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| language = English
| language = English
| budget = $350–460 million<ref name="auto1" /><ref name=":7">{{Cite web |last=D'Alessandro |first=Anthony |date=December 18, 2022 |title=''Avatar: The Way Of Water'' Opens To $134M; Why Pic's Box Office Fate Will Be Determined Through The Holidays – Sunday AM Update |url= https://deadline.com/2022/12/avatar-the-way-of-water-box-office-1235200714/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221218171411/https://deadline.com/2022/12/avatar-the-way-of-water-box-office-1235200714/ |archive-date=December 18, 2022 |access-date=December 18, 2022 |website=[[Deadline Hollywood]]}}</ref>
| budget = $350–460 million<ref name="auto1" /><ref name=":7">{{Cite web |last=D'Alessandro |first=Anthony |date=December 18, 2022 |title=''Avatar: The Way Of Water'' Opens To $134M; Why Pic's Box Office Fate Will Be Determined Through The Holidays – Sunday AM Update |url= https://deadline.com/2022/12/avatar-the-way-of-water-box-office-1235200714/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221218171411/https://deadline.com/2022/12/avatar-the-way-of-water-box-office-1235200714/ |archive-date=December 18, 2022 |access-date=December 18, 2022 |website=[[Deadline Hollywood]]}}</ref>
| gross = $1.03 billion<ref name="BOM">{{Cite Box Office Mojo |title=Avatar: The Way of Water |access-date=December 27, 2022}}</ref><ref name="NUM">{{Cite The Numbers |id=Avatar-The-Way-of-Water-(2022) |title=Avatar: The Way of Water |access-date=December 27, 2022}}</ref>
| gross = $1.029 billion<ref name="BOM">{{Cite Box Office Mojo |title=Avatar: The Way of Water |access-date=December 27, 2022}}</ref><ref name="NUM">{{Cite The Numbers |id=Avatar-The-Way-of-Water-(2022) |title=Avatar: The Way of Water |access-date=December 27, 2022}}</ref>
}}
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Revision as of 19:35, 28 December 2022

Avatar: The Way of Water
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJames Cameron
Screenplay by
Story by
Based onCharacters
by James Cameron
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyRussell Carpenter
Edited by
Music bySimon Franglen
Production
companies
Distributed by
Release dates
  • December 6, 2022 (2022-12-06) (London)
  • December 16, 2022 (2022-12-16) (United States)
Running time
192 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$350–460 million[2][3]
Box office$1.029 billion[4][5]

Avatar: The Way of Water is a 2022 American epic science fiction film directed by James Cameron, who co-wrote the screenplay with Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver from a story the trio wrote with Josh Friedman and Shane Salerno. Produced by Lightstorm Entertainment and TSG Entertainment and distributed by 20th Century Studios, it is the sequel to Avatar (2009) and the second installment in the Avatar film series. Cast members Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldaña, Stephen Lang, Joel David Moore, CCH Pounder, Giovanni Ribisi, Dileep Rao, and Matt Gerald reprise their roles from the original film, with Sigourney Weaver returning in an additional role.[6] New cast members include Kate Winslet, Cliff Curtis, Edie Falco, and Jemaine Clement. In the film, Na'vi Jake Sully (Worthington) and his family seek refuge with the Metkayina clan of Pandora and must defend against a renewed human threat.

Cameron stated in 2006 that he would like to make sequels to Avatar if it was successful, and he announced the first two sequels in 2010, following the widespread success of the first film, with the first sequel aiming for a 2014 release.[7][8] However, the addition of two more sequels, for a total of five Avatar films, and the necessity to develop new technology in order to film performance capture scenes underwater, a feat never accomplished before, led to significant delays to allow the crew more time to work on the writing, preproduction, and visual effects.[9] The filming process, which occurred simultaneously with a currently untitled third film, began in Manhattan Beach, California, on August 15, 2017. The filming location moved to Wellington, New Zealand, on September 25, 2017, and concluded in late September 2020 after three years of shooting. With an estimated budget of $350–460 million, it is one of the most expensive films ever made.[2][3]

Following repeated delays in the expected release schedule, Avatar: The Way of Water premiered in London on December 6, 2022, and was theatrically released in the United States on December 16, 2022. Critics praised the film for its visual effects and technical achievements but called the plot thin and criticized its lengthy runtime.[10] The film has grossed over $1.029 billion worldwide, becoming the sixth-fastest film to cross the billion-dollar mark (14 days),[11] the fourth film released in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic to cross $1 billion, and becoming the second-highest-grossing film of 2022. Organizations such as the National Board of Review and the American Film Institute named Avatar: The Way of Water as one of the top ten films of 2022. The film also received numerous other accolades, including nominations for Best Motion Picture – Drama and Best Director at the 80th Golden Globe Awards.

Plot

More than a decade after the Na'vi repelled the human invasion of Pandora by the Resources Development Administration (RDA),[a] Jake Sully lives as chief of the Omaticaya clan and raises a family with Neytiri, which includes sons Neteyam and Lo'ak, daughter Tuk, adopted daughter Kiri (born from Grace Augustine's inert avatar), and a human boy named Spider, the son of Colonel Miles Quaritch who was born on Pandora and was unable to be transported to Earth in cryostasis due to his infancy. To the Na'vi's dismay, the RDA returns to prepare their homeworld Pandora for human colonization, as Earth is dying. Among the new RDA arrivals are 'recombinants', Na'vi avatars implanted with the minds and memories of deceased soldiers. Quaritch has been resurrected as one such recombinant and commands the RDA's paramilitary operations.

