Pretty much sums it up. While watching it I guess I was neutral but thinking about it it seems the Na'vi where just defending their land and the humans where trying to steal from them for a profit reason.Hubilub said:On an emotional level I stayed neutral, but I believe the Na'vi are right and the humans are wrong.
It was never explained that humanity needed unobtanium to survive, only that it's really expensive stuff they can get rich on. On an entire planet there should be more than just one place where they can find unobtanium, but apparently they didn't want to make the effort of relocating to another side of the planet.
And of course, that is considering that there are no other places in the entire universe where you can get unobtanium, which frankly sounds far-fetched. If it's so damn rare, then I don't see how humanity would survive for long on that stuff.
Jake Sully isn't a jerk. Why should he side with the humans in this conflict when they are the bigger assholes? And why should they just let the humans get their will through? They'd probably start harassing and killing other Na'vi as they went looking for more unobtanium.
And who the hell can support the idea of the humans uplifting the Na'vi from their primitive society? Remember the words Manifest Destiny?
The only reference I heard to them wanting it, was that it was crazy valuable. And we don't exactly invade other countries just to get diamonds, or other valuable resources, when the owners don't want to sell it. As for those Marines, it's blind obedience like that, that tends to fuck things up. They weren't out there for the government, they were out there as private security. They just did it for the paycheck, same as Jake at the start.ElTigreSantiago said:I'm pretty sure humanity needed it to survive. And besides, humanity offered them a peaceful resolution and the Navi were the ones who wanted war. They didn't even need it for themselves, they just believed in bullshit religion (the cause of more death and destruction than anything else in the universe) so the land was sacred to them.Jedoro said:It was the planet of a sentient species, and attacking just for a valuable resource is a dick move to me. When money's a higher priority than sentient lives, shit's gonna go downhill.
I don't think what they did was wrong, that's how the world works. And in real life the superior technology would have easily won. If they kept resisting, genocide would have possibly occured. And there is not a single damn Marine that would turn on his country and the human race just like that.
Understand that these forums are VERY left wing, and the support for indiginous peoples and such even when unreasonable is a big deal with the left wing. The intentional, preachy, similarities between the Na'vi and pop-culture Native Americans was intentional. It *WAS* a propaganda movie, and you have to understand who that propaganda was created by, and directed at, and the general leanings of the forums your posting on.Chunko said:I was wondering if anyone else rooted for the humans in avatar?
[HEADING=2]Here's my reason for siding with the humans:[/HEADING]
I took this from another one of my forum posts
I agree. I always thought that the Na'vi were being arrogant and unreasonable. Humanity was offering them a lot and they refused. Humans were out there for there own survival and the Na'vi would not be diplomatic. That gave them only one option. The humans didn't care about exterminating the Na'vi, just surviving.
Jake Sully specifically was a jerk. Aside from showing no emotion he damned his own species. In addition to this he was hurting the Na'vi as well. If he had not united them maybe like twelve aliens would have died. Instead hundreds perished, both human and Na'vi. I'm sure that after the mining had been set up Na'vi would have been forced to negotiate with humanity, and maybe they could be uplifted from their primitive society.
In addition to this I quite frankly did not like any of the aliens. The only characters who stuck out to me were humans. I liked the executive and the macho military guy (I can't remember their names, sue me). On a really shallow level I didn't like the movie which made me immune to its propaganda.
Okay wow there's been 29 views and no posts. can you PLEASE qualify your opinions.
Why did everyone root for the Na'vi?
EDIT: Nevermind, thank you Hubilub.
Looks like you and Ripley came to the same conclusion.voorhees123 said:I would prefer if they nuke the planet, both sides die and there is no more talk of Avatar. I guess that would mean that the planet wins. It doesnt matter who wins as the film is biased. The humans are written as evil and the Na'vi are written as innocent. Even the planet was over designed to make it the most magical place ever. Its is just cheap and pathetic, Cameron might as well as dressed all the humans in Nazi uniforms.
Unobtanium is apparently a superconductor that not only supplies the entire Earth's energy needs, but fuels interstellar space travel. It's vital to the establishment of a space-faring civilization.Hubilub said:On an emotional level I stayed neutral, but I believe the Na'vi are right and the humans are wrong.
It was never explained that humanity needed unobtanium to survive, only that it's really expensive stuff they can get rich on. On an entire planet there should be more than just one place where they can find unobtanium, but apparently they didn't want to make the effort of relocating to another side of the planet.
And of course, that is considering that there are no other places in the entire universe where you can get unobtanium, which frankly sounds far-fetched. If it's so damn rare, then I don't see how humanity would survive for long on that stuff.
Jake Sully isn't a jerk. Why should he side with the humans in this conflict when they are the bigger assholes? And why should they just let the humans get their will through? They'd probably start harassing and killing other Na'vi as they went looking for more unobtanium.
And who the hell can support the idea of the humans uplifting the Na'vi from their primitive society? Remember the words Manifest Destiny?
I concur.Hubilub said:And of course, that is considering that there are no other places in the entire universe where you can get unobtanium, which frankly sounds far-fetched. If it's so damn rare, then I don't see how humanity would survive for long on that stuff.
Well written good Sir. nevermind the forest for a moment. How would you feel if you had an oil patch under your house. there MAY be more elsewhere, but it's you're house. Your family has lived there for generations and you don't think you should dig through the house yourself or syphon it for fear of the foundation. Oil is starting to become scarce in the world.Hubilub said:On an emotional level I stayed neutral, but I believe the Na'vi are right and the humans are wrong.
It was never explained that humanity needed unobtanium to survive, only that it's really expensive stuff they can get rich on. On an entire planet there should be more than just one place where they can find unobtanium, but apparently they didn't want to make the effort of relocating to another side of the planet.
And of course, that is considering that there are no other places in the entire universe where you can get unobtanium, which frankly sounds far-fetched. If it's so damn rare, then I don't see how humanity would survive for long on that stuff.
Jake Sully isn't a jerk. Why should he side with the humans in this conflict when they are the bigger assholes? And why should they just let the humans get their will through? They'd probably start harassing and killing other Na'vi as they went looking for more unobtanium.
And who the hell can support the idea of the humans uplifting the Na'vi from their primitive society? Remember the words Manifest Destiny?
The movie was about preservation of nature and the environment, about holding close what we care about and defending family and friends. It's deep, compalling, thoughtful.The Amazing Tea Alligator said:While I wrote humans, I was actually routing for time. What a long and pretentious, yet stupid and insubstantial movie. Eugh.
And with it being so damned rare, it won't last for long. Did they ever mention it in movie? imply it? I could care less if it's a super conductor and can do all those things. They mentioned MONEY in the movie. making money. Mooooooolah...DarkRyter said:Unobtanium is apparently a superconductor that not only supplies the entire Earth's energy needs, but fuels interstellar space travel. It's vital to the establishment of a space-faring civilization.Hubilub said:On an emotional level I stayed neutral, but I believe the Na'vi are right and the humans are wrong.
It was never explained that humanity needed unobtanium to survive, only that it's really expensive stuff they can get rich on. On an entire planet there should be more than just one place where they can find unobtanium, but apparently they didn't want to make the effort of relocating to another side of the planet.
And of course, that is considering that there are no other places in the entire universe where you can get unobtanium, which frankly sounds far-fetched. If it's so damn rare, then I don't see how humanity would survive for long on that stuff.
Jake Sully isn't a jerk. Why should he side with the humans in this conflict when they are the bigger assholes? And why should they just let the humans get their will through? They'd probably start harassing and killing other Na'vi as they went looking for more unobtanium.
And who the hell can support the idea of the humans uplifting the Na'vi from their primitive society? Remember the words Manifest Destiny?
Personally, I rooted for the Colonel. Not humans, not Na'vi. Just... Colonel Miles Quadritch. I liked him, even for racist hateful bastard he was.