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Sunday, January 31, 2010

Funny Money: Unusual and Fascinating Currency


"QUANTUM SHOT" #48
Link - article by Simon Rose and Avi Abrams



Graphical Marvels, Forged Notes, Hyperinflation "Riches" and Propaganda Bed Sheets

"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value - zero." (Voltaire, 1694-1778)

World's historical bank notes often provide the clearest and unique view on country's political and design sensibilities. For example, old Russian Empire bank notes were pretty elaborate and some of the largest in size:


(1912 Russian empire banknote with Czar Peter the Great)

German crisis money around 1921 "Serienscheine" (series notes) are especially fascinating from a graphical viewpoint - see more here:




(images via)

Imaginary (thank God!) Bank of Cthulhu:


(image via)

Polish bank notes with Frédéric Chopin - an epitomy of culture:


(image via)

A humble squirrel is featured on bank notes from Belarus:




The world’s oldest known banknote

The earliest recorded use of paper money is in China around 800 AD, although the Chinese abandoned paper money in the mid fifteenth century. This Chinese Kuan note is the world’s oldest known banknote, from around 1380.


(left: the Kuan note; right: painting from this period, by Ni Zan - images via 1, 2)

European paper money as we would recognize it today seems to have its origins in the seventeenth century. In 1633, English goldsmith certificates were being used as receipts for customers to reclaim deposits, and also as evidence of someone’s ability to pay. By 1660, these receipts were recognized as a convenient alternative to handling coins or bullion, a forerunner perhaps of the banknote in England.

The Bank of Sweden was founded in 1656, granting loans and mortgages, issuing bills of credit and taking deposits. In 1661, it was the first chartered bank in Europe to issues notes. This hundred Daler note was issued in 1666:


(image via)

In the UK, the Bank of England has been issuing banknotes since 1694, but didn’t have a legal monopoly until 1921. Decimal currency was introduced in the UK on February 15, 1971. The fifty pence coin, one of the first new ones issued, is very familiar to the people of Britain since its introduction almost four decades ago, but still seems odd to the outsider with its heptagonal shape (below, left).


(images via 1, 2)

The British public, however, had seen a multi-sided coin before. The threepenny bit was introduced in the mid-thirties, although a threepenny coin had been minted in silver since 1547. The twelve-sided version would remain in circulation until 1970 (above, middle). However, the new decimal system wasn’t without its oddities. The half penny coin enjoyed a surprisingly long and increasingly pointless existence, before it was withdrawn from the monetary system in 1984 (above, right).

Scotland has a number of distinct institutions, quite separate to England and Wales, and this includes currency. Scottish banknotes are recognized as currency in Scotland and usually in other parts of the UK, but may be refused by people in stores who are unfamiliar with such notes. However, they are of the same value as English notes and financial institutions will accept them without question:



Banknotes issued by Northern Ireland banks have similar status to Scottish ones and can technically be used anywhere in the UK. However, they are rarely seen outside Northern Ireland and are thus equally rarely accepted in England and Wales, although once again, financial institutions will readily take them. This limited edition banknote from 2006 commemorates the soccer legend George Best:

o

The Channel Islands and the Isle of Man are somewhat confusingly possessions of the British Crown, but not part of the UK. Consequently, although they have currency unions with London, they each issue their own banknotes. However, unlike Scotland and Northern Ireland, these notes cannot be used in the UK.

This Isle of Man banknote displays the island’s famous three-legged symbol:



These examples are from the islands of Jersey and Guernsey, located off the northern coast of France:



(images via)

The Channel Islands were the only British territory to be occupied by Germany during World War Two. These are pictures of currency used during the German Occupation. The top ones were used by the people of Guernsey, while the lower one shows the military currency used by German army:



Also from World War Two, here is this great example of forged currency. Operation Bernhard was the German plan to destabilize the British economy by printing phoney banknotes in various denominations. In 1943, 500,000 notes were produced, which were planned to be parachuted over Britain. The Allies retrieved most the notes at the end of the war, but forgeries still occasionally appeared for several years after 1945:



Remnants of a once mighty empire, there are fourteen British Overseas Territories which all issue their own currencies, including Gibraltar, Saint Helena and the Falkland Islands, none of which are legal in the UK or outside the territories of origin (below, left):


(images via)

In 1936, King Edward VIII abdicated the throne of England and was never actually crowned. As a result, coins bearing his head are collectors items. In the 1930’s, the British Empire spanned the globe and here’s a sovereign minted for the new king in Canada (above, right)

