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China’s wild heart

Rupert Parker finds the real-life inspiration for Avatar’s otherworldly landscapes and more in picturesque Hunan

July 4, 2024 09:40
Zhangjiajie-robs-iVYTAfsN9hkCREDITunsplash2.jpg
Zhangjiajie (Photo: Unsplash)

ByRupert Parker, Rupert Parker

5 min read

As the early morning mist clears, I see I’m surrounded by thousands of narrow limestone pillars, rising proud from a carpet of green forest, pine trees clinging desperately to their tops. Over the millennia, this enchanting landscape has been home to countless legends and myths.

Although for most visitors, the reason it might look familiar is because it was recreated using CGI as Planet Pandora in the Hollywood blockbuster Avatar.

The original is in Hunan, a land-locked province in the south central part of the country, surrounded by mountains, with the fertile Yangtze River to the north. This is picture book rural China, a major agricultural centre for thousands of years, growing rice, tea and oranges.

My trip starts in the capital, Changsha, a bustling city of over 10 million, bisected by the Xiang River. Chairman Mao was born in the countryside 70km away and arrived here in 1911 when he was 18, in order to attend college. On Orange Island, in the middle of the river, there’s a huge bust of a young Mao; apparently he used to go swimming here after a hard day’s study under the orange trees.