If it's another one of those "Ewoks pawn Empire" deals count me out. Enough is enough.
Possibly, but keep in mind these Ewoks have giant pterodactyls, massive alien horses, and are 8 feet tall with carbon fibre bones and neurotoxins that can stop your heart in under a minute.
and the marines have OBRITAL BOMBARDMENT and SPACECRAFT.
Exterminatus...exterminatus. Even a partial one. It's not like burning everythnig within 1000 miles of the excavation site will ruin the ore. No forest to hid in anymore. Clear ovewiew.
I stopped being impressed by must-see visual movies 10 years ago.
I couldn't care less for all of it's eye porn. A crap plot is still a crap plot
blah blah blah blah
It was made quite clear that massive casualties were not politically possible. I wouldn't be surprised if they didn't have any weapons capable of such a strike - how would they justify shipping them out to Alpha Centauri? When they did need to blow something up on a really large scale they had to improvise using palettes of high explosive.
It's not like James Cameron didn't think of it, he's 'take off and nuke the site from orbit' guy.
Get over your grognard disbelief that anyone packing all that hardware could lose a fight to a bunch of Captain Planet fans and go see it. It's fantastic, and not at all Luddite. Particularly fun to see the huge alien warriors using captured human throat mics.
You lost me at the grognards disbelief, since I said nothing about that. In truth, I draw great amusement from that particular portion of the movie as technology's revenge.
But I still don't care about the packaging. I don't care what it's a parable of. The story it wants to tell is about the evils of the technology users. It's Luddite whether it wants to be or not...and frankly if it didn't want to be somebody ****ed up bigtime, because that's what a rather significant percentage of people will draw from it regardless. There are times where you can go "yeah I see how you drew that conclusion but that's still bat****" and then there's...well there's Avatar.
You didn't watch the movie, so you don't know.
It's about the power of technology and science. The main characters use technology to understand and investigate a new culture. The movie extols and elevates science as a way of understanding the natural world in a way that no science fiction movie I've seen in a long time does. The natives embrace technology as a way of enhancing their insurgency. There's nothing Luddite about it.
Gibson was fond of saying that technology on its own is valence neutral; only human action introduces a human component. The movie may be against the use of technology to pillage other cultures, but it's certainly pro-technology with respect to its use in science and understanding.
Seriously, you don't know how cheering it was to see the scientists presented as the heroes for once. Sigourney Weaver's lead scientist character is probably the best in the movie.