Jake stages a guerilla campaign against RDA supply lines, but Quaritch and his recombinants conduct a counterinsurgency mission against Jake and kidnap his children. Jake and Neytiri arrive and free most of them, but Spider is taken by Quaritch, who recognizes him as his son. He decides to spend time with him in order to draw Spider on his side, and in turn, Spider teaches Quaritch about Na'vi culture and language. Aware of the danger Spider's knowledge of his whereabouts poses to their safety, Jake and his family exile themselves from the Omaticaya and retreat to the Metkayina reef people clan at Pandora's eastern seaboard. Despite being given refuge, Jake is viewed with antipathy from some of the tribesmen due to his human heritage. The family learns the ways of the reef people, Kiri develops a spiritual bond with the sea and its creatures, and Lo'ak befriends Tsireya, the daughter of clan chief Tonowari and his wife Ronal.

Lo'ak gets into a fight with Tsireya's brother Aonung. When he returns to apologize at Jake's insistence, Aonung and his friends entice him to a trip into the territory of a dangerous sea predator and leave him stranded. Lo'ak is saved by and befriends Payakan, a tulkun, an intelligent and pacifistic cetacean species whom the Metkayina consider their spiritual family. Upon his return, Lo'ak takes the blame on himself, winning Aonung's friendship, but is told that Payakan is an outcast among his species. On a trip to the Metkayina's Spirit Tree, Kiri links with it to meet her mother but suffers a violent seizure. She is healed by Ronal, but when Jake calls Norm Spellman and Max Patel for help, Quaritch is able to track them to the archipelago where the reef people live. Bringing Spider with him, he commandeers a whaling vessel which is hunting tulkuns to harvest their brain enzymes for creating anti-aging remedies called amrita. Quaritch begins to brutally question the indigenous tribes about Jake's location; when this proves fruitless, he orders the whaling crew to wantonly kill tulkuns in order to draw Jake out. Lo'ak mentally links with Payakan and learns that the tulkun was cast out because he went against the pacifist ways of his species and fought back against the RDA whalers who killed his mother.

When the Metkayina learn of the tulkun killings, Lo'ak takes off to warn Payakan, followed by his siblings, Tsireya, Aonung, and Rotxo. They find Payakan being chased by the whalers, and Lo'ak, Tsireya, and Tuk are captured by Quaritch. With their children in danger, Jake, Neytiri, and the Metkayina set out to confront the humans. Quaritch forces Jake to surrender, but upon seeing Lo'ak imperiled, Payakan attacks the whalers, triggering a fight that kills most of the crew and sinks the vessel. Neteyam rescues Lo'ak, Tsireya and Spider, but is fatally shot. Jake faces Quaritch, who uses Kiri as a hostage. When Neytiri does the same with Spider, Quaritch at first denies his relationship with him but desists when Neytiri cuts Spider across the chest.

Jake, Quaritch, Neytiri, and Tuk end up trapped inside the sinking vessel. Jake strangles Quaritch into unconsciousness and is rescued by Lo'ak and Payakan, while Kiri summons sea creatures to help her save Neytiri and Tuk. Spider rescues Quaritch, but renounces his cruelty and rejoins Jake's family. After Neteyam's funeral, Jake informs Tonowari and Ronal of his decision to leave the Metkayina. Tonowari, however, respectfully identifies him as part of the clan and welcomes his family to stay. Jake and his family accept and forge a new life at sea, with Jake vowing to keep fighting the human invaders.

Cast

  • Sam Worthington as Jake Sully, a former human who fell in love with Neytiri and befriended the Na'vi after becoming a member of the Avatar Program, eventually taking their side in their conflict with humans and leading them to victory. He left his human body to permanently become Na'vi and is now chief of the Omaticaya.[12][13]
  • Zoe Saldaña as Neytiri, daughter of the previous clan chief, future Tsahìk of the clan, and Jake's mate.[12][13]
  • Sigourney Weaver as Kiri, the daughter of Dr. Grace Augustine's Na'vi avatar who was adopted by Jake and Neytiri.[14] Weaver originally appeared in the first film as Dr. Grace Augustine. Although both Weaver and Cameron confirmed that she would return in the sequels, she stated in 2014 that she would not play the same character.[6][15][16] Like most of the cast, she learned free-diving for the film and filmed scenes underwater.[17]
    • Weaver also reprises her role as Dr. Grace Augustine, a human scientist who takes the side of the Na'vi and dies during the conflict. Her Na'vi avatar is revealed to have birthed Kiri despite her death. She appears in this film in a video recording and in a spiritual vision where she meets with Kiri.
  • Stephen Lang as Colonel Miles Quaritch, a human who led the paramilitary division of the RDA in their conflict with the Na'vi.[18] After being killed by Neytiri in the RDA's war with the Na'vi in 2154, the RDA placed his and other deceased soldiers' memories into Na'vi Avatars called Recombinants.[18] and seeks revenge. Cameron stated in 2010 that Lang would return in the first three sequels, stating, "I'm not going to say exactly how we're bringing him back, but it's a science fiction story, after all. His character will evolve into really unexpected places across the arc of our new three-film saga."[19][20] He later stated that Quaritch would act as the main antagonist once again, in all four sequels.[21][22]
    • Lang also reprises his role as the human Quaritch in a video recording to his recombinant self.
  • Kate Winslet as Ronal, a free diver of the Metkayina and Tonowari's wife, who is pregnant.[23][24] Winslet called Ronal "a pivotal character in the ongoing story" but also "relatively small comparative to the lengthy shoot" since shooting all her scenes only took a month.[25] It marks her first time working with performance capture, and motion capture altogether. She, like most of the cast, also had to learn free diving for the film; while filming an underwater scene, she held her breath for over seven minutes, a new record for any film scene shot underwater.[25][26][27][17]
  • Cliff Curtis as Tonowari, the chief of the reef people clan of Metkayina and Ronal's husband.[28][29][30]
  • Joel David Moore as Dr. Norm Spellman, a former member of the Avatar Program who chose to side with the Na'vi in the first film.[31]
    • Moore also portrays Spellman while in his Na'vi Avatar.
  • CCH Pounder as Mo'at, the Omaticaya's Tsahìk, and Neytiri's mother.[32][33]
  • Edie Falco as General Frances Ardmore, the commander in charge of the RDA's interests.[34]
  • Brendan Cowell as Captain Mick Scoresby, the head of a private sector marine hunting vessel on the planet of Pandora.[35]
  • Jemaine Clement as Dr. Ian Garvin, a marine biologist.[36]
  • Jamie Flatters as Neteyam, Jake and Neytiri's first son and oldest child.[37][38]
  • Britain Dalton as Lo'ak, Jake and Neytiri's second son.[37][38]
    • Chloe Coleman as young Lo'ak.
  • Trinity Jo-Li Bliss as Tuktirey ("Tuk"), Jake and Neytiri's eight-year-old daughter and their youngest child[37][38][39]
  • Jack Champion as Miles Quaritch "Spider" Socorro, the teenage son of Quaritch born in Hell's Gate (the human base on Pandora in the first film) who was rescued and adopted by Jake and Neytiri after they had previously killed his father.[37][38][40]
  • Bailey Bass as Tsireya ("Reya"), a graceful and strong free diver of the Metkayina and Tonowari and Ronal's daughter.[37][38]
  • Filip Geljo as Aonung, a young male hunter and free diver of the Metkayina and Tonowari and Ronal's son.[37][38]
  • Duane Evans, Jr. as Rotxo, a young male hunter and free-diver of the Metkayina.[37][38]
  • Giovanni Ribisi as Parker Selfridge, the former corporate administrator for the RDA mining operation, who appears in a recording made for Quaritch's Recombinant.[41]
  • Dileep Rao as Dr. Max Patel, a scientist who worked in the Avatar Program and came to support Jake's rebellion against the RDA in the first film.[42]
  • Matt Gerald as Corporal Lyle Wainfleet, a mercenary who fought and died in the RDA's battle against the Na'vi in 2154. Years later, the RDA placed his memories into a Recombinant. Gerald was announced to reprise his role in August 2017.[30]

