Avatar and The Jesus Incident (tell me I'm not crazy).
Posted: 30 Dec 2009 20:28
Just saw Avatar - here goes...
(Major spoilers, guys - the film is brilliant, so don't read this post before seeing it.)
The Dune/hero journey stuff is obvious:
Female-led semi-heroic/good team paves the way for the Messiah - BG vs. Weaver's team. Both teach, one plants religion, the other a language - both useful to:
Protagonist without a family, who has a special learning ability - Jake is 'an empty cup', Paul has 'learned to learn' (from the BG).
A mother figure guides him on his first steps - Jessica, vs. Weaver again; who babies him re. his legs, teaches him to use the avatar (initiating in semi-mystical ways relevant to his later ritual).
He meets the girl while in danger, she is part of the culture he is to become part of - Chani vs Neytiri, both are heirs to some shaministic mystical power, and have important and dead ancestors (Pardot Kynes and the dragon-rider).
The culture rides the fucking dragons! 'nough said, I hope...
Except riding the dragon is how you gain the treasure - spice (control) and understanding of their 'natural technology' and mysticism. Both earns you a place in the tribe.
Mom dies; or rather becomes part of the bigger mysteries of the tribe, maintaining a mother-figure role where she can still guide, although she is an outsider originally (mom is integrated first, apparently) - Weaver's char 'uploaded' and Jessica becoming a Reverend Mother, both paving the way for the hero's eventual ascension in the same manner and ritual.
The enemies attack with old-school methods and technology, the natives defend using semi-mystical knowledge and more 'primitive' methods - the 'grandmother of a storm' and the animals/planet attacking. If we also count Paul using the spice for leverage (I do), both victories are based on 'understanding the mysteries'.
The hero becomes something new, and lives while dying - Paul and the water of life (not same chronology, I know) and the final ritual, where Jake is uploaded. Note that
Anyway, this is basic hero-myth stuff, and not all that surprising. (But done nicely, if you ask me). The interesting stuff is the cyborgs - the Avatars, the mechs, the uploads, the bio-links.
And then there's The Jesus Incident-stuff:
"Pandora" - obviously. More of a nod and acknowledgement.
Planet of inhospitable wildlife.
One part of the wildlife is causing problems (kelp/Na'vi), but has a link to the greater truth of the world, which is that is it sentient.
Another life-vector of the greater sentience is hovering flyers... (big difference in size, though).
That wildlife can interface with others, using strands of electro+whatever-signal-carrying soft tissue. This is the big one, of course. Basically, the movie is the old hero myth done right, on top of Dances With Wolves, with electro-kelp and some cyborg theory thrown in for good measure
The kelp/life-trees allow 'uploads' of people, a way to live forever - and they [/i]really tie the whole planet together[/i].
Don't get me started on the cyborgs and subjectivity-discussions...
(Major spoilers, guys - the film is brilliant, so don't read this post before seeing it.)
The Dune/hero journey stuff is obvious:
Female-led semi-heroic/good team paves the way for the Messiah - BG vs. Weaver's team. Both teach, one plants religion, the other a language - both useful to:
Protagonist without a family, who has a special learning ability - Jake is 'an empty cup', Paul has 'learned to learn' (from the BG).
A mother figure guides him on his first steps - Jessica, vs. Weaver again; who babies him re. his legs, teaches him to use the avatar (initiating in semi-mystical ways relevant to his later ritual).
He meets the girl while in danger, she is part of the culture he is to become part of - Chani vs Neytiri, both are heirs to some shaministic mystical power, and have important and dead ancestors (Pardot Kynes and the dragon-rider).
The culture rides the fucking dragons! 'nough said, I hope...
Except riding the dragon is how you gain the treasure - spice (control) and understanding of their 'natural technology' and mysticism. Both earns you a place in the tribe.
Mom dies; or rather becomes part of the bigger mysteries of the tribe, maintaining a mother-figure role where she can still guide, although she is an outsider originally (mom is integrated first, apparently) - Weaver's char 'uploaded' and Jessica becoming a Reverend Mother, both paving the way for the hero's eventual ascension in the same manner and ritual.
The enemies attack with old-school methods and technology, the natives defend using semi-mystical knowledge and more 'primitive' methods - the 'grandmother of a storm' and the animals/planet attacking. If we also count Paul using the spice for leverage (I do), both victories are based on 'understanding the mysteries'.
The hero becomes something new, and lives while dying - Paul and the water of life (not same chronology, I know) and the final ritual, where Jake is uploaded. Note that
Anyway, this is basic hero-myth stuff, and not all that surprising. (But done nicely, if you ask me). The interesting stuff is the cyborgs - the Avatars, the mechs, the uploads, the bio-links.
And then there's The Jesus Incident-stuff:
"Pandora" - obviously. More of a nod and acknowledgement.
Planet of inhospitable wildlife.
One part of the wildlife is causing problems (kelp/Na'vi), but has a link to the greater truth of the world, which is that is it sentient.
Another life-vector of the greater sentience is hovering flyers... (big difference in size, though).
That wildlife can interface with others, using strands of electro+whatever-signal-carrying soft tissue. This is the big one, of course. Basically, the movie is the old hero myth done right, on top of Dances With Wolves, with electro-kelp and some cyborg theory thrown in for good measure

The kelp/life-trees allow 'uploads' of people, a way to live forever - and they [/i]really tie the whole planet together[/i].
Don't get me started on the cyborgs and subjectivity-discussions...