Also from North America, no article on currency would be complete without some mention of banknotes issues by the Confederate States of America during the Civil War. Here are two examples of Confederate twenty dollar bills from 1861 and 1864:



(images via)

There was of course another independent country in the southern part of what is now the United States a few decades earlier. Here’s some money issued by the Republic of Texas in the 1830’s:


(image via)

Although the shape of the British three penny and fifty pence coins may seem somewhat odd to non-UK residents, how about these coins minted in Zambia in honour of the 2000 Sydney Olympics? -


(image via)

Also in Africa, the economic troubles of Zimbabwe in recent years have been reflected in the currency, such as this ten million dollar banknote from 2008:



However, it has been exceed by far with this one (click to enlarge):


(image via)

Zimbabwe is not the first country to experience such hyperinflation, of course. After the First World War, Germany endured a severe economic crisis. In 1914, the highest denomination German note was for 1000 Mark, which was worth approximately 238 US dollars or 50 British pounds. In early 1922, the government issued 10,000 Mark notes, but by February 1923, Germans were using banknotes in denominations of 100,000 and 1 million Marks. Notes reached 50 million in July, 10 billion in September and 100 trillion when hyperinflation peaked in October 1923.

Just to give you an idea of what this meant for the average German, on November 1 1923, you could buy a loaf of bread for a measly three billion or truly splash out and get three pounds of meat for 100 billion. By November 15, 100 billion would get you two glasses of beer, not really enough to make you forget your troubles, while that loaf would now cost you 80 billion.

When it was all over, these huge banknotes were worth around 5 pounds or 24 US dollars. On November 15, the government introduced a new currency, one unit of which was worth a trillion of the old Marks. Prices eventually stabilized, but most of the population had nevertheless seen their wealth vanish.

5 Million Mark Note issued in Dresden on August 21, 1923:



Ten million:



50 million:



100 million:



500 million:



100 trillion, Nov. 3 1923 - see this site for more:


(image via 1, 2, 3, 4)

Later in the interwar period Germany got a new government who’s head actually resisted having his own head on the national currency. However, with victory seemingly within sight, Adolf Hitler decided that his head should indeed adorn the country’s money, after the anticipated final triumph. This design for a five reichsmark coin was struck in 1942, but never issued:



The following banknotes were created by the Nazis for the infamous concentration camp, at Theresienstadt in what is now the Czech republic. The camp served as a showpiece for the Nazis to demonstrate to the Red Cross and other agencies how Jewish prisoners were being well treated, took part in cultural events and had schools for their children. In reality, over 30,000 people died in Theresienstadt and almost 90,000 were sent from there to extermination camps further east. These 10 and 20 Kronen notes were part of the propaganda ploy presented to the Red Cross, but were simply papers with no value and never used:



Hitler’s fellow dictator, Josef Stalin, got his head on the 100 Kronen coin in Soviet occupied Czechoslovakia 1949:



In Asia, World War Two resulted in what turned out to be temporary occupation currency in a number of different countries. This ten military yen note 1941 was issued during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong:



(image via)

This one is from the Philippines occupation:



This 1944 100 Yuan banknote circulated in the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo, better known as Manchuria, in north west China:



And finally, also from Asia, probably the largest banknote in the world - 16cm(6.3in) by 16cm(6.3in) - issued in Thailand in 1987:



Bank note origami from a Japanese artist Hasegawa Yosuke - see his site for more:


(image credit: Hasegawa Yosuke)

For richer, or for poorer... collecting money is what most people do, or strive to do, anyway:



CONTINUE TO "WORLD'S MOST CURIOUS EPHEMERA" ->

Simon Rose is the author of science fiction and fantasy novels for children, including The Alchemist's Portrait, The Sorcerer's Letterbox, The Clone Conspiracy, The Emerald Curse, The Heretic's Tomb and The Doomsday Mask.

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COMMENTS::

21 Comments:

Blogger JJ said...

I love currency. Especially this:

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?v=wall&gid=6850966739

___  
Anonymous Bronson said...

loving your work, your posts never fail to entertain.

___  
Blogger Carl said...

the "100 million" Reichsmark note actually is worth 100 BILLION.

___  
Anonymous JamesGrassick said...

Another good post :) Surprised not to see any shinplasters though http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinplaster

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Anonymous Charlie Brown said...