Additionally, Alicia Vela-Bailey appears, uncredited, as Zdinarsk, a Recombinant and member of the 1st Recom Squadron. Vela-Baily previously portrayed Ikeyni, the leader of the Na'vi Ikran Clan, in the original Avatar. She is also featured as a stunt performer in both films.[43][44] CJ Jones appears, also uncredited, as a Metkayina interpreter of the Na'vi sign language he created.[45]

Production

Development

James Cameron speaking in 2010
Director James Cameron in 2010

In 2006, James Cameron stated that if Avatar (2009) was successful, he would consider making two sequels.[7] In 2010, he said the sequels would proceed as planned as a result of the film's widespread success.[8] The sequels were originally scheduled for release in December 2014 and 2015.[9] He included certain scenes in the first film for future story follow-ups.[7][12] Cameron planned to shoot the sequels back-to-back and to begin work "once the novel is nailed down".[46] He stated that the sequels would widen the universe while exploring other moons of Polyphemus.[47] The first sequel would focus on the ocean of Pandora and also feature more of the rainforest.[48] He intended to capture footage for the sequel at the bottom of the Mariana Trench using a deepwater submersible.[49] In 2011, Cameron stated that he was just starting to design the ocean ecosystem of Pandora and the other worlds to be included in the story. The storyline, although continuing the environmental theme of the first film, would not be "strident" since the film will concentrate on entertainment.[50] The sequels were confirmed as continuing to follow the characters of Jake and Neytiri in December 2009.[13] Cameron implied that the humans would return as the antagonists of the story.[51] In 2011, Cameron stated his intention to film the sequels at a higher frame rate than the industry standard 24 frames per second, in order to add a heightened sense of reality.[52]

In 2013, Cameron announced that the sequels would be filmed in New Zealand, with performance capture to take place in 2014. An agreement with the New Zealand government required at least one world premiere to be held in Wellington and at least NZ$500 million (approximately US$410 million at December 2013 exchange rates) to be spent on production activity in New Zealand, including live-action filming and visual effects. The New Zealand government announced it would raise its baseline tax rebate for filmmaking from 15% to 20%, with 25% available to international productions in some cases and 40% for New Zealand productions (as defined by section 18 of the New Zealand Film Commission Act 1978).[53][54]

Cameron mentioned a possible third sequel for the first time in 2012; and was officially confirmed the following year.[55][56] Cameron was then looking to release Avatar 2 in 2015, but later that year, production was rescheduled for 2014, with the film to be released in December 2016, and to be followed by the two other sequels in 2017 and 2018.[57] By 2015, the scheduled release dates for the sequels were each delayed by another year, with the first sequel expected to be released in December 2017; this was due to the writing process, which Cameron called "a complex job".[58][59] The following month, Fox announced a further release delay.[60] In February 2016, production of the sequels was scheduled to begin in April 2016 in New Zealand.[61] In April 2016, Cameron announced at CinemaCon that there will be four Avatar sequels, all of which will be filmed simultaneously.[62] The four Avatar sequels share a $1 billion budget (e.g. $250 million each film).[63]

New crew members include cinematographer Russell Carpenter, who worked with Cameron on True Lies (1994) and Titanic (1997), and Aashrita Kamath, who will act as art director on all four sequels.[64][65][66] Kirk Krack, founder of Performance Freediving International, worked as a free-diving trainer for the cast and crew for the underwater scenes.[67] Several creatures that were first introduced in the Walt Disney World theme park attraction Avatar Flight of Passage were featured in the film.[68]

