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James Cameron’s Avatar. A formula for success: Narrative. A US army officer, injured in battle, is stationed to a remote post where primitive natives live all around He falls in love with a native girl and is accepted into the tribe after helping them find a group of buffalo
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A formula for success: Narrative • A US army officer, injured in battle, is stationed to a remote post where primitive natives live all around • He falls in love with a native girl and is accepted into the tribe after helping them find a group of buffalo • The US army comes to check on the outpost & attacks the tribe, claiming the land is theirs • The tribe fight back, but lose
A formula for success: Narrative • A US marine, injured in battle, is stationed to a remote post where primitive natives live all around • He falls in love with a native girl and is accepted into the tribe after helping them tame a group of ikran (mountain banshee) • The US marines come in to take the natives’ land • The tribe fights back, and with the marine’s help, wins…
A formula for success: The Release • Titanic was originally scheduled for release in the summer of 1997, but it was pushed back to the winter because of post-editing delays • It was eventually released in the US on 17th December 1997 • It went on to make $1.8bn
A formula for success: The Release • Avatar was originally scheduled for a summer released • It was pushed back to 16th-18th December, 2009 • It made $2.7bn worldwide • Why? • Legacy of Titanic’s success… • Main competition for Avatar: • Alvin & the Chipmunks: the Squeakuel • The Spy Next Door • Did You Hear About the Morgans?
The Re-release The movie was re-released on 27th August 2010 with 9 additional minutes of footage (all CGI) • The movie played again for 12 weeks in cinemas, bringing in a further $780m worldwide The footage cost just over $9m
Audience Positioning: A 1D experience • Na’vi as a cutesy race makes them more likeable to audiences • Idea that primitive = innocent (no money; no concept of land ownership; etc.)
Audience Positioning: A 1D experience Peaceful (kill to survive) Low tech Respect land/planet – no concept of economics Innocent = THE GOOD GUYS Violent Lots of tech Imperialist/Colonialist (want everything to belong to them) Sadistic = THE BAD GUYS
Audience Responses • “It was an absolute marvel and I am left in awe after seeing it,” James Howard – audience member at premiere • “It's all about the quality of the 3D for me. I'd never seen a 3D film before and this is amazing.” Lucy Beswick – audience member at premiere • Some fans... “have experienced depression and suicidal thoughts after seeing the film because they long to enjoy the beauty of the alien world Pandora.” source=CNN
Some questions about the film? • Does the film’s status as a 3D experience is limit the film past its cinematic release (think about DVD & Digital download)? • 1.6m 3D TVs shipped in the US by the end of 2010 (roughly 18 months after they were first mass produced) • 53% of US homes had HD TVs in May 2004 (roughly 3 years after they were first mass produced) • The US population was c.293m in 2004 • A US census puts the average people per home at 2.59 • At 2.59 people per home, that’s roughly 113m HD TVs... • ...3D has got some serious catching up to do!
Some questions about the film? • Does James Cameron give audience members enough credit with his film? • Simplistic presentation of characters • Unsubtle uses of words like ‘Pandora’ & ‘unobtanium’ • Supply-led plugging of film’s 3D status