Otago Daily Times

Sequels coming for the cynics

Thirteen years after first defying the cynics, is back in theatres to set the stage for its sequel, writes

- Jen Yamato.

It was December 2009 when Australian actor Sam Worthingto­n, unaware of how massively his role as a former Marine on a mission to a new planet was about to change his life, received a bit of advice from James Cameron.

The movie they’d been working on for two years, the scifi epic Avatar, was about to hit theatres — and there was some doubt as to how the film, with a reported production and marketing budget of $US430 million, would fare with audiences.

‘‘Jim told us that science fiction may not translate as well,’’ Worthingto­n said ahead of the film’s 4K theatrical rerelease, designed to reintroduc­e the best picture nominee to audiences before its highly anticipate­d sequel Avatar: The Way of Water opens in December. ‘‘He said, ‘When the movie comes out just take yourself away, out of the world for a bit. Go live on an island or go up a mountain and try not to read anything.’ And I did.’’

By the time Worthingto­n returned from a snowy getaway with friends — no talk of box office receipts allowed — the film was a massive global hit.

‘‘I pretty quickly realised my life had gone 180,’’ said Worthingto­n, who needn’t have worried: the film scored nine Oscar nomination­s and won three and went on to gross $US2.8 billion to date, with four new blockbuste­rsized sequels on the way.

Written and directed by Cameron (Titanic, Aliens), Avatar employed groundbrea­king performanc­e capture technology to tell the story of Jake Sully (Worthingto­n), a paraplegic former soldier who operates a blueskinne­d, 10foottall geneticall­y engineered avatar on the planet of Pandora. There, he falls in love with a local warrior, Neytiri (Zoe Saldana) and joins the Na’vi tribe to stop Earth colonisers from destroying their world.

Producer Jon Landau confirms that Cameron fielded suggestion­s to alter or add things to Avatar for its theatrical rerelease, as filmmakers like George Lucas and Steven Spielberg have done retroactiv­ely to their own classics.

‘‘There were people who thought about it,’’ said Landau. ‘‘But to us and to Jim, this was the movie he wanted to release. It wasn’t like we didn’t get to do something. It wasn’t like there was an ending someone tried to talk us out of.’’

While audiences have had to wait 13 years for the sequel, many of the cast and crew have been working on and off for Cameron on simultaneo­us sequels in the intervenin­g years. Worthingto­n will return for multiple sequels alongside Saldana and Stephen Lang, with Sigourney Weaver, Giovanni Ribisi, Joel David Moore, Dileep Rao and CCH Pounder also back for more.

In 2012, the year Cameron made a recordsett­ing solo dive into the Mariana Trench, he also began discussing ideas for Avatar 2 with Worthingto­n, who praised the director’s penchant for pushing limits even outside of film.

‘‘I texted him and said, ‘Hope you don’t get eaten by a Megalodon, brother’,’’ said the actor, who has already filmed most of his scenes in Avatar 3

(expected release date, December 20, 2024) and a few scenes for Avatar 4 (due in 2026). ‘‘I do my washing on my days off. This guy goes down to the Titanic.’’

Stage and screen veteran Lang had been cast as Col. Miles Quaritch, the ruthless head of security for the mining company tasked with harvesting valuable unobtanium from Pandora, two decades after auditionin­g for

Cameron for a role in 1986’s

Aliens.

It was during production of

Avatar that the director first told him he’d be bringing him back for future instalment­s. Initially the news took Lang by surprise. After all, Avatar ended with Quaritch taking two Na’vi arrows to the chest.

‘‘As far as I’m concerned, I was probably dead,’’ he said.

But during a day off from filming in 2007 in New Zealand, Cameron turned to him. ‘‘He said, ‘You know, you’ll be coming back.’ And he had a beer in his hand and I had a beer in my hand.’’ said Lang. ‘‘I thought it might be the beer talking, but if you know Jim, you know Jim doesn’t say things lightly.’’

In 2010, after Avatar opened to critical and commercial acclaim, the filmmaker confirmed it. ‘‘This time he said, ‘You’re in all the sequels’.’’

While years of painstakin­g and costly research and developmen­t went into the unpreceden­ted performanc­ecapture technology and production processes, the technology created for the first film has been expanded upon for the sequels, the first two of which filmed simultaneo­usly. Avatar 2, set in a previously unseen aquatic land on Pandora, will feature underwater performanc­e capture filmed in a 900,000gallon water tank built for the sequels.

‘‘Avatar just created the floor of the technologi­cal advances that we want to continue to push with each sequel,’’ said Landau.

The narrative bridges between Avatar and Avatar 2, he said, are themes of family — Jake and Neytiri now have teenaged children — and the continuing environmen­tal conscience that is central to the first film. ‘‘Jake and Neytiri now have a mixed race family; he’s of the human world, she’s of the Na’vi world. Their kids are being raised in this environmen­t. How do they handle it?’’ said Landau.

‘‘The sequels are a story of the young Sullys coming to define who they are,’’ he added. ‘‘It’s a story about family dynamics and when the family is forced to flee their home and go try and find safe haven in the distant atolls, they are literally and figurative­ly fish out of water. Now they have to adjust and adapt thematical­ly, in a way that oftentimes refugees might have to. So again, very relatable themes for the world.’’ —TNS

I thought it might be the beer talking, but if you know Jim, you know Jim doesn’t say things lightly

 ?? PHOTO: TNS ?? Sam Worthingto­n as Jake Sully, left, and Zoe Saldana as Neytiri, in Avatar.
PHOTO: TNS Sam Worthingto­n as Jake Sully, left, and Zoe Saldana as Neytiri, in Avatar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand