sexta-feira

Obama vai ao cinema ver Avatar

E3 2009: James Cameron's Avatar Interview

James Cameron's Avatar official game trailer for PS3/Xbox 360/Wii/DS/PSP/PC - developer diary#2 [HD]

Família Obama vai ao cinema assistir a ‘Avatar’

Sessão no Havaí foi exclusiva para família do presidente dos EUA.
Cinema próximo à casa em que Obama está passando feriado foi fechado.

“Avatar” vem liderando as bilheterias norte-americanas desde sua estreia, em 18 de dezembro. O filme, com orçamento de produção em mais de US$ 230 milhões, conta história que mistura fantasia e preceitos ecologicamente corretos. Vem sendo considerado um marco tecnológico no cinema, e está sendo exibido em versões 3D e IMAX.

Avatar is a 2009 American science fiction film written and directed by James Cameron, and starring Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldaña, Sigourney Weaver and Stephen Lang. The film is set in the year 2154 on Pandora, a fictional Earth-like moon in a distant planetary system. Humans are engaged in mining Pandora's reserves of a precious mineral, while the Na'vi — the sapient and sentient race of humanoids indigenous to the moon — resist the colonists' expansion, which threatens the continued existence of the Na'vi and the Pandoran ecosystem. The film's title refers to the remotely controlled, genetically engineered human-Na'vi bodies used by the film's human characters to interact with the natives.[4] Avatar had been in development since 1994 by Cameron, who wrote an 80-page scriptment for the film.[5] Filming was supposed to take place after the completion of Titanic, and the film would have been released in 1999, but according to Cameron, "technology needed to catch up" with his vision of the film.[6][7] In early 2006, Cameron developed the script, the language, and the culture of Pandora.[8] He has stated that if Avatar is successful, two sequels to the film are planned.[9] The film was released in traditional 2-D and 3-D formats, along with an IMAX 3D release in selected theaters. Avatar is officially budgeted at $237 million;[2] other estimates put the cost at $280 – $310 million to produce and an estimated $150 million for marketing.[10][11][12] The film is being touted as a breakthrough in terms of filmmaking technology, for its development of 3D viewing and stereoscopic filmmaking with cameras that were specially designed for the film's production.[13] Opening to critical and commercial success, it grossed an estimated $27 million on its opening day and made $77,025,481 in the United States and Canada on its opening weekend.[14] Worldwide, the film grossed an estimated $232,180,000 on its opening weekend,[15] the ninth-largest opening-weekend gross of all time, and the largest for a non-franchise, non-sequel and original film.