warpus
Sommerswerd asked me to change this
They were there cause they looked pretty, a common hollywood movie-making tactic.
It makes sense for mountains containing large amount of superconductive materials to float when placed in a region of strong magnetic fields, or for mountains containing high levels of magnetically polarized minerals to float over superconductive materials. This is explained by the Meissner effect.
The Force is a lot harder to explain scientifically.


That, however, is not the explaination given. In fact, there never was an explaination given in the movie they just showed you floating mountains and we are supposed to be too busy oooing and ahhhing that we never bother to ask why there are floating mountains.
).Even if there was a plot mechanism given for the floating mountains (and again their isn't), they would act as gigantic sails being pushed all over the place by the wind. In fact, in all reality they would probably be constantly crashing into each other and thus pulverized in hours. LAME LAME LAME.

I don't need a scientific plot mechanism, just a plot mechanism. Psychic powers and telekinesis are common themes and much easier to explain away, and saying it is "the Force" works just was well as invoking magic. But again, there was no mechanism provided at all in Avatar.
And its not like those floating mountains had ANYTHING to do with the plot whatsoever either. They served absolutely no purpose.
I don't really need to add anything here![]()
EDIT: Actually I do:
It's been explained in accompanying materials.
Although I don't see how you could miss the obvious comparison between the unobtainum sample the corporate boss had in his office and the flying mountains.
I for one am sick of the tendency of many American movies to explain every little thing for the audience, even though the dialogues look silly and unnatural (like when one supposedly top scientist explains a trivial thing to a group of other top scientists - yeah, they'd really be talking about that).
Not necessarily, it can definitely be justified once you accept the idea that mountains can fly if they're full of superconductive material.
On the other hand, about every other thing you see in Star Wars is physically impossible, which kinda puts your "LAME LAME LAME" exclamations into perspective![]()
I see that Cameron grossly overestimated the average viewer.
Does the word "setting" mean anything to you? Or should I extend this logic on everything else and say that the whole film should have been set in the Amazon and in the present day, because anything more than that would be unnecessary to advance the plot?
[/quote]Avatar is about looking at the fictional world with a jaw dropped, that's kinda what art is supposed to be all about - being beautiful, creating emotions and interest. If you start looking at everything from a purely functional perspective, you'll lose this.
Or you could take the time, effort, and care to have all of that AND IT BE FUNCTIONAL. Or in other words, produce actual art.
It makes sense for mountains containing large amount of superconductive materials to float when placed in a region of strong magnetic fields, or for mountains containing high levels of magnetically polarized minerals to float over superconductive materials. This is explained by the Meissner effect.

Apparently winner, and the definition is that if it is in art then it must be functional. So if Pride and Predudice is ever remade, but with three moons CGIed into the night sceens this time, apparently we shouldn't ask any questions and just go with it.
It is explicitly stated that Unobtainium is valueable because it remains a superconductor at high temperatures, much higher than the ambient temperatures in that mountain range.

Yes, we have established that mindless handwaving is your style.
First off, why the hell would you ever charge a row of machine guns and power armor with horse archers? That's just ********.
. Dang teddy bears and there bows n arrows charging into Stormtroopers with blasters and AT-STs 
As for the air battle, bows and arrows against gun ships? Really?

Yes, we have established that mindless handwaving is your style. You're into handwaving, we get it.
1.) It hasn't been explained in accompanying materials.
2.) Even if it had been it is irrelevant. 99% of the viewing public will never hear/read/see any of these "other materials" and thus in order to make a move work all of what we see has to make sense on its face.
Sorry, the more you try to compare these two films in terms of realism, the more you fail.The whole "other materials" garbage was stupid when Star Wars did it, it was stupid when The Matrix did it, it was stupid when Star Trek did it last year and it is stupid when Avatar did.
Now, if you want to EXPAND on a story that already makes sense with more material fine, but your flagship medium has to stand on its own.
Obvious connection? What obvious connection? I have a pen that stands on its hand via magnets I got from Brookstone years ago, does that mean everything with magnets should be expected to balance at odd angles? :crazyeyes:

For one, nothing suggests the unobtanium was flying of its own accord, in fact it is hovering over a metal disk with the "obvious connection" that the disc is making it float as a odd office decoration just like my pen.
Second, at no point is it ever even suggested the mountains contain unobtanium.

Third, if there was that much unobtanium in them to actually make mountains fly why are they not being mined? Why is the LARGEST DEPOSIT OF UNOBTANIUM KNOWN not flying?
Yes, we have established that you are not appreciative of good story telling. I am sure you didn't get past the first pages of War and Peace and Crime and Punishment either.
The simple fact is that there was a time when movies placed character development, plot development, and most of all plot consistancy at a premium. But that is hard to do because it requires thinking and work, so you enjoy your CGI pornography.
The thought that you even contemplated the idea that you could accept that is disturbing. I am pretty sure that if they had told you they were flying because they were full of cotton candy, and equally plausable and intellectually stimulating plot device, you would have still hand waved it in favor of smurf porn.

Very few of it is physically impossible, just not currently achievable. In any case that is irrelevant given the plot mechanisms chosen. It was not a mistake that Star Wars was set "a long long time ago, in a galaxy far far away" or that the societies we are seeing are in excess of 25,000 years old. This provides with the instant ability to remove ourselves from having to apply any understanding of politics or current technology to Star Wars, there is literally no connection to our current frame of reference. Dune did the exact same thing.
Avatar, on the other hand, made it very clear it wanted us to apply our current frame of reference, and thus the plot mechanisms it has to use to bring in things like floating mountians need to make sense to us in a more real way.
That is of course the whole reason why unobtanium's properties were explained to us in the first place, in order to provide a motivation for the antagonists. Note that floating was not a characteristic given.
No, his average viewer is someone like you, a fanboi.

Of course not, because being on Pandora did advance the plot. Floating mountains didn't. In fact they didn't just not advance the plot, they detracted from the plot because the add a lot of WTH quotient needlessly and movies like Avatar are already pushing the WTH envolpe pretty far by their very nature.
Its sort of like if dinosaures started randonely walking around in the background of Love Actually, or if Aliens saucers landed in the middle of sceen in Lord of the Rings, or a volcanoe erupted in the distance while Tom Hanks was storming Omaha beach. All make just as much sense as floating mountains in Avatar.
Or you could take the time, effort, and care to have all of that AND IT BE FUNCTIONAL. Or in other words, produce actual art. I realize that your quality control is all little more on the OMG SHINY end of the scale, so I am not surprised this is lost on you.
