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Avatar 3D Blu-ray DVD

The AVATAR script reveals some background about the AVATAR world including sex, drugs and suicide. But lots happens before the movie’s events take place and producer Jon Landau says James Cameron wants to write a prequel novel: Sigourney teaching at the schoolhouse. Jake on Earth, and his back-story and how he came here, and Tommy, Jake’s brother. The possibilities are endless.
Avatar 3D  Cameron
Cameron could flesh out the Na’vi beyond the movie’s noble redskin stereotypes and even show something besides evil white guys and noble blue guys, but could just as easily blast right-wing critics. Or explain how unobtainium really got its name.
Avatar 3D Blu-ray DVD Na’vi character
Or write himself in as a Na’vi character. The good news: Cameron hopes to have the book done by the end of the year.
What questions about life before AVATAR would you like to see answered in the prequel?

The AVATAR script reveals some background about the AVATAR world including sex, drugs and suicide. But lots happens before the movie’s events take place and producer Jon Landau says James Cameron wants to write a prequel novel: Sigourney teaching at the schoolhouse. Jake on Earth, and his back-story and how he came here, and Tommy, Jake’s brother. The possibilities are endless. Cameron could flesh out the Na’vi beyond the movie’s noble redskin stereotypes and even show something besides evil white guys and noble blue guys, but could just as easily blast right-wing critics. Or explain how unobtainium really got its name. Or write himself in as a Na’vi character. The good news: Cameron hopes to have the book done by the end of the year.
What questions about life before AVATAR would you like to see answered in the prequel?

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Last Updated on Thursday, 25 February 2010 06:27

Great news for all Avatar fans, there will be a sequel to Avatar, probably it will even end up  as a trilogy if Cameron gets he’s way.

This should not come as an surprise, Cameron has talked about his plans for sequels earlier, and now when Avatar has become the second most profitable movie of all time there is no question that the studio – Fox – would like to see more Avatar movies made.

Cameron said - “Yes, there’ll be another.” -but that doesn’t necessarily mean that he will direct it. Cameron has only directed two movies in a row for the same franchise once before – Terminator and Terminator 2: Judgement day (Cameron’s Aliens was a sequel, but the fist Alien movie was not directed by him, it was directed by Ridley Scott).

Cameron has other projects in the works as well, the question is if he will have the time to direct the Avatar sequels himself!

Don’t know if this is newsworthy, but I just saw a Variety Screening Series showing of Avatar at the Arclight theater in Hollywood tonight, followed with a Q&A with James Cameron and two of his visual effects artists. One of the artists mentioned that they’ll never again do this for the first time, meaning that everything they did in the making of Avatar was just a lot of instinctive grasping in the dark.

Cameron agreed with him. He also told him to expect the studio to want another one, as they’d passed the billion $ mark. A second film will be easier, as the technology now exists, thanks to the movie. The moderator asked if there *would* be an Avatar sequel. To which Cameron answered that the plan had always been to make a trilogy of films. Finally, Cameron actually said it: “Yes, there’ll be another.”

Source: AICN


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Last Updated on Saturday, 9 January 2010 07:50

John Landau, producer of Avatar, has spoken at the 3DX Film and Entertainment Technology Festival in Singapore. He compared Avatar to Titanic (which he also produced) and was quoted saying:

“There is nothing more immersive than 3-D, on Titanic, our goal was to use visual effects to make people feel part of the film. With Avatar, we’re using technology to transport people to another world.”

They definetley succeded on making Titanic, I love that movie, if they pull this off in Avatar, we’re in for a hell of a ride.

Below is the article in full.

Katzenberg: 3-D vision goes beyond animation

SINGAPORE — It’s a 3-D world, and Jeffrey Katzenberg thinks it’s time to reflect that on the big screen — and not just in animated films.

“In five to seven years, all films, regardless of budgets or type, will be made in 3-D,” the DreamWorks Animation boss said here Wednesday during his keynote at the inaugural 3DX Film and Entertainment Technology Festival.

“3-D is how we see, how we take things in. It’s natural,” Katzenberg said. “This is not a gimmick, it’s an opportunity to immerse the audience, to heighten the experience.”

He added that the migration to 3-D will happen on all screens, including mobile phones and laptops.

Katzenberg was joined by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Group president Mark Zoradi and others in stressing the industry’s commitment to 3-D as the future of film.

Moviegoers’ early response is clear, Zoradi said, citing the success of such 3-D titles as “Chicken Little” and “Hannah Montana and Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert.”

“Consumers clearly prefer 3-D if they have a choice,” he said, adding that 3-D films could bring in two to three times the business of a 2-D release.

Zoradi touted his studio’s new five-picture deal with Imax, which will kick off with Robert Zemeckis’ “A Christmas Carol” in November 2009, adding that the slate could involve projects from Tim Burton and Jerry Bruckheimer, though no details were disclosed.

Producer John Landau, now working with James Cameron on “Avatar,” said that 3-D would “do for cinema what stereo did for the audio industry.”

All the film industry has to do is “demystify” 3-D for consumers, whose perception of 3-D may be of “gimmicks on B films” and “theme parks that forced things off the screen,” Landau said.

Zoradi’s presentation Wednesday included the first public screening of 3-D footage from “Beauty and the Beast” (originally released in 1991), which Disney is re-rendering for a 2010 release, as well as Disney’s “Tron 2,” set for 2011 or 2012.

The addition of “Beauty and the Beast” brings Disney’s number of digital 3-D releases for 2009-10 to 11, with another six to come in 2011. This would give Disney more than 50% of all 3-D releases during the next three years; 11 of those would be animated.

“The biggest barrier (to 3-D) is not product, it’s the installed base of digital cinemas,” Zoradi said.

Katzenberg predicted that 35%-40% of admissions for March DWA release “Monsters vs Aliens” will be for 3-D. For a film coming out 15 months later, he envisions 80%-85% of admissions for the company’s next “Shrek” installment to be for 3-D.

Stressing the technical advances that made the latest incarnation of 3-D different from past efforts, Katzenberg said 3-D “will bring people back to the movies who have stopped going.”

“This is not my father’s 3-D,” he said. “There’s no ghosting, no eye strain and best of all, you don’t throw up. Throwing up is not good for anyone’s business.”

All agreed that 3-D’s ability to immerse audiences in the film is the key.

“There is nothing more immersive than 3-D,” Landau said. “On ‘Titanic,’ our goal was to use visual effects to make people feel part of the film. With ‘Avatar,’ we’re using technology to transport people to another world.”

Katzenberg said that theatrical digital 3-D represents a “unique opportunity for cinemas” to create an experience that consumers could not get at home, “and it will be many years before they can.”

Among the reasons cited was the fact that light diminishes the quality of the image.

“The only place in the home to replicate this is in the coat closet … and I would not want to spend two hours there watching a movie,” he said.

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 5 January 2010 08:12