The technology of Avatar required a decade of incredibly hard and discerning work to perfect. Lots of very smart people spent years asking each other the toughest questions they could and testing out their best answers. You can’t just B.S. this stuff out of nothing. That stuff had to work.
So I’m still baffled at how an effort like Avatar, the technical achievement of which required years of aggressively smoking out and chasing down “what are we missing”‘s and “how can we do better”‘s, has a Swiss-cheese story that left me distracted with “wait a minute”‘s and “hey what about”‘s during the show itself.
The technology was tight as a goddamned drum and consumed ~1000X as many person-hours of debugging effort as the story, which blue-screens many times during the film itself.
What does that mean?
…
Yeah so anyway, here’s my list that I threw together the night I got back:
- When the good guys ran off in that helicopter, why didn’t anyone chase them? Why didn’t they do a remote-shutdown via radio?
- When the Na’vi were fighting the humans, why not just drop rocks/logs/ropes into the helicopters’ rotors? (It worked in Vietnam, after all.)
- Why would the Na’vi frontally attack the soldiers instead of ambushing them guerrilla-style?
- Why did Pilot Homegirl just strafe the Colonel’s ship instead of firing directly through the windows in the one advantage-of-surprise sucker-punch chance she had?
- Why not camouflage the stolen transmitter station with leaves and branches and stuff to make it less visible from the air?
- If missile tracking didn’t work in “the vortex”, then how could they drive their Avatar’s around?
- Why couldn’t they circle back to find Jake before his first night outside? Huh? They don’t have flashlights in the future?
- In the final battle, why not just run up and drop the fricking bomb already? Why slow down and creep up on it and give the Na’vi a chance to attack? Huh?
- Why not drop it from higher up where the Na’vi can’t fly?
And finally…
- Why did the humans just give up? If Cameron were really channeling the colonial experience, you know they’d come back with more guns and just murder everyone.
At least my last gripe has an answer: “He [Cameron] has stated that if Avatar is successful, two sequels to the film are planned.”