| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Sam Worthington | ... | Jake Sully | |
| Zoe Saldana | ... | Neytiri (as Zoë Saldana) | |
| Sigourney Weaver | ... | Dr. Grace Augustine | |
| Stephen Lang | ... | Colonel Miles Quaritch | |
| Michelle Rodriguez | ... | Trudy Chacón | |
| Giovanni Ribisi | ... | Parker Selfridge | |
| Joel David Moore | ... | Norm Spellman | |
| CCH Pounder | ... | Mo'at (as Carol Christine Hilaria Pounder) | |
| Wes Studi | ... | Eytukan | |
| Laz Alonso | ... | Tsu'tey | |
| Dileep Rao | ... | Dr. Max Patel | |
| Matt Gerald | ... | Corporal Lyle Wainfleet | |
|
|
Sean Anthony Moran | ... | Private Fike |
|
|
Jason Whyte | ... | Cryo Vault Med Tech |
| Scott Lawrence | ... | Venture Star Crew Chief | |
When his brother is killed in a robbery, paraplegic Marine Jake Sully decides to take his place in a mission on the distant world of Pandora. There he learns of greedy corporate figurehead Parker Selfridge's intentions of driving off the native humanoid "Na'vi" in order to mine for the precious material scattered throughout their rich woodland. In exchange for the spinal surgery that will fix his legs, Jake gathers knowledge, of the Indigenous Race and their Culture, for the cooperating military unit spearheaded by gung-ho Colonel Quaritch, while simultaneously attempting to infiltrate the Na'vi people with the use of an "avatar" identity. While Jake begins to bond with the native tribe and quickly falls in love with the beautiful alien Neytiri, the restless Colonel moves forward with his ruthless extermination tactics, forcing the soldier to take a stand - and fight back in an epic battle for the fate of Pandora. Written by The Massie Twins
Well, I just saw Avatar this morning, one of the press premieres which are running on these days. My opinion: you've seen this story a hundred times, but never like this. Finally 3D is what it's supposed to be, an instrument at the service of the movie. You'll enjoy the visual experience, no doubt.
As for the story, some of the "inspirations" are so huge and so obvious that mentioning two or three of them would REALLY ruin the movie for you, and I'm not willing to do that. Lots of mysticism and ecology, if you like that stuff. If you're 15 or so, you'll have a great time thinking that it's the first time somebody makes something like this. If you're an experienced movie watcher, better leave your skepticism at the door, bring lots of pop corn and enjoy with the usual action-flick-with-moral-and-loads-of-clichés.
I liked it, however: "the movie that re-invents movies"??? No way.