Kitsuna10060 said:
TheSchaef said:
Again, you guys miss the boat.
AVATAR.
Like Star Wars, like Citizen Kane, a clear demarcation line between the movies that came before it and the movies that came (or will come) after it.
but has Avatar had the same CULTURAL impact as it has had on the technical realm?
i kinda have to say no, and if you'll recall Star Wars didn't just 'change how movies' where made, the culture changed to some degree to
The cultural impact of Star Wars was not immediate, and keep in mind that at the time, Lucas marketed the crap out of Empire - a plot he hatched when he secured the merchandising rights from Fox - and which had been a complete mystery to people 30 years ago.
Today, everything is merchandised to death (the crux of the Yogurt joke in Spaceballs), and it's entirely possible that the mythos of Avatar will be lost in white noise. But it IS the highest-grossing movie of all time (not adjusted for inflation; that honor still falls to Gone With the Wind), so it's definitely something that had an impact in the short term. time will tell if it has an impact in the long term, but it's a different game now than it was then. I'm not sure anything can recapture that.
Of the ones mentioned herein, LotR, Harry Potter and prequel Star Wars are all movies built on established properties; they had a built-in fan base before a single frame was shot, something which neither original Star Wars nor Avatar had going for it. The Matrix is the only "original story" candidate, and like I said, the cinematic impact was significant but not world-altering, and the cultural impact is largely limited to the first movie, and not really much deeper than the likes of Fight Club or Spider Man.
If we throw out Avatar, the closest thing in my mind is Toy Story. I don't think it changed live cinema the way Star Wars or Citizen Kane did, but it changed animation in the way Disney used to do in the 30s and 40s, it put full-length computer animation on the map, Pixar caught fire, and everyone knows Woody and Buzz. I don't think it's apples to apples but Toy Story is my silver medal choice.