Avatar Depression

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kawaiiamethist

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Nov 21, 2009
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Who else caught this insane story on Yahoo?

http://au.movies.yahoo.com/news/article/-/6670472/the-avatar-effect-movie-goers-depressed-at-not-being-able-to-visit/

Movie goers are experiencing feelings of depression and in some cases even suicidal tendencies after seeing "Avatar."

Fans are upset at not being able to visit Pandora, the make believe planet that is nirvana for the Na'vi, the blue native humanoids that habitat Pandora.

Forums on the internet have been swamped with posts by fans not being able to cope after seeing the movie and experiencing feelings of depression that they can't visit the magical world of Pandora.

Avatar fan site, 'Avatar Forums' contains a thread titled 'Ways to cope with the depression of the dream of Pandora being intangible', which in itself contains nearly 1,000 posts.


Forum administrator Philippe Baghdassarian said: 'I wasn't depressed myself. In fact the movie made me happy.

'But I can understand why it made people depressed. The movie was so beautiful and it showed something we don't have here on Earth. I think people saw we could be living in a completely different world and that caused them to be depressed.'

Forum user 'okoi' writes: 'After I watched "Avatar" at the first time, I truly felt depressed as I "wake" up in this world again.

'So after a few days, I went to cinema and watched it again for the second time to relieve the depression and hopeless feeling. Now I listen to the soundtrack and share my views in this forum. It really helps.'

User Mike wrote on another fan site 'Naviblue' that he considered suicide after watching the film.
Mike wrote: 'Ever since I went to see "Avatar" I have been depressed. Watching the wonderful world of Pandora and all the Na'vi made me want to be one of them. I can't stop thinking about all the things that happened in the film and all of the tears and shivers I got from it.'

'I even contemplate suicide thinking that if I do it I will be rebirthed in a world similar
to Pandora.'

The incredible visual realism of the film has caused viewers to become particularly attached.


Dr. Stephan Quentzel, psychiatrist and Medical Director from the Beth Israel Medical Centre in New York told CNN: 'Virtual life is not real life and it never will be, but this is the pinnacle of what we can build in a virtual presentation so far.

'It has taken the best of our technology to create this virtual world and real life will never be as utopian as it seems onscreen. It makes real life seem more imperfect.'

Others are saying it's just a movie and are using the forums to cope with the depression and connect with other like minded individuals.

However, perhaps they are just feeling upset about all the racist undertones, with "Avatar" being criticized that it allegedly contains racist themes ? that of the white hero saving the primitive natives.

Since being praised critically since the film opened and taking over $1 billion in box office receipts, hundreds of blog posts, newspaper articles, tweets and YouTube videos have said things such as the film is "a fantasy about race told from the point of view of white people" and that it reinforces "the white Messiah fable."

James Cameron, the film's writer and director however, has said the real theme is about respecting each other's differences.
Shit, I'm more depressed Cameron didn't put as much effort into his script and fleshing out his characters that he did in creating that world.
 

ShadowofaAirmen

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Nov 20, 2009
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Tbh i didnt enjoy it all that much so i dont see why they all sad...but then agian im i suprised by the topic? Not at all people have gotten depressed over less things.
 

GodsAndFishes

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Mar 22, 2009
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...Seriously?
Yes it would be nice to go to Pandora (ignoring the inhospitable atmosphere and the 10,000 or so predators that will eat you at the slightest drop of a hat), but when did people stop being able to differentiate between real life and make-believe?
 

rossatdi

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Aug 27, 2008
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Heard about this a week or so ago, just pathetic. Seriously, a step on from twi-tards. At least Twilight is aimed at impresonable teenage girls - one would hope nerds would be a bit more discriminating.
 

Jaqen Hghar

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Feb 11, 2009
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I'm just waiting for some asshole on Fox or something saying that it's the CGI in the movie which does this. CGI... computer graphics.... BAM! Let's blame videogames!

I haven't seen this movie yet, but from what I can tell from trailers and stuff it doesn't seem that special compared to a lot of landscapes and places from games. So I don't see what the big deal is. Maybe more people should start playing games, so that they grow out of being depressed when they cannot go to some make-believe place?
 

RyQ_TMC

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Apr 24, 2009
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Meh, I wasn't expecting deep characters or anything beyond the simple story with a rather anvilicious environmentalist message. The depiction of Pandora is what made Avatar worth seeing and such an enjoyable film.

But this Yahoo story sounds rather weird to me. Sure, Pandora was unlike anything seen on the screen so far (in terms of depiction, not the overall idea), but claiming depression over not being able to experience such a thing is like being depressed that there are no night elves in this world. Or that we will never experience the belle epoque again.

Besides, worlds more complex than Pandora have been present in literature for years, and I have yet to meet a single SF reader who gets emotional over not being able to live in one of those.

An elaborate prank that caught on at the very least and a cry for attention at most.
 

thiosk

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Sep 18, 2008
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I don't know, I get depressed when I realize I will never be able to achieve the rank of Commissar. Commissar Thiosk, HERO OF THE IMPERIUM. I wish war40k fluff was real :(

Demented Teddy said:
Really?!
I would have loved it if they burned the entire planet to get at the unobtainium.
I prefer our cities to that stone age socioty that the Na'vi have.
Hell, why didn't they just genocide the Na'vi with WMD's or something?!
That one time, when you admitted to being a fascist, I just assumed you were being cute. But damn. The na'vi best suited for curing 30somethings from their cheetara fetishes.
 

Crazy_Bird

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Oct 21, 2009
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Sounds like a joke but this might get a serious problem if we finally were to invent the
holo deck (and we are on the way if you ask me).
 

DannyBoy451

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Jan 21, 2009
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This bizzare fandom that's springing up around Avatar is just fucking strange, at best it was a half-descent, overly long action movie with fairly impressive CGI and a derivitive plot.

This just strikes me as a load of fangirls and fanboys squeeing over the Naavi, who themselves were a bunch of one-dimensional mary-sue furries.

Trust me, the amount of collective failure around the Avatar fandom will reach Twilight proportions soon.