A Response to Avatar, the Oldest Story in the World
I saw the movie that is taking the world by storm the other night, and it has taken me several days to have some words to be able to describe my experience.
First let me say that I am not so much a popular movie buff. I do like some movies that happen to have fallen in the popular range, such as Star Wars and Lord of the Rings…those stories carry that mythical quality that appeals to my Hero’s Journey mentality. But most of the time, I will not see movies that most others see; I usually find them to be hollow. I certainly don’t attend first run movies in the theater unless there is some very good reason to see it on the big screen.
Avatar was one such occasion. A bit of a geek for visuals (I am an artist, after all), I wanted to see the new technology every one is talking about. Similar to when Star Wars first broke into the movie industry, Avatar is carrying a whole new ability to enter the film as if we are part of it, and this is due in no small part to the new computer and filming technologies used to make the movie.
It satisfied in that respect, totally. Avatar was eye candy from the beginning, and so the artist geek in me that totally gets off on the visuals was delighted. Completely. Very.
And now that I have acknowledged that, I want to deepen the conversation for a moment to the larger philosophical, ecological, and spiritual implications of the film.
Other innate aspects of me are my love of universal themes, my love of humanity, my love of the earth, and my innate awareness of my connection with All Creation. This movie appealed to those aspects, as well.
It interested me that the geek side of me was completely revved up…my geekiness seems to live in my head, at least that is where I feel it. It is a fascination with the pretty things, the distractions, the amazement at what we can create with our brilliant, curious minds. But the story, and the larger impact, I felt deep in my being. My experience was of being stretched like taffy from top of my head to the core of the earth, where I choose to ground my energy to the planet.
And perhaps that was intended on the part of the moviemakers. So much of the time I see humanity hanging out in our heads (what I call “the Penthouse”), a place up high with a fabulous view, where we don’t have to interact with the messy stuff that lay at our feet (the stuff of being human). We can hide in the penthouse, being fascinated with our mental constructs, believing we have control of our lives, inventing all kinds of brilliant (if flawed) philosophies and get rich quick schemes, and keeping ourselves “safe” from connecting with each other.
I see many using their bodies as a kind of walking prop that carries the penthouse around, not really grounding and connecting with the earth in the deep way we were intended to (and our ancestors used to do). I have done it, too, and feel I am rescuing myself now from the edge of making that way of life a habit for me. I have made no secret in the years I have been writing publicly that I feel this is a kind of madness, a sickness that has taken humanity away from our feelings of connection with the earth and with each other, resulting in disastrous consequences.
Seeing Avatar left me with a sense of fullness, but not over the top fullness. It was a fullness that my entire body, my entire Being could hold. It was a, “Wow, that was an amazing feat of technology, and hmmmmm, yes, that story is so familiar to my heart and belly, and therefore not a big deal”. I know for some the story will be a new awareness, and perhaps this is even one reason many are so deeply affected by the film. Perhaps the use of the new technology to appeal to both hemispheres of our brain, coupled with the deep and ancient nature of the story, was a guarantee that the messages would get through, in one way or another. For this I am glad.
An utterly visually beautiful film, an eye popping experience of technology….but what really felt important to ME was how old the story is…to me it is the ages-old tale of how we struggle in ourselves to feel as if we are in control of our own destinies, denying our connection to Source and All Creation, the web of life.
Do we flail about our whole lives, building walls around us, living in a box of our own creation, resisting the attempts of the universe to break though our self-imposed barriers? Or do we let the Light in; do we take the risk and surrender to love, opening to the inherent goodness of the universe and allowing ourselves to experience our connection with the All That Is? And what will be the consequences of those choices? To me, that is the essential message of this film.
The story in Avatar is as old as the hills….perhaps the most ancient story there is. I pray that each of us find our way back to the awareness and experience that we are all connected in this Web of Life. Therein lies our salvation.




Thank you for this post, Licia. I left the theatre after my first viewing completely in tune and engaged with my desire to a) make a difference, b) leave a legacy, and c) be a part of something larger than myself that fulfills and satisfies the basic human need for connectedness. I have now seen it in 3D, 3D iMax, and 2D with open captions.