In 2019, after several media outlets shared rumors of potential titles for the Avatar sequels, including the name Avatar: The Way of Water, Cameron confirmed that the titles mentioned were "among titles that are in consideration" but had not been finalized at the time.[69]

Writing

In 2012, Cameron stated that the sequels were being written as "separate stories that have an overall arc inclusive of the first film", with the second having a clear conclusion instead of a cliffhanger to the next film. Screenwriters were also announced: Josh Friedman for the first, Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver for the second, and Shane Salerno for the third.[57] However, Friedman later clarified and stated that Jaffa and Silver were writing the first of the four sequels and he was writing the second.[70] In April 2014, Cameron expected to finish the (then) three scripts within six weeks, stating that all three sequels would be in production simultaneously and were still slated for December 2016 to 2018 releases.[71][72] He stated that although Friedman, Jaffa and Silver, and Salerno are each co-writing one sequel with him, they at first worked together on all three scripts: "I didn't assign each writer which film they were going to work on until the last day. I knew if I assigned them their scripts ahead of time, they'd tune out every time we were talking about the other movie."[57][73][74][19][70][75] Cameron added that they had "worked out every beat of the story across all three films so it all connects as one, sort of, three-film saga", a creative process that was inspired by his experiences in the writing room of his television series Dark Angel.[76] The writing took longer than expected, forcing Cameron to delay the release of the films further in 2015.[58]

He spent a year writing and completing a full script for the first sequel titled Avatar: The High Ground, a 130-page treatment and then threw it out and started over because "it didn't go enough into the unexpected," which is one of the critical elements about sequels, according to Cameron. At one point he threatened to fire his writers because they would only focus on the new stories rather than first figuring out what made the original movie a success.[77][78] In December 2015, Cameron stated in an interview with Entertainment Weekly, saying "I'm in the process of doing another pass through all three scripts [...] Just refining. That's in parallel with the design process. The design process is very mature at this point. We've been designing for about a year and a half. All the characters, settings and creatures are all pretty much [set]."[79] On February 11, 2017, Cameron announced that the writing of all four sequels was complete.[80] In a November 26 interview the same year, he estimated that the scripts had taken four years to write overall.[81]

Comparing the themes of the sequels to the original, Cameron stated that "It will be a natural extension of all the themes, and the characters, and the spiritual undercurrents. Basically, if you loved the first movie, you're gonna love these movies, and if you hated it, you're probably gonna hate these. If you loved it at the time, and you said later you hated it, you're probably gonna love these".[81] He later compared the sequels to The Godfather franchise (1972–1990), calling it "a generational family saga [...] It's a continuation of the same characters and about what happens when warriors, willing to go on suicide charges and leap off cliffs on to the backs of big orange Toruks, grow up and have their own kids. Now the kids are the change makers. It's interesting."[82]

Discussing the character of Tuk in a February 2019 interview, Cameron mentioned that she was eight years old, and that the film would feature a scene between Jake and Neytiri taking place from Tuk's perspective: "There's a three-page argument scene between Jake and Neytiri, a marital dispute, very, very critical to the storyline. I wound up shooting it all from the point of view of the 8-year-old hiding under the structure and peeking in. Having gone through the experience with [Sam Worthington] on Avatar, I now knew how to write the Jake character going forward across the emotional rollercoaster of the next four movies."[39][83] In a December 2019 interview, Lang stated that his character was always meant to return in the sequels, as Cameron had shared with him "that Quaritch had a future" while shooting the original film.[84]

Sigourney Weaver has stated that "The story is about family, about our families trying to stay together [and] the lengths to which we all go to protect each other and protect the place where we live. It's very much based on [James Cameron's] family and his joy in the family; and also, how vulnerable you are when you have children."[85] Cameron has stated that the film addresses the implications of Jake and Neytiri becoming parents in the time that elapsed since the first film.[86] Cameron stated:

Becoming a parent changes so much of your behavior and your value system...What we saw in the first film were people who were fearless. Jake would throw himself off his ikran onto a leonopteryx (creatures featured in Avatar) but is a father of four going do that?...He's trying to keep his kids alive and trying to adjust his own life. Is he still a warrior? Are these young boys who are 14, 15, 16, coming up, getting all excited about wanting to go to war and fight for their people and for their land? How's [Jake] going to be a hypocrite and hold them back when he has to go do it?[86]

RogerEbert.com critic Brian Tallerico notes that some of the themes in the film echo themes from earlier films directed by Cameron, including Titanic, Aliens (1986), The Abyss (1989), The Terminator (1984) and Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991). For example, the film asks whether you should run and hide from a powerful enemy or fight their evil, similar to the Terminator films. The film also invokes themes of environmentalism and colonization.[87]

Casting

Sam Worthington and Zoe Saldaña were confirmed in January 2010 to have signed on to reprise their roles in the sequels.[12] Later that year, Cameron confirmed that both Sigourney Weaver and Stephen Lang would return despite the demise of their characters.[19][15] Cameron also stated that Weaver would be featured in all three sequels (the fourth one was not planned at the time), and that her character, Grace Augustine, would be alive.[16] In March 2015, however, Weaver said that she will play a new character in the next film.[6] Cameron confirmed in 2010 that Lang would return as Quaritch in the first three sequels, stating, "I'm not going to say exactly how we're bringing him back, but it's a science fiction story, after all. His character will evolve into really unexpected places across the arc of our new three-film saga."[19][20] In September 2015, Michelle Rodriguez stated that unlike Weaver and Lang, whose characters had also died in the first film, she would not return in Avatar 2.[88]