You should mention the world recorder Hyperinflation "Riches", the Hungarian 100 million billion (100 quintillion) Pengo. Yes, that's a 1 with 20 zeros after it.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/33/HUP_100MB_1946_obverse.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peng%C5%91

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Anonymous Paulitto said...

To DarkRoastedBlend.
Check that :
http://www.adme.ru/sberbank/kalendar-sberbanka-sdelali-iz-elementov-banknot-fastway-103341/
russian bank has released creative and weird 2010 calendar made of elements of money...

___  
Blogger Eric said...

I second Carl. A milliarden is one billion, millionen is one million.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Well done; many thanks.

Typo: Edward VII should read Edward VIII.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Edward VIII became King instantly and absolutely upon the death of George V. After the death of a monarch, a period of respect for the dead monarch of approximately one year passes before the celebratory coronation ceremony (or "crowning") of the successor. Edward VIII abdicated before the end of the period of respect had passed, and thus he had not been "crowned" at the time of his abdication. Edward VIII was actually King from January 20, 1936, to December 11, 1936 (the effective date of his abdication). The mere fact that there was no coronation is of trivial significance. The short duration of his reign has much greater significance as to the rarity and value of "his" money.

___  
Blogger Hurricane567 said...

Don't forget notes issued by His Imperial Majesty Emperor Norton I, Emperor of the United States and Protector of Mexico.

___  
Blogger darko said...

World record note:

I dont believe you didnt published
a photo of 500 000 000 000 dinars note (national bank of Yugoslavia), during hyperinflatio in 1993. here it is:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/sr/0/0d/500milijardi.jpg

___  
Anonymous Charlie Brown said...

@darko: That Dinar note is far from being world record... Even the posted Zimbabwean note has 3 more zeros, and that's not WR either.
In terms of zeros, no currency managed to "beat" the infamous Hungarian Pengő I posted above.

___  
Blogger benjamin said...

Czechoslovakia was not occupied by Soviets in 1949. It was back then only the Soviet satellite. The occupation happened in 1968.

INVITATION
See my vintage picture blogs:
http://mynewoldpictures.blogspot.com
http://mypetarts.blogspot.com
http://mynaturepictures-benmil.blogspot.com

___  
Blogger david said...

One of the reasons the 50 pence and twenty pence coins are multi-sided is so that blind people could tell which coins they were holding. A square pound coin was trialled in Jersey but was rejected in favour if a thick, round one, due to vending machine considerations.

Good article!

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

You should also mention Cook islands: scallop shaped 1 dollar, triangular 2 dollars and dodecagonal 5 dollars and one shouldn't forget the banknotes for 3 (!) dollars.

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Blogger xwcg said...

that "100 million" reichsmark bill is actually 100 Billion.

___  
Blogger Daniel said...

fortunately i own one note showed here. its the first one, the Russian Empire bank note. its an A4 sized paper which i inherited from my grandmother. also i own lots of hungarian pengő, also millions. so practically i'm a multi millionaire :)))

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Anonymous kernel.net said...

a hundred trillion dollars... it's incredible how poor zimbaue is... there's lots of corruption, and they have an acting dictator, I think his name is mugabe. The guy is completely mad, he forced the population of an entire city to move in the desert and starve or something like that... that's just so bad...

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Polish 20 zlotys with Chopin it's limited edition for collectors.

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Blogger Emily said...

Very neat. I was surprised not to see Canadian money on it near the end, though. It does represent one of the most colourful currencies.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/76/Canadian_bills2.jpg

___  
Anonymous Chris said...

The "100 Million" Reichsmark note is actually 100,000,000,000 Reichsmarks. The confusion here is that the names of numbers begin to differ between North America and Europe after the millions. In North America a thousand million is a billion and in Europe a thousand million is a milliard.

___  

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    Read more

  • Deathworld is available as a free e-book from:
    http://manybooks.net
    Apparently the copyright was not renewed.
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  • I went and saw Avatar last night: a gorgeous visual feast and I was
    impressed by how seamlessly the 3D elements cohered into the
    narrative: technology that instantly becomes intuitive is usually technology that will augment one's experience immeasurably (think of
    how intuitive the internet is, and how quickly we've come to
    assimilate it into our daily experience!).

    I think a polarised film over a television screen will be the next
    step - we'll lose the hokey glasses because the screen 'wears' it forus.

    As a writer, Cameron is an excellent director. 'Come to papa'. REALLY, James? Very chiched and banal dialogue. I nearly burst out laughing a few times. I support the simple plot as outlined in the post, but the dialogue borders on the ridiculous.

