Product Description
-------------------
This extended collector's set includes more than eight hours of
bonus features.
Disc 1: Three Movie Versions
• Original Theatrical Edition (includes family audio track with
objectionable language removed)
• Special Edition Re-Release (includes family audio track with
objectionable language removed)
• Collector’s Extended Cut with 16 additional minutes, including
alternate opening on earth
Disc 2: Filmmaker's Journey
• Over 45 minutes of never-before-seen deleted scenes
• Screen tests, on-set footage, and visual-effects reels
• Capturing Avatar: Feature-length documentary covering the
16-year filmmakers’ journey, including interviews with James
Cameron, Jon Landau, cast and crew
• A Message from Pandora: James Cameron’s visit to the rainforest
• The 2006 art reel: Original pitch of the Avatar vision
• Brother termite test: Original motion capture test
• The ILM prototype: Visual effects reel
• Screen tests: Sam Worthington, Zoë Saldana
• Zoë’s life cast: Makeup session footage
• On-set footage as live-action filming begins
• VFX progressions
• Crew film: The Volume
Disc 3: Pandora's Box
• Interactive scene deconstruction: Explore the stages of
production of 17 different scenes through three viewing modes:
capture level, template level, and final level with
picture-in-picture reference
• Production featurettes: Sculpting Avatar, Creating the Banshee,
Creating the Thanator, The AMP Suit, Flying Vehicles, Na’vi
Costumes, Speaking Na’vi, Pandora Flora, Stunts, Performance
Capture, Virtual Camera, The 3D Fusion Camera, The Simul-Cam,
Editing Avatar, Scoring Avatar, Sound Design, The Haka: The
Spirit of New Zealand
• Avatar original script
• Avatar screenplay by James Cameron
• Pandorapedia: Comprehensive guide to Pandora
• Lyrics from five songs by James Cameron
• The art of Avatar: Over 1,850 images in 16 themed galleries
(The World of Pandora, The Creatures, Pandora Flora, Pandora
Bioluminescence, The Na’vi, The Avatars, Maquettes, Na’vi
Weapons, Na’vi Props, Na’vi Musical Instruments, RDA Designs,
Flying Vehicles, AMP Suit, Human Weapons, Land Vehicles,
One-Sheet Concepts)
• BD-Live extras (requires BD-Live-enabled player and Internet
connection--may be available a limited-time only): Crew Short:
The Night Before Avatar; additional screen tests, including
Stephen Lang, Giovanni Ribisi, Joel David Moore, CCH Pounder, and
Laz Alonso; speaking Na’vi rehearsal footage; Weta Workshop:
walk-and-talk presentation
.co.uk Review
-------------
After 12 years of thinking about it (and waiting for movie
technology to catch up with his visions), James Cameron followed
up his unsinkable Titanic with Avatar, a sci-fi epic meant to
trump all previous sci-fi epics. Set in the future on a distant
planet, Avatar spins a simple little parable about greedy
colonizers (that would be mankind) messing up the lush tribal
world of Pandora. A paregic Marine named Jake (Sam
Worthington) acts through a 9-foot-tall avatar that allows him to
roam the planet and pass as one of the Na'vi, the blue-skinned,
large-eyed native people who would very much like to live their
peaceful lives without the interference of the visitors. Although
he's supposed to be gathering intel for the badass general
(Stephen Lang) who'd like to lay waste to the planet and its
inhabitants, Jake naturally begins to take a liking to the Na'vi,
especially the feisty Neytiri (Zoë Saldana, whose entire
performance, recorded by Cameron's complicated motion-capture
system, exists as a digitally rendered Na'vi). The movie uses
state-of-the-art 3D technology to plunge the viewer deep into
Cameron's crazy toy box of planetary ecosystems and high-tech
machinery. Maybe it's the fact that Cameron seems torn between
his two loves--awesome destructive gizmos and flower-power
message mongering--that makes Avatar's pursuit of its point
ultimately uncertain. That, and the fact that Cameron's dialogue
continues to clunk badly. If you're won over by the movie's
trippy new world, the characters will be forgivable as broad,
useful archetypes rather than standard-issue stereotypes, and you
might be able to overlook the unsurprising central plot. (The
overextended "take that, Michael Bay" final battle sequences
could tax even Cameron enthusiasts, however.) It doesn't measure
up to the hype (what could?) yet Avatar frequently hits a giddy
delirium all its own. The film itself is our Pandora, a
sensation-saturated universe only the movies could create.
--Robert Horton