Avatar

Your rating

Average rating

(33 votes)

Add your review

In order to be credited for your review and save all your ratings, please create a free account and log in. Premium membership is also available for just $12 a year, which removes all adverts, prioritises your submissions, and more.

Avatar (2009) is the first in what may be several movies that combine James Cameron's passions with a little Pocahontas and big action! Jake Sully is a Human soldier who is trained to take over when his brother dies to drive a Na'vi body and represent Human interests on a moon of planet Pandora. The humans are there primarily to get Unobtainium from under the spiritual center (a titanic tree) at any cost. There, he meets Neytiri, a large blue catlike humanoid who earns his trust and love. Together, they rally the other aliens and assorted creatures to fight for their world and drive the Humans back in this science fiction action drama! Can Jake rally and fight, gain love, and be a hero? Watch and be amazed.

Erik M.

It is a good movie it has geography in this movie and good for the kids it is awesome

Continuity mistake: When Jake first gets into the "syncing" device and he says, "This is cool," Grace's hands are already on his leg. In the next shot she reaches for his legs, where he replies, "Don't, I got this."

More mistakes in Avatar

Jake Sully: Look, at first it was just orders. And then, everything changed. Okay, I fell in love. I fell in love with the, with the forest, with the Omaticaya people, with you. With you.

More quotes from Avatar
Avatar trivia picture

Trivia: In the final battle sequence, Neytiri has a white handprint on her chest as part of her warpaint. It has five fingers, indicating that it is Jake's hand - Avatars have five fingers while Na'vi only have four.

More trivia for Avatar

Question: There is a scene where Parker is telling Grace that the piece of ore he is holding, called "unobtainium", is why they are on Pandora. This same ore was used in the 2003 movie, "The Core", to build the manned drilling machine to bore through Earth, to the core. Was the use of the same ore name in Avatar, done with permission from the earlier movie? Or was it a mistake?

Big John

Chosen answer: The Core didn't originate the name - it's been used since the 50's and even has its own Wikipedia article at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unobtainium. There it's described as "any fictional, extremely rare, costly, or impossible material, or (less commonly) device needed to fulfill a given design for a given application."

Jon Sandys

More questions & answers from Avatar

Join the mailing list

Separate from membership, this is to get updates about mistakes in recent releases. Addresses are not passed on to any third party, and are used solely for direct communication from this site. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Check out the mistake & trivia books, on Kindle and in paperback.