rigorous as this, you are going to need a story that everyone can relate to and tales of this stripe have been pounded into our collective, guilt-ridden heads all through elementary school, college, literature, media, music, pretty much everywhere. It’s not a new story, but because of that, we can use it as a springboard to bring *everyone*, not just the sci-fi and escapist fantasy geeks, into this world that Cameron and his teams have created.

Let me instead go with the visuals. This is my core field, 3d animation, modeling and texturing. Like so many in my field, slippage is usually easy for me to spot, I can derive as much enjoyment from just watching for technique, brilliance and fail and most people do from watching character development or sex. So I went into this film intending to deconstruct the visuals, watching for places where they had restored to compositing in real-life elements, watching for slips in the physics, the bits where they had to hand-animate versus mo-cap. I knew the New Zealand teams and some of the more elite hands in the industry had been pulled in on this, so I was expecting the bar to be raised.

I was not expecting the bar to be removed entirely and replaced with a brick-wall with “Nyah Nyah Nyah” in graffiti on it for anyone who dared to follow.

Forget stunning, any decent studio can get the guys to do *stunning* when it comes to visuals, it’s a tired and overused word, and it doesn’t do justice to the mind that guides the camera. What we see here in Avatar is love, pure and simple. Each time we see a new area of the environment we get an excruciating level of detail, from the divots in the tree bark to the spiders and underfoot critters scurrying away from the shot. Most people look at a scene and think, “well, yeah, but the computer handles all that stuff” like there’s some big flashy, neon cyberpunk-esque button you can punch that will grow trees, design flora and animate the wind from a helicopter rotor.

There’s a reason that mistakes slip through and we are left with bad composites of live environments and GCI characters. This stuff is TIME CONSUMING. Every tree had to be built, every leaf designed and painted, then programmed so it could be called up, changed just a touch and then used over and over again so seamlessly that to the naked eye it looks like a thousand different leaves. Every single square inch of the world has to actually be built. Every blade of grass needs to have physics applied; does it bend in the wind? How far? Does it twist? Does it lose leaves? Does it *always* lose leaves? And while, yeah, there is a certain amount of this that can be left to the computer program, you have to remember, above all else, that the computer is an idiot. It can’t think for you, and it most certainly can’t guess what you want a scene or a physical mesh or a texture to look like. You don’t have the luxury of applying a generic wind modifier, chucking in a little gravity and bingo-bango-bongo, there you have it.

I went in to this movie with a gimlet eye, looking to tear the CGI apart and maybe learn some new tricks in the process. Instead of tricks, however, I found that the studios behind Avatar went to the trouble to put in this level of detail. Instead of finding ways to cheat the eye and cut costs wherever possible, they had simply gone ahead and done the extra work. Out of the entire, nearly 3 hour running time, I picked up on perhaps 5 glitches total. Most of them were in the scenes where we were working with “humans” and “Na’vi” in the same shots. Some of them might not even be errors, for example, in some shots the proportional size of the Na’Vi head and neck appear to be different than they do in others, it could be because of the camera angle or type of lens (yes, in CGI you can use different types of lenses, just like you can with a physical camera). Because we are working in CGI however, it is equally possible that the proportions have been tweaked in some shots to direct the focus of the viewer, to make the Na’Vi look more or less alien depending on how they want us to feel about the characters at that point in the film. Some CGI films go to this level of illustration, some don’t. The point is that these could have been stylistic choices.

The same goes for changes in the physical appearance of Sully’s Avatar form. In some shots he has rounder, more human looking musculature on the shoulders (I’m singling this out because of the effect it has on his silhouette) but in others he more closely resembles the sleeker form of the Na’Vi people. Again, if we were talking about traditional 2d animation, this would probably be the result of deliberate fiddling in order to push or pull the emotions of the viewer. Because this is CGI (and the rules are still evolving) this could easily have been because the shot was done by a different studio, because something went awry in the programming for the skinning or the rigging wasn’t done right, because someone couldn’t find the Sully body and threw in a Na’Vii body in a rush. I choose to believe (given what I have heard about Cameron as a Director) that these elements, that some might see as mistakes, are instead the result of this type of deliberate manipulation.

Good show guys!  Thanks for giving us all a new challenge 😀

Sight Unseen

So Cameron’s latest opus has been released to the public.  Tweets were coming in from people standing in line for 3am showings.  The buzz has been epic, the anticipation was (and still is) through the roof.  Reviews are already flooding in.  This movie could potentially bring SciFi solidly back into the mainstream where literary and cinematic properties are concerned.

So why is the sci-fi community less than impressed with the result?  It’s got awesome special effects, it’s got alien worlds, space marines, lithe and beautiful blue-skinned alien women, giant robots, interstellar travel, what else could the people who are *supposed* to be lining up in droves to view this movie possibly want?  Where did Cameron go wrong?

Thing is, he didn’t.

Avatar isn’t for us so much, not for the hard-core Sci-Fi fans who know the exact conditions under which you *could* have sound in space, or understand *why* a triple helix is a biological impossibility and just what kind of biology you’d need to make it work.  Avatar is a piece of transcendent fiction, it’s written to appeal to those who love a good story and a great visual spectacle, but not, so much, for the sci-fi aficionado.  Arguing story memes like space-marines is like arguing the possibility of a cross-class romance in Titanic.  There’s no point.  There’s going to be tried and true (and hackneyed and overused) tropes in here *because* the movie is appealing to a broader audience.  It’s going to need those points of commonality, hackneyed sci-fi ideas that everyone has been exposed to, so that it can engage an audience for whom the idea of 10ft tall anime-eyed alien is something so far outside their experience that they’d be hard-pressed to keep up with the storyline.