    And army robots with combat knives?! Where's a corncob pipe for when the day's pillaging is done?

    Just my 2c.


    Anyhoo, cheery Christmas!
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  • H. Beam Piper's "Little Fuzzy" was brought to mind. Does a native alien race have the right to control the resources of its own planet over the machinations of a greedy human corporation? ("Little Fuzzy" is available at Project Gutenberg)
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  • Visually, one can see similarities between fauna, flora and terra (Pandorae?)in Yes album covers, specifically those by Roger Dean.
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  • You've got something here! Well searched huh? Really love to read your thoughts.

    Thanks for this wonderful insights.
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  • Anne McCaffrey also wrote the Powers That Be series, about a damaged ex-soldier sent to a self-aware planet with an intricately inter-linked ecosystem, to get friendly with the residents as the military's woman-on-the-inside: she ends up going native, defending the planet from the industrial-military complex, and being healed.
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  • A withdrawn forest people from whom humans want something and are prepared to take it by force, then begin transformations from humans into forest people, sacred trees, sacred shamans, exotic relationships between people and animals, clash of modern vs medieval weapons and intelligent exotic animals. Finally, a populations in tune with all nature and the trees sheltering and servicing as the source and the network of that knowledge. Andre Norton: Judgement on Janus.
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  • The Themes and archetypes used in Avatar permeate literature and transcend culture and have been told countless times eg Eden lost through knowledge(technology), enlightenment through nature as apposed to the establishment, the clash of mans instincts with cold modern reality(disillusionment) and the story of the man how never dreams but at the same time dreams to much. anyone who sees something as being completely original has not done their research, and anyone who faults this movie for it's similarity to dances with wolves or any other of the countless stories, myths, and legends that employ the same premise or characters is short sighted. Any artist will tell you that everyone has an influence. some say it goes a little deeper then that. arising form our shared experiences(as we are all human this hardly seems surprising) we have a sort of collective unconsious ...Hm that sounds familare as well.

    Thank you Joseph Campbell

    anyone who says it is to simple a plot needs to do more thinking and less talking.
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  • Formerlawyer:

    Not only is Deathworld available in print for free since it is in the public domain, but you can get an audiobook version for free from LibriVox.org as well. It's a halfway decent reading too.

    OP:

    I disagree with the statement that Deathworld has only visual and atmospheric clue and no similarities with the overall plot. In the big picture(tm), it is quite compatible with the plot of Avatar. It is only the time scale of the overall history of Pyrrah that differs with the plot of the movie. The war between the planet and the humans has been going on for 300 years. In the end of Deathworld, the planet's natives do mount a renewed and cooperative full-spectrum counterattack on the human base aided by humans that have "gone native." The overall plot theme is the same in the end.
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  • You also forgot Amy Thomson's Color of Distance about researchers going native.
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  • It's not Alan dean Foster's "Midworld". The people are blue in the movie and not green!
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  • Various works by Andre Norton spring immediately to mind.
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  • This is hardly a suprise: not that I've seen every single one of his movies, but James Cameron is not exactly known for the originality of his plots. The broad outline of Terminator is identical with that of the 1966 Doctor Who serial "The War Machines." Titanic is history with a generic tragic love story thrown in. Et cetera.
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  • Well, since people seem to be aware of Deathworld , let me weigh in and say that to characterize the humans as "space marines" is simply wrong. In fact, the colonists have rather evolved along with the native flora and fauna, adapting to heavier gravity and so forth. They aren't and never have been "space marines."
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  • Manta's Gift by Zahn employs the device of a handicapped man used to get inside the body of a native (stingray-like creatures in Jupiter's atmosphere.) They aren't avatars— his brain is actually grafted into an embryo, with the permission of the natives— but it's got its similarities.
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  • No one mentioned the second and third book of the "Ender's" series? I'm shocked.
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  • Just goes to show how hard it is to come up with a new plotline. They have already be done.
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  • carson:
    A being appears in the sky,
    a young woman with no sex life,
    an angry 'king' sending his soldier to kill innocents, looking for the one who will overthrow 'him',
    the being tries to calm the woman, telling her she will bare humanity's savior with the initials 'JC', they go on the run
    the good guys win.