Several new cast announcements were made in 2017, with Joel David Moore, CCH Pounder and Matt Gerald all confirmed to return from the first film.[32][33][30][31] Additionally, Cliff Curtis joined the cast as Tonowari, the leader of the Na'vi reef people clan of Metkayina.[28][30] On September 23, 2017, child actor Filip Geljo was revealed to have been signed in an undisclosed role.[89] On September 27, seven child actors were confirmed as a part of the main cast including Geljo: Jamie Flatters, Britain Dalton and Trinity Bliss as the children of Jake and Neytiri, Geljo, Bailey Bass, and Duane Evans Jr. as members of the Metkayina (together with Curtis), and Jack Champion, the only one to perform in live action, as a human born on Pandora.[37][38] Cameron later stated that the child cast had been trained for six months to prepare for the underwater scenes filmed in performance capture, and that they now could all hold their breath "in the two- to four-minute range", even then-seven-year-old Trinity Bliss, and were now "all perfectly capable of acting underwater, very calmly while holding their breath".[90][91]

On October 3, 2017, it was reported that Kate Winslet, who starred in Cameron's Titanic, had joined the cast of Avatar 2, and possibly its sequels. Cameron commented, "Kate and I had been looking for something to do together for 20 years, since our collaboration on Titanic, which was one of the most rewarding of my career", and added that her character was named Ronal.[23][92][24] When asked by ComicBook.com on her reasons to return to work with Cameron, Winslet stated that he just asked her to play Ronal and she accepted out of a combination of her love for the first Avatar film, an attraction to the well-written and strong female role she was offered, a love for being on the water and to work with Cameron and the film's cast.[93] Although the nature of her character was originally unknown, Cameron stated the following month that Ronal was "part of the Sea People, the reef people", in reference to the Na'vi clan of Metkayina, making Avatar 2 Winslet's first role via performance capture, or motion capture altogether, which she was looking forward to; as she insisted on performing all her character's movements herself, she, like the child cast, had to learn free-diving for the film.[81][25] Winslet, who had been notoriously reluctant about working with Cameron again because of the complicated situations he puts his actors in for their scenes, stated that Cameron proposed the role to her in July 2017 when he came to help her and their fellow Titanic collaborator Leonardo DiCaprio at a fundraiser in France, sending her the scripts shortly after.[25] She commented that her role was "relatively small comparative to the lengthy shoot", as she would only have one month of shootings, but also "a pivotal character in the ongoing story".[25]

On October 13, 2017, it was announced that Giovanni Ribisi would reprise his role of Parker Selfridge from the first film, in all four upcoming Avatar films.[41] On January 25, 2018, Dileep Rao was confirmed to return as Dr. Max Patel.[42] A year later, Edie Falco and Brendan Cowell joined the cast in live-action roles.[34][35] In October 2019, Edward Norton revealed that he had turned down a role in Avatar 2, due to only being interested in playing a Na'vi, which his proposed character was not.[94]

Filming

Performance capture

Avatar: The Way of Water entered production and started preliminary shooting on August 15, 2017, with Manhattan Beach, California, as the main shooting location.[95] Principal photography started on September 25, 2017, simultaneously with Avatar 3 (2024).[20][96][97] As Sigourney Weaver later revealed in November, filming had to be moved around to allow her to film a cameo appearance in the series eight finale of Doc Martin (2004–present).[98]

On November 23, Cameron stated that the crew had been undergoing tests with the cast for the last month to film underwater scenes in performance capture, and that they succeeded in filming the first of those on November 14, featuring six of their seven main child actors, including Trinity Bliss.[81] He stated "we're getting really good data, beautiful character motion and great facial performance capture. We've basically cracked the code".[90][91] He said that tests would last until January 2018, as "we're still working in our small test tank. We graduate to our big tank in January".[90] It was "a dialogue scene", as according to Cameron, the characters communicate via "a kind of a sign language".[81]

On April 30, 2018, Kate Winslet had "just a couple days" of shooting left to do.[99] While filming an underwater scene, Winslet held her breath for over seven minutes, breaking the record for longest breath held while shooting a film scene underwater, a record previously held by Tom Cruise for Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation (2015).[17] In May 2018, Saldaña stated that filming was "kind of only halfway done" and that the crew is "about [to finish] motion capture production on the [second and third] movies, and then after that, they go straight into pre-production for the live-action part that would shoot for six months in New Zealand."[100] Saldaña finished shooting her scenes on June 8, for both Avatar 2 and its sequel, while Cameron stated around the same time that 130 days of performance capture had been shot.[26][27] On November 14, 2018, Cameron announced filming with the principal performance capture cast had been completed.[22]

Live-action

In February 2019, Landau stated that live-action filming for Avatar 2 and 3 would commence in New Zealand in the spring of 2019.[101] Cameron confirmed later the same month that they had "only wrapped for [the motion capture parts]. Now, that is the vast majority of the characters and it is the vast majority of the running time of the film[s]. But that pesky little live action component is going to cost me five months of my life across the two movies."[102] Filming for 2019 concluded on November 29, to resume the following year in New Zealand.[103][104][105]

On March 17, 2020, Landau announced that the filming of the Avatar sequel films in New Zealand had been postponed indefinitely in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. He also confirmed that production would remain in Los Angeles.[106] However, virtual production continued in Manhattan Beach, California while visual effects continued at Weta Digital in Wellington.[107] In early May, health and safety production protocols had been endorsed by the New Zealand government, allowing filming to resume in the country.[108] On June 1, 2020, Landau posted a picture of himself and Cameron on Instagram, showing that they had returned to New Zealand to resume filming. After their arrival, Cameron and 55 other crew members who had traveled to New Zealand started a 2-week government-supervised isolation period at a hotel in Wellington before they would resume filming. This would make Avatar 2 and 3 the first major Hollywood blockbusters to resume production after postponing filming due to the pandemic.[109][110][111][112] On June 16, 2020, Cameron resumed filming and Landau posted a photo of his crew on Instagram filming the production.[113][114] In September 2020, Cameron confirmed that live action filming in New Zealand had been completed, therefore completing the shooting of the film altogether after over three years; he estimated Avatar 3 to be "95%" completed, due to having live-action parts yet to be filmed outside of New Zealand.[115][116][117]

