Film Review: James Cameron’s ‘Avatar: The Way Of Water’
13.12.2022 - 20:25
/ deadline.com
James Cameron always swings for the fences — no singles, doubles, triples or even stealing home for him — and he’s hit a grand slam with the long-awaited Avatar: The Way of Water. This second installment in a five-film series of Avatar features from 20th Century Studios/Disney (with three more to open at two-year intervals through 2028) more than fulfills the promise of the original, which was released in 2009, before some of its fans were even born. The film is beautiful, obsessive and eventful, a depiction of a veritable Eden threatened by voraciously destructive forces both natural and man-made. No one who enthused over the original would think of missing this follow-up, which ups the ante for all that is to come, creatively and financially.
When Cameron took on the daunting challenge of guiding a troublesome, dubiously seaworthy entity called Titanic to its destination in 1997, something its captain and crew were unable to do in real life, he righted the ship sufficiently for the film to make it to port and generate $2.2 billion worldwide, an all-time box office record to that point. When Cameron resurfaced 12 years later with Avatar, another watery endeavor, he once again hit the jackpot, to the tune of $2.7 billion. And now, with the film’s producers and financiers gambling on the director’s hand to remain hot all these years later (few would bet against it), we can see that what’s up on screen represents a further flowering of a verdant, watery and altogether captivating island environment now being threatened by the forces of greed, money and militarism poised to overrun paradise.
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