Directed by James Cameron, known for its innovations in film technology and the ambition to make the CG look and feel real. The next film, Avatar, will put his reputation on the test. Cameron will make a blue, alien when viewed on the big screen? With all the attention focused on the film, something that is not perfect is not good enough. Here is how Cameron plans film history with a variety of new technologies and years of development.
The film, although “film” seems an outdated term, such as digital-intensive production occurs in the month named Pandora, which circles a distant planet. Jake Sully, a former Marine paralyzed from the waist down in a battle on Earth, has traveled to the lush green world filled with exotic, Bioluminescent life to participate in military Avatar. Human settlers attracted to her type of resources, but can not inhale the poisonous atmosphere, so to help explore the moon and a meeting with indigenous Na’vi who lived there, Sully has been linked with an awareness of genetic engineering 9-foot – tall human-alien hybrid.
Cameron said the first treatment for the film in 1995 with the aim of pushing the boundaries of what is possible with cinematic digital effects. In his vision, which should Avatar mixing live action sequences and performances into a digital three-dimensional, computer-generated world caught. Part action-adventure, part interstellar love story, so an ambitious project that 10 years before Cameron feels the movie has developed technology to the point where the Avatar even possible.
Cameron looked straight into Worthington’s face, or rather, he looked into the face of a digitized Worthington as a creature with blue skin and large yellow eyes, but he might also be looking into the Kabuki mask.