Showing posts with label avatar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label avatar. Show all posts

Friday, January 08, 2010

Avatar in China

Why do we destroy everything that is good and connected? Why can we not recognize the beauty and value in existence, co-existence, tranquility and balance?

"A Chinese take on Avatar" makes note of a Chinese blogger's comparison of the movie to the situation of "nail houses" in China (i.e. last-house-standing after real estate developers force/entice/evict whole blocks from their homes).

When I stepped out of the movie theatre, I also thought about the hutong neighborhoods ... Definitely can draw parallels -- that sense of helplessness in the face of an onslaught by more powerful entities, a losing battle to preserve what is good and meaningful.

Some aspects of the movie in which one could see an analogy:

- Remaining in touch with the voices and memories of our ancestors.

- The sense of connectedness -- what one long-time hutong resident called being "grounded" in the book "The Last Days of Old Beijing".

- (Modern) human ignorance of things of value and a fixation on profit to the detriment of all else. "It's a f*cking tree! They need to leave so I can tear it down to mine the area." is just the same as, "It's a g*damn shack. Why can't these people move out so I can develop this ground and make money?" This view ignores the fact that these residences have centuries of history and that a living human community has grown up there and taken on meaning of its own.

Perhaps we can see Avatar as a missive to protect things of value, such as ecology and plantary connectedness -- or in the Chinese context, traditional architecture and living communities.