In July 2022, the New Zealand Film Commission disclosed that the Avatar sequels had received over NZ$140 million worth of public funding through the country's Screen Production Grant. By comparison, The Hobbit trilogy (2012-2014) had received NZ$161 million in film subsidies. While ACT party deputy leader Brooke van Velden criticised the Government's film subsidy programme for allegedly taking public funding from other areas, the Economic Development and Regional Development Minister Stuart Nash argued that New Zealand's film subsidies for major Hollywood products brought much needed overseas investment and jobs to the New Zealand film industry.[118]

Visual effects

"It's never been done before and it's very tricky because our motion capture system, like most motion capture systems, is what they call optical base, meaning that it uses markers that are photographed with hundreds of cameras. The problem with water is not the underwater part, but the interface between the air and the water, which forms a moving mirror. That moving mirror reflects all the dots and markers, and ... it creates thousands of false targets, so we've had to figure out how to get around that problem, which we did. ... It's taken us about a year and a half now to work out how we're going to do it."

— Cameron, on blending underwater filming and motion capture system[119][120]

On July 31, 2017, it was announced that Wētā FX had commenced work on the Avatar sequels.[121] The film heavily features underwater scenes, actually filmed underwater with the cast in performance capture.[90][91] Blending underwater filming and performance capture being a feature never accomplished before, it took the team a year and a half to develop a new motion capture system.[120][119]

Landau stated in November 2015 that Avatar 2 would have a number of major technological improvements since the first movie. A lot more of the lighting work on the virtual production stage could be done during production instead of post-production, and like Alita: Battle Angel (2019), which is produced and co-written by Cameron, the crew can use two lightweight HD head cams to record the actors' facial performance. In addition they also used two digital puppets instead of just one; one that is an accurate copy of the real actor, and another that is the actor's character, allowing the team to re-target one onto the other to make it as accurate as possible.[122][123]

Cameron stated that there was possibility that the film could be shown in "glasses-free 3D", along with the sequels.[124][125] But he later disagreed with these rumors and did not think the technology would be there yet.[126]

The film was completed on November 23, 2022.[127]

Music

Avatar composer James Horner was originally reported to score music for the franchise, before his death in a plane crash in June 2015.[128] In December 2019, Simon Franglen, who had previously worked with both Cameron and Horner as record producer and arranger since 1997's Titanic, including on Avatar (notably completing Horner's score for 2016's The Magnificent Seven after his passing), was reported to write music for the film.[129] Landau confirmed his involvement in the project in August 2021, while also associating with the forthcoming Avatar sequels.[130][131] Horner's score will be reused in the film, in addition to the original themes produced by Franglen.[131] The scoring for the film officially began on July 29, 2022, at the Newman Scoring Stage in 20th Century.[132] The soundtrack album was released on December 16, 2022, by Hollywood Records.[133][134] An expanded score album, featuring 10 more tracks from the original score, was later released on December 20.[135]

In November, it was reported that the film would feature an original song titled "Song Chord" which will be performed by Franglen and Zoe Saldaña.[136] The following month, it was announced that Canadian singer The Weeknd will contribute an original song, "Nothing Is Lost (You Give Me Strength)", to the film, produced by Franglen and Swedish supergroup Swedish House Mafia.[133][137]

Marketing

File:Avatar The Way of Water logo.jpeg
The film's title was revealed at the 2022 CinemaCon.

Disney extensively promoted Avatar: The Way of Water across multiple media platforms, including merchandising, consumer products, theme parks and advertising.[138] At the 2022 CinemaCon,[139] the new title for the sequel was officially announced and the first teaser trailer was debuted at the event,[140] along with four new first look images, showing off the adventures of the Na'vi on and off the coasts of Pandora.[6] It was theatrically showcased at the premiere of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,[141][142] and was later released online on May 9, 2022.[143] The teaser finished its first 24-hour online window with 148.6 million views,[144] including 23 million from China alone, according to Disney and 20th Century.[145][146] Grant Ridner of GQ commented "The trailer features minimal dialogue and primarily focuses on shots of the cerulean Pandora and its residents, as well as indigenous flora and fauna."[147] However, Stuart Heritage of The Guardian criticized the teaser saying that "There isn't a trace of premise here, or character, or any real action to speak of. Instead, we're given a minute and a half of nice-looking scenery. It's like being held hostage to look at someone's holiday photos."[148] Louis Chilton of The Independent also felt that the trailer "feels rather too much like a tech demo, or the trailer for a long-gestating video-game sequel".[149]

In June 2022, the teaser was edited by Disney ahead of the theatrical screenings of Pixar's Lightyear, where sequences featuring Sully hold a rifle and few guns were edited. According to Russ Burlingame of Comic Book Resources, the trailer was edited due to "public sentiments to avoid glorifying gun violence" as Lightyear released after the Robb Elementary School shooting incident,[150] while TheWrap's Drew Taylor opined that the change was made on the request of Motion Picture Association for attaching the trailer with PG-rated films.[151] New set photos were released by Empire on June 30, 2022, showing Kate Winslet and Cliff Curtis in their Na'vi forms,[152] and subsequent photos were released on the following day, showing Sigourney Weaver as Jake and Neytiri's adopted teenage Na'vi daughter, Kiri.[14] Though the film was not promoted at the San Diego Comic-Con event, Lego released four new sets from the franchise as a part of the promotions.[153]