I live in the middle of nowhere, so 3D viewing is not an option for me, unless I want to drive 3 hours to do so. But I saw the film and it resonated deeply with me too. It’s also my reality, the love of Nature over anything man-made, so I didn’t leave the theatre vowing to make any changes. I left the theatre content that main-stream Hollywood had tapped into that channel so beautifully, and happy to have been able to enjoy it. I hope it makes people think. I hope it spurs them to action. I hope to see it again, even if it can’t be in 3D.
http://starkravingzen.blogspot.com/
I THOUGHT i WAS GOING TO FLY!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I felt so full of everything positive and good and important on a Soul level. And then, I noticed people dashing out as the credits rolled. My 2 teen aged boys and I sat silently drinking it in until there was silence and we were alone.
Do you realize?? Can you imagine how hard it was to climb back into my wheelchair?? Just about as hard as it was for Jake to return to Earth time after time.
YES, ancient story but in a more cosmic sense. The belief system woven into it went beyond the “typical” reincarnation stuff and the conflict went sooooooo much deeper!!! For someone interested in Neuroplasticity, it left me wanting more!! Then again, my personal challenges are neurological so, I guess that might be a given.
In all, the immense feeling of LOVE I took with me was unparalleled to anything I’ve ever experienced in a theater.
That was the most palpable environment I have ever experienced in a movie theater. I was completely involved in the story and thunderstruck by the visuals. It is worth the price to see at an IMAX theater in 3D. It took me the better part of an hour to feel completely in my body again!
Great. Moving. Breath taking. Adventerous. Skin tingling. Avatar
Kristy, drive the 3 hours to see it in 3D.
Thoughtful post: The Penthouse is an excellent metaphor, and you clearly describe the choice well at the end of your post. Great graphics, fun adventure, big, glad Hollywood plays with mythic themes like this. Would rather a mythic theme like this than the tired individuals-oppressing-each-other tales, but once they went as far as biosphere+indigenous vs. power-over+industrial, i sorely and painfully wish they went the short steps farther, including:
-hero arises within indigenous rather than requiring industrial savior.
-fulfillers of indigenous myths arise within indibgenous, not the same old James Fenimore Cooper inductee fantasy which is a colonial narrative.
-heroism more a group decision, exposing beautiful group processing, solidarity, and cohesion.
-female lead actually leads, not just a prize for protagonist.
-yecch to maintaining the illusory and totally Taker split between body and spirit, even within an imagined embodied spirituality.
-yecch to maintenance of pyramidal power-over exploitation of animals even during exposition of a communicative device that would’ve made animal mutuality and voluntarity natural to show.
-believable conversions of characters’ views.
-direct connections between organisms WITHOUT emergent intelligence and cooperation? WITHOUT planetary resistance once resistance began?
-Biospheric cloud-computing in a wish-fulfillment fantasy WITHOUT conscious access when plugged in?
Going only partway like they did made me roll my eyes and, in deep disappointment, long for a more thorough, imaginative, and useful fantasy. Why spend so many millions of dollars and never really leave The Penthouse?
I agree, Kristy! The 3D experience was a whole different level of immersion.
xo
licia
Wow, Gina…I had no idea you ambulate with a wheelchair….this story must have held some poignant space for you in a very specific way! If you’d like to share any thoughts or AHAs, I would love to listen to them.
In terms of the “ancient story, but in a more cosmic sense”, I would say that my feeling of an indigenous way of life is that the sense of cosmic is ingrained in the daily life and activities, in a very practical way. That’s WAY ancient in my book!
I will have to see this movie again….there is so much there in terms of information, symbolism, mythology (personal and collective), and pure heart/soul recognition that I need another exposure to feel I am integrating what’s important!
Thank you for reading and commenting! Please continue!
xoxo
licia
Zot,
Thanks so much for your thoughts….as I mentioned to you personally, you read my mind about some of where I am going next with my own thoughts about Avatar.
I share your gratitude about this movie being made in comparison to so many others which feel like meaningless and empty drivel, attempts to market to a demographic to make the bucks rather than tell a meaningful story that will uplift or make people think. I struggle with this, but I suppose that the All That Is is truly all that is!
Keep an eye out for my next post that agrees with much of what you have stated above as well as takes it in some other directions….
Blessings,
licia