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AM+A.SciFi+HCI.eBook.17Aug12 - Aaron Marcus and Associates, Inc.

AM+A.SciFi+HCI.eBook.17Aug12 - Aaron Marcus and Associates, Inc.

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<strong>Aaron</strong> <strong>Marcus</strong>, The Past 100 Years of the Future, Page 133<br />

James Cameron waited a decade until movie-making animation technology could<br />

enable him to present the film he envision depicting a society of marauding earthmen<br />

(mostly) of about 2150 attempting to obtain the ludicously named unobtanium of the<br />

satellite-world of P<strong>and</strong>ora, which seems to have a strong feminine leadership. Once<br />

again, men, metal, <strong>and</strong> destructive objects are pitted against wise women, ethereal<br />

sensitive animals <strong>and</strong> plants, <strong>and</strong> a sense of connectedness, a dialectic featured in<br />

several other sci-fi films. The technologydepicted seems to favor three-dimensional<br />

displays <strong>and</strong> the ever-present transparent screen displays. The latter seem to have<br />

become an iconic representation of advanced technology, much as rotating magnetic<br />

tape drives were in decades past. In my humble opinion, the movie is one of the most<br />

startling displalys of visual imagination ever conceived in the history of film. I could be<br />

wrong, but as the first file to gross more than $2 billion, it seems to be doing something<br />

right.<br />

Figures: Scenes from Avatar, 2009.<br />

133

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