James Cameron began making the rounds with “Avatar” footage in June at Cinema Expo, followed by a five-hour mini-conference to woo exhibitors earlier this month at Grauman’s Chinese. But the truest test of his film’s hype would be fulfilling his promise to show 20 minutes of footage to the fans that deified him after films like “Terminator,” “Terminator:2,” “Aliens,” “The Abyss” and, to a lesser extent (at least at Comic-Con), “Titanic.”
Cameron fans have come to expect a certain standard. When the director takes his time to develop something groundbreaking (i.e. the morphing technology in ”The Abyss” and “Terminator 2″), his audience has been richly
rewarded. However, there’s never been this much anticipation and mystery surrounding one of Cameron’s projects, leaving the fans in Hall H to nervously wonder if he can deliver.
After very little preamble from Cameron (he came to the podium to ask, “Are you ready to go to Pandora?”), what ensued was 20-25 minutes of a sci-fi fever dream. Employing what appears to be (at the least) a mix of CGI, performance capture and green screen, the footage should continue to stir very positive buzz.
For the fans, the footage was the equivalent of a cinematic second coming and the panel that followed seemed pretty tame. Moderator/producer Jon Landau oversaw a discussion between Sigourney Weaver, Steven Lang, Zoe Saldana and Cameron about the characters and the “Avatar” filmmaking experience. Cameron gave a shout-out to Peter Jackson, claiming the technological mastery behind Gollum in “Lord of the Rings” was one of his cues to make “Avatar.”
At the end of the panel, Cameron announced that on August 21, he would take over a number of IMAX and 3D theaters to show the public 15 minutes of “Avatar” as a way to compensate those who couldn’t be at the conference.

Director Brian Robbins’ name keeps popping up, and still, all I can think is: “Hey, it’s that middle-of-the-road actor from the ’80s.”
He had a bunch of 1-episode stints on the big, classic shows from that decade like Cagney & Lacey, The Facts of Life, Three’s Company, and Knight Rider before nabbing the part of Eric on Head of the Class. He’s the guy who had the little, black and white pictures in my issues of Teen Beat because the Coreys, the Brat Pack, and other cuties ruled the color spreads. But he’s actually had a lot more success directing, mainly in that uber-fluffy sort of way. These days, he’s got a directorial man-crush on Eddie Murphy and the projects just keep coming.
They brought us Norbit, we’re about to get a little Starship Dave, and now Variety reports that they will team up for a DreamWorks comedy called A Thousand Words. To give the duo credit, it’s an interesting idea: the movie will focus on “a glib man who finds out that he has only 1,000 words left to speak before he dies.” Steve Koren, the guy who penned Click, wrote the screenplay.
This being said, it all depends on execution, and it doesn’t help that they want to rush this before the strike. But that might just be a little tricky – Murphy has a slew of projects stacking up, from Nowhereland to Fantasy Island. But get ready, sports fans! At some point, we’ll probably have yet another battle between the critics and those who love the world of Robbins!
| Directed by Duncan Jones (son of David Bowie) and starring Sam Rockwell.
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