    I'm not so sure he was ripping off dr who.
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  • i cant believe not a single person mentioned the masterful Dune by Frank Herbert.
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  • There were several scenes in Avatar that seemed like a ripoff of Aliens with Sigourney Weaver. And then later there was some music that seemed identical to music used in Aliens.
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  • I remember the first time I encountered the "telepresence concept", it was as a kid in the 60s with the juvenile sci fi book ROBOTS OF SATURN (great memories). The three young heroes encounter a hut on a moon of Saturn, in this hut are two guys apparently sitting unconscious with electrical contacts on their foreheads. It turns out they were remotely controlling/experiencing large and powerful robot bodies elsewhere on the small moon. Cool stuff!
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  • "La Planete Sauvage" Anyone.....?
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  • Anne McCaffrey, mentioned a couple of times above, also has a section in the early novel "The Ship Who Sang."

    The titular ship takes a crew of actors to a planet highly inhospitable to human life. Once there, they project into alien "envelopes" in order to perform Hamlet for the aliens.

    Several of the actors become too wrapped up in the sensations provided by the envelopes and "go native."
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  • Dune....it's much closer than the dragon riders of pern
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  • Manta's Gift? the list goes on..
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  • Without naming a particular title, I thought the whole film was redolent of great sci-fi/adventure Franco-Belgian bande dessinée (comic strips) of the past 50 years. Whereas Americans were fascinated by superheroes in long underwear, Enuropeans were following tha dventures of (1) "good savages" like Timour and Rohan ans (2) space explorers like the ones depicted by Moebius (and republished in the US by "Heavy Metal"). The same inspiration informs the recent movie "10,000 BC" - a flop in the US, a great success everywhere else.

    Benoit Racine
    Toronto
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  • I second, or third, or whatever, the artistic links with Roger Dean's paintings & designs. (band Yes covers but also other stuff) I was surprised not to see him in the credits.
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  • The special breathing organs on the 'dragons' immediately called to mind the 'superchargers' on the Ythrians from Poul Anderson's "Earth Book of Stormgate". I don't recall anything about it being mentioned in the dialog, but some auxiliary breathing system would be important (as Anderson made clear) for flying creatures of that size. Recent work on pterosaurs indicates that our own 'flying dragons' found a different solution to the problem.

    http://scienceblogs.com/tetrapodzoology/2009/02/pterosaur_breathing_air_sacs.php
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  • I found it absolutely awesome. Simple enough. I saw many similarities to many books I have read in the past, but it was its own story.

    Bravo, James Cameron.
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  • I think Blish's A Case of Conscience might be another one - though I haven't yet seen the film I must confess!
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  • Don't forget Roger Dean artwork on "Yes" album covers for floating rock formations
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  • Nice research article. Still doesn't excuse IP infringement. Wouldn't it be nice if 20th Century Fox posted some allowed fandom guidelines?
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  • In "The Stone God Awakens", a less known novel by Philip José Farmer, the main organism in a future Earth is a huge tree, that developed connections with all the other trees in the world, just like a mainframe computer with dumb terminals. It is a book from 1970.
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  • I enjoyed that Cameron pulled ideas from so many sources (intentional or not) to create "Avatar". Thanks for citing so many. I haven't seen Terry Brook's "Tanequil" mentioned here for its parallel to sentient trees.
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  • I noticed similarities between Avatar and an old HG Wells book I once read, I think it was called "A Dream of Armageddon", where a man was living two lives by being a soldier in the future while he was asleep and "dreaming" in the real world and vice versa. He eventually swapped over as the dreams got more real and exciting and real life became more vague and boring to him, and ended living in the world which was originally just his future dream "avatar". This was a great story, as is avatar. Loved the movie
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  • The guy who mentioend Roger Dean further up is right on--those floating landmasses and arches are right off Yes album covers, and even the dragon-ish things are very similar to some of his work (I'm thinking most specifically about that bland orchestral to Pink Floyd that came out in the mid-to-late-90s).
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  • What is this, TEN different sources? It's the Disney movie Pocahontas with aliens. That's it.
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  • Thanks so much for this brain-jolt. I've been trying to think of "Winds of Altair" since Avatar was first mentioned!
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  • You know the story. The dialogue is clunky ( i loled in the cinema ) and yet I found this film to be almost transcendental. Don't try and think while you watch it. Put your hood up and just be inside it.
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  • You know, it also reminds me of the movie The Mission, only in that movie, it turns our much worse for the natives. I still can't listen to Adagio for Strings without tearing up...
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  • Smurfs too! lol
    But seriously it was a fun movie to watch.
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  • "The Emerald Forest", a great movie by John Boorman made in 1985. The white outsider learns the ways of the natives in the beautifully shot Amazonian forest, although this was not really a choice as he was kidnapped as a kid. He learns and become a real man during a ceremony, connected to the spirit of an animal. Then bulldozers come, wreak havoc and destroy trees (to build a dam). The native chief is killed, and the outsider will lead the fight with his tribe friends, some outside knowledge and technology (such as guns), and the help of forest animals (the frogs) and Mother Nature, to push out the white invaders. And he decides to stay in the forest at the end. And he falls in love with a native girl.

