Saw E.T. in the EYE film theatre/museum in Amsterdam yesterday.
It was not only nice to finally view it on the big screen, but it was also the first time I've been to the cinema in nine years.
On the downside, contrary to what I interpreted from the information on the website, the 20th Anniversary "walkie talkie" version was shown in stead of the original film.
Worse was the picture quality; apart from exhibiting a lot of defects for a print that can't be more than a good ten years old, it also suffered from obvious telecine wobble, oversaturated colour, severe image softness and an extreme lack of shadow detail with dark greys replacing blacks.
Really a shame that such a beautifully shot film wasn't done justice, but the kids in the audience loved it to pieces nonetheless - it definitely still 'worked' a good thirty years later.
Avatar is a movie that doesn't share the enduring cinematic magic of Spielberg's classic.
I watched it on TV last night and it managed to underperform in spite of my already dim expectations.
The post-Terminator 2 Cameron has never impressed me terribly (though the Abyss has some nice bits), but I still didn't think he'd deliver something quite this bland.
Apart from the incredibly simplistic, predictable and derivative plot, there's a complete lack of interesting characterisation and even the film's visuals didn't impress me greatly.
Avatar may be a vast technical accomplishment and I fully admit I didn't exactly see it in the highest fidelity possible (analogue TV signal, two pieces of cable patched together without amplification, standard definition set), but even so there are plenty of grounds for criticism.
For one thing, despite all the glowing tree vines and plant leaves, there's a blue-green dullness to Pandora (and the movie as a whole) and where more vivd colours were used, the result felt very basic, artificial and 'flat'.
Then there's the CGI and its animation, which never truly became lifelike; even under less than optimal viewing circumstances there's a clear distinction between the on-board real time acting parts and the virtual bits.
On top of that, the alien creature design wasn't very inventive, mostly consisting of dinosaurish mashups of existing animals (e.g. the hammerhead rhino).
There are other aspects that suspend disbelief, such as the vulnerability of the human military arsenal to Pandora's primitive weaponry and fauna, but what it comes down to in the end is that in my view this multi-billion dollar epic is inferior on just about every level to the comparitively shoe-string budget Terminator from back in the days when Cameron was still creatively challenged by substantial technical and financial limitations.