All Miles Quaritch Best Moments/Fight Scenes in 4K IMAX Hope You Enjoyed Wanna Know How I Get My Footage 👉: My Patreon / xhbunny #quaritch #avatar #avatarthewayofwater #4k #imax
Quarritch Shows signs of PTSD every time he sees Neytiri's Arrows. I love the first dialogue between them. It's kind of extraordinary when he calls her "Mrs Sully".
He acknowledges her as a person and speaks to her as one. Stark contrast to the original human who didn't even speak to her. Saw her as just about the same as another animal. Much to his undoing because he didn't respect her combat ability as a sapient being.
@@EmptyMan000 Well, it's it a bit more complicated than that on his end. He is objectively not the man she killed. And he's aware of it to an extent, but still can't break his conditioning completely. Because what else is there for him if he does? Nothing. He has to fake it until he makes it using the memories as a crutch. But he's still not, and never will be, that angry little ape she killed. They can call him by his name all they want, give him his rank, give him his tattoo. Not gonna change that he's a different person. Literally.
6:17 I’ve always loved how this bit of mocap translated onto the screen. Seeing Quaritch out of breath isn’t just realistic, but it also ties into the scene by showing that he’s exhausted from trying to find Jake and he realizes he needs to change his hunting methods.
They were a bunch of barely more than children only conscious for months, given weapons with the expectation that just having memories and gaslighting them into thinking they're elite soldiers because of them was enough and still adjusting to life when it was taken away for most of them. Them being as efficient as the RDA expected them to be wasn't realistically possible but the corporation didn't seem to care. Only one of them was able to actually land a shot.
@@Faliat The avatar program was stated to be extremely expensive thats why Sully was brought in the first movie as a replacement of his brother, I really doubt Quarich and his team didnt keep their military skills, they had time after all to get acustomed to their new bodies is not like they send them to a mission just after waking up, considering how expensive were those custom made avatar bodies. They were "nerfed" so to speak so they didnt stomp the good guys, heck Quarich should be a beast in CQC compared to Sully yet he manages to lose in the final fight
I really liked Quaritch in the first film but damn, they really improved his character in this one. His character has a lot more layers. In a way, he’s quite similar to Jake; both Jake and Quaritch have a father-side and a militant-side and those sides kinda clash with each other. I’m curious to see where they will take Quaritch over the coming three films. I wonder whether he will turn into a good guy in the last film, I personally don’t think so.
I like to think he would be like Agent Smith in the Matrix films being freed from the system that controls him and now just wants to destroy both the good and the bad guys
He probably will realize that fighting the Na’vi is pointless for him, considering that earth is already fucked up for him to return to, and now that his cloned “son” version of himself still wandering around Pandoran jungle will be the meaning he started to fight humans
In the end, he is the hero of his race: their world is dying. If they want to survive, they need Pandora's resources to build spaceships advanced enough to take them to terrestrial planets, and no matter what…
It’s great that Cameron took the most one dimensional, cartoonish character from the first movie and made him more complex while still being every bit as badass
But in this case his return actually makes sense and turns out to be a way to make his development way more interesting for this and for the next movies yet to come (And unlike star wars, the reason is actually explained)
Personally I'd be scared if he managed to become toruk makto. Imagine the blow that would be to the Navi and their culture. A dark toruk makto that arrives to bring a time of great sorrow instead of leading them out of it.
I mean technically speaking, we could end Pandora real quick. We dont need anything from that planet other than the ore. Its just that we are nice about it, at the moment. Just hit every insurgent gathering with shells from orbit. All you need is a couple of Tungsten rods and a magnetic accelerator. Or you know just use good ol fashioned batteries.
@@CrestOfArtorias don’t even need that, apparently all their equipment is built on planet using 3d printers. They could easily build ballistic missiles and end every village in defiance with a month without any losses
Prediction for the third film: Quaritch will join the fire Na’vi and learn their ways. Then lead an attack against The Metkayina. It will be a battle between Fire and Water.
I'd assume maybe since quaritch failed the RDA a second time that there would be consequences and they just discard him and wainfleet so they go off and do their own thing and come across the ash people and join them and attack jack and the humans kind of sit back and watch and let it happen so they ain't gotta deal with them if they take themselves out while the humans keep building bridgehead where I assume maybe that's where the big battle happens where quaritch might have a change of heart i still need part 3 for quaritch to get a win the villains need at least 1 win and in 4 like when the studio got the script for part 4 they were stunned and amazed how crazy it was gonna be and 5 would be going to earth
In the end, he is the hero of his race: their world is dying. If they want to survive, they need Pandora's resources to build spaceships advanced enough to take them to terrestrial planets, and no matter what…
Crazy, I didn’t think of Quaritch as anything but just another military villain in the first movie. The second movie added a whole new dimension to his character, making him more interesting.
@@allegrokater, In the last movie, he was just doing the job he was trained to do. In the second one, he’s doing that and also going out for revenge against Jake so it’s personal.
the key point about Quaritch in this film is that he starts to take the steps that Jake has taken before and starts to grow a conscience. I really liked his role in this one.
Would you also root for Nazis in ww2 because they were "human"? What a sad and corrupt mind you must have to root for something just because they are "human"
This is what I love about the Avatar sequel is that even villains have a heart and can be humans at times. Quaritch still cares about his son (Miles), so maybe someday he'll understand why the Resources Development Administration (RDA) is corrupt and only cares about garnering materials that benefit them, rather than protecting indigenous living beings on Pandora.