    It all goes back to Campbell analysis. Like one movie with a thousand faces.
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  • You forgot Disney's Atlantis... Both bad guys even look the same!
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  • There's nothing completely original. Even the Iliad copied bits from previous stories.

    Cameron got in trouble with _Terminator_ because he talked about it being inspired by two specific _Outer Limits_ (IIRC) episodes. One of the people he was talking to was a friend of Harlan Ellison, who wrote both episodes.
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  • Three more - Ray Bradbury's short stories:
    - Here There Be Tygers
    - And the Moon Be Still as Bright
    - Dark They Were, and Golden-eyed
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  • A few people have compared the movie to my connected stories BLUE WAR, DEADSTOCK and IN HIS SIGHTS (all published by Solaris Books). One blogger directed me to his posts, drawing comparisons:

    BLUE DEJA VU, from 1/3/10 http://daedahl.blogspot.com/2010/01/blue-deja-vu.html

    And BLUE WORLDS REVISTED, from 1/9/10 http://daedahl.blogspot.com/2010/01/blue-worlds-revisited.html

    " *both stories were told from the point-of-view of a disabled veteran (Jake Sully is a paraplegic in Avatar; while Jeremy Stake suffers from metamorphic paralysis in In His Sights)
    *both protagonists travel to a jungle-like world populated by blue-skinned humanoids with almond shaped eyes (the Na'vi of Pandora; the Ha Jiin of the unnamed blue world)
    *the blue-skins world is invaded by humanity solely for the acquisition of a rare and exotic subterranean resource (Pandora's ridiculously named mineral: Unobtainum; the Ha Jiin's strange subterranean gasses)
    *on both worlds the mining of resources involves violating sites considered sacred by the blue-skins (Pandora's sacred trees containing the souls of their ancestors; the Ha Jiin's sacred burial catacombs)
    *both protagonists were selected because their unique genome allowed them to assume the form of a blue-skin, infiltrate and gain access to said exotic resource (Jake Sully - his genetically engineered Avatar; Jeremy Stake - a mutant human with mild metamorphic abilities) "

    I'm not claiming Cameron read my stories...as you say in the article, it's all just jolly good fun. ;-)
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  • Thank you Jeffrey, great info - and kudos to all other commenters who unearthed a whole bunch of other references. Great fun!
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  • Not classic science fiction but classic anime: Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind. Great movie with a couple of ideas which found their way into Avatar. For example the tree of soul's shimmering tentacles or the way the navi'i ride the dragons.
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  • Thanks for these. I just wonder how to go about getting hold of these stories. Are they at all still in print?

    The similarities between all these stories are probably more than coincidental or influencial. I'm guessing there are a historical references in play as well. Maybe the colonization of America, Africa and Australia. And the Gulf war references, "The hearts and minds" tour, "Shock and Awe" campaign, were too obvious to miss.

    But yes, these Science fiction sources are fantastic.
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  • How about "The Jesus Incident" by Frank Herbert?

    And don't say you read the synopsis and it doesn't sound familiar...I read the book and saw the movie, they are definitely linked!
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  • Avatar was one of the best movies I have ever seen. James Cameron is the man when it comes to creating amazing movies!
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  • Totally riped from the animated movie "Fern Gulley"...right down to the bulldozer scene!! Can anyone verify this ??? Is there not any origionality anymore??
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  • My first thought was 'The Dragon riders of Pern' for the bonding between the dragons and their riders BUT, How about 'The Integral Trees' by Larry Niven?
    FYI- Cameron said he drew from everything in his experience.
    Abolutely beautiful-wonderful creatures and plants, esp. 'dragons'
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  • @xJENOVAx uep. frank Herberts the Jesus incident/lazarus effect had a planet called PANDORA which was crawling with HOSTILE WILDLIFE, and a type of sentient kelp that had a networked COLLECTIVE CONSCIOUS
    with the other creatures on the planet, just like in Cameron's movie. I think they referred to it as ¨avata¨
    I think there was also genetically engineered CLONES that were adapted for the planet.
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