leroyjenkens said:
But they didn't portray humans as cruel and nothing else. Several of the humans were good guys. Why do they get to be ignored?
The only ones that were good were the ones that sided with the Na'vi. By the end of the movie they were killing the bloodthirsty humans. I didn't ignore them, but saying they represented humanity wouldn't be accurate. They represented Na'vi interests. The good, Na'vi loving humans were allowed to stay on Pandora and live in peace, and the cruel, hateful humans were sent back to Earth to suffer and probably die.
My point to you was that it's apparently alright to say that a few humans in a movie represent all of humanity, but it's not alright to say a few humans in real life represent all of humanity, since you called me on it, but not him.
The few humans in the movie represent all of humanity because there are only a few humans in the movie. We can't hear the voices of people that don't speak. I can't jump into that world and travel back to Earth to ask the opinions of its inhabitants. I have to rely on the director to show me these things. What he showed was that humans were motivated by cruelty. There was only the barest glimpse of a more convincing reason.
A few humans in real life don't represent all of humanity because everyone has a mind of their own. If you want to hear an opinion direct yourself to the nearest human and ask for it. Sometimes just getting people to stop shouting long enough to agree on anything is more of a problem. My point is that gathering information to make a decision that we feel comfortable with is our own responsibility in real life. We are the directors of our own perception.
Well, saying that it's inaccurate to portray humans as cruel for no reason pretty much says that humans aren't cruel for no reason.
As a general rule I would say that is correct. In real life I would definitely say that the average Marine does not represent all of humanity. I would also say that the average Marine would not be gung-ho about wiping out native civilizations to the last man, woman and child for no reason besides a desire to inflict suffering. Self preservation is a motivation I could believe. Cameron alluded to it, but he didn't show it in his film.
In the movie there is a line or two about some stuff that the humans need for their own civilization that happens to lie beneath the stuff that the Na'vi need for theirs. The importance of the Na'vi stuff to their civilization is well described. No importance is given to describing humanities need for stuff. Cameron's portrayal of humanity goes something like this, "Floaty rocks is cool! When can we we kill worthless natives for cool, floaty rocks?" The need for ill-defined stuff is a poor use of the MacGuffin in this case, unless the point is to make the audience unsympathetic towards humanity through omission of character motivation. I consider directing the audience in such a way to be poor storytelling.