@@bartegexe8182 They *are* corrupt tho. The RDA does not give a shit about whether Humanity lives or dies, because they have a near-monopoly on travel to and from Pandora. They only care about their profits and nothing else.
The RDA were honestly trying to save the tribes, though are painted badly by the bad administration of the director in charge of it, and his oversight of navi cultural sites. And by the military response of Quaritch when the tribes got more out of hand, especially under Sully
6:44 He might be the main villain, but he wasn't wrong about Sully suddenly switching sides and getting people killed and then continuing to jeopardize the safety of others by hiding away in this movie.
Quaritch and Kiri are like the perfect foils for one another. The way their arcs and beings contrast one another's is just too scrumptious to pass up analyzing. The Na'vi-hating Miles Quaritch was reincarnated through scientific means as a 'recombinant', a method grounded in reality. Kiri is the seeming reincarnation of the Na'vi-loving Grace Augustine, via Eywa's mysterious methods. Both were humans in their prior lives, and both were reborn as Na'vi hybrids. Quaritch was a man of great military talent and efficiency whose deeds earned him a second chance at life in the eyes of humanity -- not only that, but a return to the planet where he died for an opportunity to amend the defeat he suffered in his last life. Grace cared a massive deal for the Na'vi, and ultimately gave her life for them. Kiri was brought into being with none being aware of the hows or whys in regards to it (her birth is clearly a nod to the sacred concepts of virgin births from biblical texts), and most signs that hover around her, namely her startlingly effective affinity for Pandora's nature in all its forms, seem to indicate she's destined for greatness. Quaritch tries to connect with Spider, the son he never knew, and has only some success in the effort to bond with him under the hopes that he might re-intigrate with not just Quaritch himself, but his fellow humans... and as well the ulterior motive of learning more about the Na'vi and Jake for the purposes of overcoming both. He fails in the end due to his own faults and acts of cruelty, and Spider returns to the family he knew all his life, though not before going out of his way to save his birth parent one final time. Kiri holds a particularly close relationship with Spider, far more so than the other members of her family, and it is in part her truly _unconditional_ love for her brother that spurs him to come back to her and their family. The film might not be anything too extravagant when it comes to complexity, but hot darn do I love me some special subtle narration in works like these. You never know what you might find, if you look in the spots many might pass over or take for granted. Came lookin' for copper, and found me some gold!
When Quaritch tamed that banshee, that was my favorite moment. Not only did he survived, but his team was so supportive. Can't remember when that happened to a main character🤔 Plot twist: He may have named his banshee cupcake🧁
Quaritch is the best part of both movies. He's cruel both because he gets paid to be so, and because its often the only thing people listen to when reason doesn't work. He's so incredibly good at his job and he knows it his confidence and swag is so infectious. I actually feel at times Quaritch would've made a good father he's responsible, keen and alert but he's not completely against having fun even in banter.
its very nice to say that the colonel is more developed than in the previous film where he was just a poorly-written reactive leader now he seems to be more of a actual leader with a character with layers
I like how in this movie they constantly remind us that it's technically not THE Quaritch. Sure he has Quaritch's memories and mannerisms and face and everything... But by all accounts, he's a Navi hybrid clone of Quaritch. And they address this. Hell, even Quaritch himself believes this. How he mentions to Spider "I am not your father." and how human Quaritch is always seen as a separate individual almost. It's sort of a way I haven't seen been addressed in movies previously, and I think it's ingenious, as it is logical thinking after all.
*Avatar 3 will go like this* 1. Quaritch seeks an alliance with the Ash People. 2. He is imprisoned by them due to being a clone and not a true Na'Vi. 3. The Ash People make an enemy out of him. 4. Brief team-up with Jake Sully in order to defeat the chief. 5. Quaritch decides that he will fight the chief. 6. He wins, becomes the new chief. 7. Launches a war on the Sully Clan.
James Cameron: We have a badass antagonist for the human side, how do we make him more badass? Writer: Let's have him punch a dinosaur! James: promote that guy!
01:44 I just realized how, since Quaritch is still kind of an old man, he had to ask Lyle to put sound on the recording because he's not very good with newer tech and gadgets haha!
Idk about that, it does a lot of things differently. It has strengths the first movie didnt, but the first movie was a lot cleaner and concise. It was basically a masterpiece. Also that final battle still has nothing else like it.
above average for a sequel but not as good as the original. Dialogue seemed plain in #2 with less character development. but there were moments in #2 that really engaged my emotions and after watching overall left me feeling satisfied. The first avatar had me just enamored all the way thru and had me dying for more when it ended
Please writers don't kill off Quaritch! If he does redeems himself with his son in the upcoming movies, don't have him sacrificing himself for the greater good. It's such a cliché and has been done over and over again in other movies. Just give Quaritch a hard road ahead of him, because he's no longer human and not a true Navi.
I actually respect and like Quaratich a lot in these movies, he is a man looking out for his own kind and troops, he shows he cares about them a lot like a good CO and does what he thinks is best for them. He went after Jake so much because sulley technically was a traitor, he betrayed his own army and all of mankind because he had a crush on some blue alien. So there is a reason behind all of this.
What i liked about this movie is avatars (or hybrid navis) doing human stuff, you know acting like humans, soldiering like humans, face gestures and all that, I'm probably not the only one who likes rda navis more than jake or original navis (they feel more civilized versions of navis)