Eight minutes of the film's footage was showcased in 3D at the D23 Expo on September 10, 2022.[154][155] McFarlane Toys had launched several action figures based on the characters and creatures, which were unveiled at the event.[156] The collections were officially released on October 1.[157] A second footage from the film is shown during the credits of the Avatar re-release on September 23, which evidently varies in different versions and screenings.[158][159] The official trailer was released on November 2, 2022, at Good Morning America.[160][161] New brand poster characters were released on November 21, 2022, and the second and final trailer was also released.[162][163] An 18-minute "never-seen-before" footage from the film was released exclusively released at the CCXP convention on December 2.[164] The footage features independent storylines surrounding Jake's character and events occurring several years since the first film.[165]

Disney initiated the environmental global campaign, "Keep Our Oceans Amazing", to support the Nature Conservancy in the conservation of marine habitats and animal species.[138][166] A concept art book titled The Art of Avatar: The Way of Water, written by Tara Bennett and forward by Robert Rodriguez, was made available for pre-order in October 2022, and will be released simultaneously with the film.[167] Another book titled, Avatar The Way of Water: The Visual Dictionary by Joshua Izzo is also set to be released with the film.[167]

Deadline Hollywood estimated that advertisers paid more than $170 million for promos. Lightstorm Entertainment and Mercedes-Benz revealed the Vision AVTR concept car inspired by the film at the Consumer Electronics Show in 2020. Amazon Echo enabled interactions for its Alexa virtual assistant based on the film, the first time it did so for any film. In China, Disney partnered with JD.com and Alipay for advertising, while Razer Inc. launched the Yaqi Orochi V2 Avatar computer mouse in the country themed after the film. NYX Professional Makeup owned by L'Oréal promoted a lineup of makeup products inspired by the film. Kellogg's launched an estimated 53 million Avatar-themed packages across its three labels. Motorola Mobility and Deutsche Telekom partnered with Disney to promote the film in Latin America and EMEA respectively.[168]

Steven Gould has been hired to write four novels based on the four Avatar sequels, starting with Avatar 2.[169]

Release

Theatrical

Avatar: The Way of Water's world premiere was held on December 6, 2022, at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square in London.[170] The film was theatrically released in the United States on December 16, 2022, with distribution by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures through the 20th Century Studios label.[171][172][173] The film is the first in the series to be released under Disney, since its acquisition of both 20th Century Studios and the rights to Avatar in 2019.[174][175] The film was released in RealD 3D, Dolby Cinema, IMAX, and IMAX 3D formats. Select showings also had support for dynamic high frame rate up to 48 frames-per-second.[176] The Way of Water, alongside the forthcoming sequels, was released in Dolby Vision.[81] The Way of Water is one of the widest releases ever given for a Disney film, debuting on over 12,000 screens in the United States and Canada and 40,000 internationally.[177]

The film was subjected to eight delays, as the crew took more time on the writing, pre-production and visual effects process. Initially in late-2010, the film was scheduled for release in December 2014.[9] By mid-2013, Cameron originally intended Avatar 2 to be released in December 2015,[57] which was subsequently delayed to 2016 and then to 2017.[59][58] In April 2016, Cameron announced four Avatar sequels which would be released in December 2018, 2020, 2022 and 2023;[62] but, in March 2017, he stated that this film would not be released in 2018, due to extensive production and the visual effects process.[178]

In April 2017, a new release date of December 18, 2020 was announced, with all the other sequels: Avatar 3, 4 and 5 releasing on December 17, 2021, December 20, 2024, and December 19, 2025, respectively.[179] However, following the announcement of the three upcoming Star Wars films,[180] in May 2019, the sequels were delayed another two years, with this film being scheduled to be released on December 17, 2021.[181] The release date was again deferred due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and in August 2020, a new release date of December 16, 2022 was announced.[176][171] Mentioning about the delays, Cameron felt optimistic that it would not harm the films' success, likening it to his films Aliens (1986) and Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), which were both commercially successful sequels released seven years after the original films.[81][182] The film was also approved for release in China, making it one of the few Hollywood blockbusters to be greenlit for distribution in the country in 2022.[183]

Runtime

In July 2022, Empire revealed the runtime was "around three hours" at that stage in production.[184] In November 2022, the film's runtime was revealed to be 192 minutes (3 hours and 12 minutes).[1] In the Empire interview, Cameron stated "I don't want anybody whining about length when they sit and binge-watch [television] for eight hours... I've watched my kids sit and do five one-hour episodes in a row. Here's the big social paradigm shift that has to happen: it's okay to get up and go pee."[185][186]

Avatar: The Way of Water is the second Walt Disney Studios film and the second 20th Century Studios film, after Avengers: Endgame and Titanic respectively, to exceed three hours in length.[187]

Reception

Box office

As of December 27, 2022, Avatar: The Way of Water has grossed $317.1 million in the United States and Canada, and $712.7 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $1.029 billion.[4][5] It had a worldwide opening of $441.7 million, the 11th-biggest of all time, and the third largest in the pandemic era behind Spider-Man: No Way Home ($601 million) and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness ($452.4 million). IMAX accounted for $48.8 million, the second-highest global weekend ever for a film released in IMAX cinemas.[188][189] It is the second-highest-grossing film of 2022.[190] James Cameron estimated that due to the film's near-record-breaking budget, it would have to become among the top eight highest-grossing films in history to break even.[191][192] Additionally, is the 51st film to reach the $1 billion milestone and the fourth in the pandemic era behind Spider-Man: No Way Home, Top Gun: Maverick and Jurassic World Dominion.[193]

