"I want to return to meet some of the leaders of the Xikrin-Kayapo tribe who invited me," the Canadian director said in an interview published in the Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper.
"I want to take a 3D camera to film how they live, their culture," said Cameron, whose blockbuster movie Avatar tells the story of the peaceful Na'Vi people who live in harmony with nature on the planet Pandora and wage a bloody fight against strip-miners from Earth.
His celebrity status does bring visibility to this issue. And people listen to him more, as he has not squandered his "bully pulpit" on limousine-liberal shannanigans.
ReplyDeleteIf he were really serious about putting this issue in the spotlight, he would call this dam movie "Avatar II".
It's good that Cameron is doing with his power and influence. But I wouldn't suggest this film be called 'avatar2' because reality and fiction are not the same.
ReplyDeleteTo be a Cameron movie though, he's going to need to do a great deal of fictionalizing around the subject matter. His winning formula is a classic movie formula, something reality rarely provides without much playing with the facts.
Actually, my joking point was on the box-office power of the Avatar name. Putting the label "Avatar" on this film would probably make 20 times as many people see it.
ReplyDeleteJudging by this article, Cameron's film will be a documentary, not a drama. He's produced a dozen or so documentaries and this will be another one.
ReplyDeleteBut it wouldn't hurt to put "Avatar" in the title. Call it Amazon Avatar: Real-Life Na'vi vs. Dam of Doom or something like that.