It was less-pronounced in the first Alien movie, but there was a slimy corporate presence in the form of Ash. He was under special orders to bring back an alien for study, and "all other considerations are secondary".
It's been a recurring theme in all the Alien movies, but it gets worse and worse as the series goes (which isn't saying much, because the movies themselves get worse and worse--they should have stopped at two).
Avatar, of course, takes the theme way too far. The simplistic and obvious plot and characters, combined with the PG-13 rating, makes me wonder if Cameron specifically intended this to be a kids' movie?
I enjoyed the 3D a lot too. I hope we get a lot more of this kind of 3D in future. I'm sure they'd like to make extra money selling or loaning their technology.
I do think the real world and the movie are uncomparable. The fact that people rush to compare them is telling of the disease that infects us within the capitalist ideology - the desire to create unities where there are none and to dominate objects with a vision dictated by the subject. It begins when we decide to use price mechanisms, especially when we regard them as a real way to measure some sort of inherent worth to adjudicate between things that are uncomparable.
Maybe? Though I don't think so. It's not symbolism so much as the eagerness to draw comparisons and to measure things against each other. Sure, I think something like Avatar may be able to tell us something about the real world, although I doubt it will stand under scrutiny in this case, but to compare it with what happened or happens in the real world requires too much imagination.
Also, I think it's not a symptom of capitalism. Rather, it shares a similar premise with capitalist ideology.
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/film/article6992685.eceChina plans to pull Avatar from most cinemas, despite the long queues for tickets, to make way for a more patriotic film the censors deem more appropriate – a life of Confucius.
The move comes amid government anxiety that many Chinese are making a link between the plight of the film's Na’vi, who face being displaced form their homeland, and that of those in China who are subject to often brutal evictions by property developers.
Hong Kong’s Apple Daily said the state-run China Film Group had instructed cinemas nationwide to stop showing the ordinary version of Avatar from January 23 on orders from Beijing’s propaganda czars.
The newspaper said: “Reportedly, the authorities have two reasons for this check on Avatar: first, it has taken in too much money and has seized market share from domestic films, and second, it may lead audiences to think about forced removal, and may possibly incite violence.”
Did anyone else who watched the 3d move get very dry eyes watching it?
Apparently, communists and not just capitalists are big on symbolism.
Ecofarm said:Let's see now... how many capitalist countries have pulled the movie from theaters? Wow... It seems that while everyone sees symbolism, only communists ban stuff because of it.
Symbolism, blahblahism or whatever you want to call it, I don't care. Have the semantic argument with someone else.
The CCP did it more than anyone, so your capitalism -> relating the movie to real life idea is blown out of the water.
How is the CCP comparing the movie to real events (i.e. what I'm talking about, not "relating the movie to real life", which is vague)?Ecofarm said:If I might be so presumptous, your next argument (the one that always comes after semantics when someone's nti-capitalist idea is obliterated): "The CCP is not communist". I shall pre-emptively respond with: I know, noone is communist and everyone is capitalist... that way, we can easily blame everything on capitalism.

How is the CCP comparing the movie to real events (i.e. what I'm talking about, not "relating the movie to real life", which is vague)?
The CCP has banned the film from theaters because they compare it to real life.Reportedly, the authorities have two reasons for this check on Avatar: first, it has taken in too much money and has seized market share from domestic films, and second, it may lead audiences to think about forced removal, and may possibly incite violence.
You didn't read the article I posted?
The move comes amid government anxiety that many Chinese are making a link between the plight of the film's Navi, who face being displaced form their homeland, and that of those in China who are subject to often brutal evictions by property developers.
Chinese people are not communist?
Ecofarm said:It must be all those capitalist Chinamen doing this!