By December 14, prior to the film's domestic release, Boxoffice Pro projected an opening weekend in the United States and Canada of $145–179 million, and with a total final domestic gross of $574–803 million.[194] The film made $53.2 million on its first day, including $17 million from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to a $134.1 million weekend, nearly double the original's opening of $77 million, coming in below expectations while finishing first at the box office.[195][196] Deadline Hollywood and Variety noted strong audience exit scores, the small day-to-day drop, limited competition from other films, and upcoming Christmas holiday all indicated likely strong legs at the box office.[3][197] The film made $64 million in its second weekend (a drop of 52%), and $95.5 million over the four-day weekend, remaining atop the box office.[198]

Outside the United States and Canada the film grossed $307.6 million in 52 countries in its first week of release. The largest running-total markets by December 28 were China ($108.3 million), France ($60.4 million), South Korea ($55.3 million), Germany ($41.5 million) and India ($39.1 million).[188][189]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 78% of 382 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.1/10. The website's consensus reads: "Narratively, it might be fairly standard stuff—but visually speaking, Avatar: The Way of Water is a stunningly immersive experience."[199] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 67 out of 100, based on 68 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[200] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale, same as the first Avatar, while PostTrak reported 91% of audience members gave the film a positive score, with 82% saying they would definitely recommend it.[3]

Positive reviews focused on the visual spectacle of the film, and advocated seeing it in as large a format possible.[10][201] Chicago-Sun Times critic Richard Roeper highlighted the film's visuals as "some of the most dazzling, vibrant, and gorgeous images ever seen on screen."[202] Variety critic Owen Gleiberman praised the film as a "dizzyingly spectacular sequel" with "miraculously sustained" combat sequences, "scenes that will make your eyes pop, your head spin and your soul race" and "state-of-the-art 3D (never in-your-face, just images that look and feel sculpted) [that] makes the film's every underwater glide feel as experiential as one that you're literally on."[203] On the other hand, Gleiberman felt that the story is "basic" with a "string of serviceable clichés," "bare-bones dialogue" and little dimensionality to the characters.[203] The Atlantic critic David Sims said that the film will wow audiences and exhibit "new delights...in the alien world of Pandora" while noting that the film gets off to a slow start that is "busy with plot details as the film updates the audience on the past decade-plus of Pandoran life."[204] Los Angeles Times critic Justin Chang hailed Cameron as "one of the few Hollywood visionaries who actually merits that much-abused term" and stated that the film will "stun most of his naysayers into silence", while also praising the film's tenderness and sentimentality.[205] Entertainment Weekly critic Leah Greenblatt summed up her review of The Way of Water saying that it "created its own whole-cloth reality, a meticulous world-building as astonishing and enveloping as anything we've ever seen on screen — until that crown is passed, inevitably, in December 2024, the projected release date for Avatar 3."[206]

However, some critics felt the film was too long and the story not in depth enough to justify the length.[10] The New Yorker critic Anthony Lane opined "The film is more than three hours long, some of it dangerously close to dawdling; not until the final third does Cameron apply the whip and remind us that, in the choreographing of action sequences, he remains unsurpassed."[207] The Guardian critic Peter Bradshaw was critical of the "scathingly bland plot" and noted that despite the shift in setting, "there isn't a single interesting visual image".[208] San Francisco Chronicle reviewer Mick LaSalle called it "a one-hour story rattling around in a 192-minute bag," while acknowledging that "it looks pretty good," incorporating "one of the best uses of 3-D to date, with visuals that seem to have been conceived in three dimensions."[209] The Telegraph critic Robbie Collin said that the film "has no plot, no stakes and atrocious dialogue" and that "for all its world-building sprawl, The Way of Water is a horizon-narrowing experience – the sad sight of a great filmmaker reversing up a creative cul-de-sac."[210]

The Toronto Star commented that the film was poorly received as trying to portray the colonial struggles of an indigenous population, with reviewer Drew Hayden Taylor noting "It's also rather conventional in its own way and somewhat boring. Predictable. I've been involved in crooked card games with a less foreseeable storyline."[211]

Accolades

Avatar: The Way of Water was nominated for five Critics' Choice Movie Awards and two Golden Globe Awards.[212][213] It was named one of the ten best films of 2022 by the National Board of Review and the American Film Institute.[214][215]

Sequels

The Way of Water is the first of four planned sequels to Avatar. Avatar 3 started filming simultaneously with this film in New Zealand on September 25, 2017. Cast members from previous films including Worthington, Saldaña, Lang, Weaver, Pounder, Curtis, Ribisi, Moore, Rao, Gerald, Dalton, Bliss, Champion, Bass, and Geljo have all been announced to return while Oona Chaplin and David Thewlis will be playing new characters.[216][217]

Although the last two sequels have been reportedly greenlit, Cameron stated in a November 2017 interview: "Let's face it, if Avatar 2 and 3 don't make enough money, there's not going to be a 4 and 5".[81] Thewlis later confirmed this in February 2018, stating "they're making 2 and 3, they're gonna see if people go and see them, and then they'll make 4 and 5."[218] Conversely, Weaver stated in November 2018, after the first two sequels had completed main photography, that she was currently "busy doing Avatar 4 and 5", which several media outlets interpreted as confirmation that the last two sequels had started filming.[219][220][221]

In January 2019, in face of the proposed acquisition of 21st Century Fox by The Walt Disney Company, Disney CEO Bob Iger confirmed that both Avatar 4 and Avatar 5 are being developed but have not been officially greenlit.[222] According to producer Landau in February 2019, Iger may have been misinterpreted. He said that Avatar 4 and 5 "are not only [greenlit]" but also a third of Avatar 4 has already been filmed.[223]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As depicted in Avatar (2009)

References

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