Hello, and welcome to another beautiful issue of your favorite movie review blog. This issue reviews the Hollywood blockbuster 'Avatar: Fire and Ash'. As usual we look beyond the fantastic action and thrilling scenery to provide valuable life lessons hidden within this movie. Enjoy reading.
- Feminine Strength
Ronal (Kate Winslet) and Kiri (Sigourney Weaver) struggle to give birth to a child during the war, and Ronal dies from exhaustion after giving birth. This commitment to sustain life by procreation regardless of the situation is one of those things that symbolize the true strength of the feminine gender. Arguably, the Ronal has no choice due to labor pains but Kiri is also committed to see her deliver safely, and becomes tasked with protecting the child.
In reality, women have a deep sense of responsibility towards the divine task of procreation. Like we discussed in our reviews of 'The True Story of the Nun of Monza' and 'Frankenstein', the divine plan to be manifested physically through reincarnation and multiplication, placed the responsibility of bearing children on women. The woman would have to be a weaker vessel to ensure their capability to procreate through pregnancy and childbirth.
However, the commission or promise on the men to not disrespect the rights of the weaker feminine vessels has been corrupted by covetousness and greed. Men now seek to enslave women for their own personal and myopic gains. The misguided men go great lengths to ensure the commoditization of women, sexual enslavement, and gender discrimination which all contribute to ruining the promise of balance. We have to look beyond egoistic and misogynist tendencies to ensure the sustenance of the promise of equality which was expected to sustain the balance of life. See our eBook titled 'The Angels and Demons Feud' for more insight into the promised balance of life.
- Drawn to the Source
Kiri tries to communicate with the divine for help during the war. She pleads for her people to be saved. At first, she finds it impossible to gain the presence of the divine but she's later assisted by the others to gain the attention of the deity Eywa. However, the divine presence remains an indifferent distant giant poker face as Kiri and her companions appear inconsequential to the process of things.
From 'Our Perspective' and the main focus of this website, we are reincarnated versions of ourselves from the beginning. Therefore, ourselves at the beginning are a divine life-form, expressing the totality of our being and spiritually harboring our DNA programming. Therefore, Kiri was only seeking for an audience with her own divine self.
- Return To Source
At first, Kiri is rejected by the divine presence and this helped symbolize the wrongness of merging the physical with the spiritual. From our perspective of reincarnation, a return to source is considered a failure on the human race journey. This is because our divine presence harbour our DNA programming for the proper direction of the world. Therefore, as humanity progresses physically in building the physical plain, our divine DNA programing is released as creative energy, memories, or insight into the development of things that contribute to ascending the cosmos physically. Arts and technology are all derivatives from the divine source energy being transmuted to our physical presence. Hence, the more we build physically, the lesser the divine presence, because what we do physically flows from them spiritually. Therefore, if Kiri and her companions are returning to the source, it means the process has been corrupted and things have not gone as planned.
Therefore, Kiri and her companions who are pleading for divine assistance are considered quite inconsequential to the process of things because the balanced flow of life has already been spoilt by the war.
- Bonded Differences
The differences between the water and fire tribes creates a lack of understanding which results in primitive violent acts against each other. Furthermore, the differences between the entire Na'vi and the human invaders are also expressed as war. War is a violent attack on people or beings and regardless of the armament or technology used in its pursuit, such killings and destruction are barbaric and primitive. It shows a deep lack of mindfulness, understanding, and civility. Like we mentioned in our review of Dune two, advancements in technology is not the same as civilization.
The bonded differences carried by our DNA programing ought to be expressed in civilized or diplomatic ways. We don't have to result to violence if we truly understand who we are and what everyone represents or stands for. Our eBook titled the Angel and Demon Feud provides more explanation on bonded differences.
- Not So Different
Spike learns to breath without the use of an oxygen mask and everyone is shocked by his ability. His ability convenes a message that humans are not so different from the Na'vi. This ability to overcome the atmospheric differences and breath like a Na'vi tribe member drives home the point that with understanding and acceptance we can learn about other beings and peacefully accept or at least tolerate the in-built differences that stem from our programming at the source.
The Avatar is a true Hollywood blockbuster with great scenery and beautiful dialogues. It is definitely a must-watch. Thank you for reading or review of life lessons hidden in its scenes.
You can find streaming sources for this movie on the links below.
IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1757678/
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