Zürcher Nachrichten - Avatar's James Cameron on art, AI and outrage

EUR -
AED 4.233821
AFN 72.629104
ALL 95.991075
AMD 434.073714
ANG 2.063687
AOA 1057.158744
ARS 1604.449029
AUD 1.67734
AWG 2.078002
AZN 1.956585
BAM 1.958849
BBD 2.322314
BDT 141.480201
BGN 1.970567
BHD 0.435213
BIF 3425.834841
BMD 1.152844
BND 1.485099
BOB 7.967366
BRL 5.972307
BSD 1.152995
BTN 107.392832
BWP 15.818552
BYN 3.416488
BYR 22595.748257
BZD 2.318899
CAD 1.603515
CDF 2645.776996
CHF 0.921235
CLF 0.026765
CLP 1056.811394
CNY 7.922371
CNH 7.956949
COP 4234.293354
CRC 536.530408
CUC 1.152844
CUP 30.550374
CVE 110.436885
CZK 24.540137
DJF 205.301725
DKK 7.472166
DOP 69.698177
DZD 153.489499
EGP 62.657017
ERN 17.292664
ETB 180.04945
FJD 2.598281
FKP 0.864816
GBP 0.872732
GEL 3.100899
GGP 0.864816
GHS 12.677677
GIP 0.864816
GMD 84.731883
GNF 10114.74269
GTQ 8.82069
GYD 241.304638
HKD 9.03519
HNL 30.629406
HRK 7.541676
HTG 151.33554
HUF 383.82279
IDR 19609.881523
ILS 3.633909
IMP 0.864816
INR 107.312516
IQD 1510.537914
IRR 1520457.524098
ISK 144.404935
JEP 0.864816
JMD 181.782929
JOD 0.817333
JPY 184.021045
KES 149.996484
KGS 100.814851
KHR 4611.156853
KMF 491.976371
KPW 1037.553462
KRW 1748.334103
KWD 0.356632
KYD 0.960891
KZT 546.378019
LAK 25388.404664
LBP 103252.455374
LKR 363.754599
LRD 211.560924
LSL 19.592669
LTL 3.40405
LVL 0.697344
LYD 7.373476
MAD 10.83276
MDL 20.287488
MGA 4820.481741
MKD 61.719914
MMK 2420.536169
MNT 4118.322511
MOP 9.308548
MRU 45.805299
MUR 54.126351
MVR 17.811475
MWK 1999.13807
MXN 20.679433
MYR 4.656362
MZN 73.73584
NAD 19.592925
NGN 1592.043957
NIO 42.425664
NOK 11.22947
NPR 171.828531
NZD 2.019444
OMR 0.443271
PAB 1.15299
PEN 3.989109
PGK 4.987763
PHP 69.925199
PKR 321.718535
PLN 4.285174
PYG 7458.446663
QAR 4.204107
RON 5.098795
RSD 117.41149
RUB 92.457343
RWF 1684.013713
SAR 4.327653
SBD 9.234254
SCR 16.05308
SDG 692.85901
SEK 10.947756
SGD 1.483659
SHP 0.864932
SLE 28.360267
SLL 24174.581004
SOS 658.868318
SRD 43.0749
STD 23861.549402
STN 24.538191
SVC 10.088702
SYP 127.445693
SZL 19.583782
THB 37.7666
TJS 11.050741
TMT 4.034955
TND 3.399191
TOP 2.775772
TRY 51.292921
TTD 7.822141
TWD 36.863364
TZS 3003.159558
UAH 50.498597
UGX 4325.732615
USD 1.152844
UYU 46.691659
UZS 14008.499192
VES 545.670264
VND 30361.307453
VUV 138.494083
WST 3.194388
XAF 656.976676
XAG 0.016311
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.115619
XCG 2.078025
XDR 0.811002
XOF 656.97953
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.097466
ZAR 19.603391
ZMK 10376.981865
ZMW 22.281583
ZWL 371.215394
  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    21.95

    -0.18%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RELX

    0.2650

    33.495

    +0.79%

  • RIO

    -0.8800

    93.93

    -0.94%

  • RYCEF

    0.5500

    15.64

    +3.52%

  • BCC

    -2.0350

    73.045

    -2.79%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    12.54

    +0.16%

  • BCE

    -0.8670

    24.513

    -3.54%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.2

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    0.6300

    56.62

    +1.11%

  • AZN

    1.9300

    202.66

    +0.95%

  • NGG

    0.5800

    87.42

    +0.66%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    15.19

    +0.39%

  • BTI

    0.4900

    58.38

    +0.84%

  • BP

    0.8350

    47.005

    +1.78%

Avatar's James Cameron on art, AI and outrage
Avatar's James Cameron on art, AI and outrage / Photo: ISABEL INFANTES - AFP

Avatar's James Cameron on art, AI and outrage

From "Terminator" to "Titanic" to "Avatar", director James Cameron has pushed Hollywood's technical wizardry to new limits, but human emotion must always come first, he told AFP.

Text size:

In an era when special effects are much more accessible to filmmakers, and studios are willing to regularly spend hundreds of millions of dollars on blockbusters, it is the artistic talent that makes the difference, Cameron said during a visit to Paris.

Whether he can still strike the balance will be tested as the world finally gets to see "Avatar: The Way of Water" next week -- a sequel to his groundbreaking extraterrestrial epic that has been 13 years in the making.

"Anybody could buy a paintbrush. Not everybody can paint a picture," the Canadian director said. "The technology doesn't create art. Artists create art -- that's important."

It was originally hoped that a first sequel would be out in 2014, but Cameron's gargantuan ambitions led to repeated delays.

He does not come across like the sort of megalomaniac director of Hollywood lore -- describing his sets as "a big hippie commune with a bunch of really great artists."

But these hippies are armed with some powerful computers.

"We had over 3,200 shots, which is a lot to maintain high quality, high quality control," Cameron said.

"We brought in machine deep learning and plugged AI into various stages of the process to assist us... not to take the place of the actors at all but actually to be more truthful to what they had done," he said.

- 'Connection to nature' -

The challenge was managing to draw emotion out of performances that were largely shot in front of green screens, and where most of the scenery and props would only appear later in the effects booths.

"The heart, the soul, the emotion, the conflict, creativity... all that happens first, and then all the technical work begins," he said.

Cameron has always justified the vast sums he has asked of studios -- "Titanic" was both the most expensive and most profitable film of all time following its release in 1997, only to be topped by "Avatar" in 2009 -- and he feels that responsibility "every day".

"I can't be whimsical or impulsive, I have to be very focused and dedicated to creating something that's both pleasing to me artistically, and that I think will be pleasing to the public and commercial enough to make some money," he said.

"It can't be too intellectual, but I can make it satisfying to me by putting in secondary and tertiary levels of meaning that I know are there."

Clearly, much of the impulse of the Avatar series is drawing attention to humanity's impact on nature, but the sequel also focuses on Cameron's aquatic interests.

Long fascinated by the sea, from 1989's "The Abyss" to "Titanic", Cameron became a deep ocean explorer for National Geographic in the 2000s and was the first solo human to visit the deepest underwater trench, the Mariana Trough, in a purpose-built submarine.

He sees "Avatar" as "awakening that thing in all of us, that connection to nature.

"The movie asks you to feel something for nature... It's about maybe feeling a sense of outrage," Cameron said.

"These Navi characters... they don't look like us, they're blue, they've got the ears and tails. But they represent the better angels of our nature.

"Maybe for 10 minutes after the movie's over, you see the world a little differently," he added.

T.Furrer--NZN