Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Remember ‘Avatar’? Disney hopes you do

- By Mae Anderson

NEW YORK >> You may not have thought much about the 2009 movie “Avatar” over the past eight years, but Disney sure has. The Magic Kingdom is wagering a reported half-billion dollars that you and zillions of other people will line up for new theme park attraction­s based on the movie’s biolumines­cent world of Pandora.

It’s a major gamble, even by Disney standards. While the movie smashed box-office records thanks to its dazzling 3-D effects and higher 3-D ticket prices, it’s also left little but a fading echo in pop-culture consciousn­ess. There are no “Avatar” sequels, at least yet, and no spinoffs; memorable characters and catchphras­es are also in short supply.

“I’ve never seen anybody ever walking down street wearing an Avatar t-shirt,” says Martin Lewison, a theme park expert and business management professor at Farmingdal­e State College in New York. “There’s no real emotional connection with ‘Avatar’ among the public despite the movie being so popular.”

CULTURAL PLUNDER

But theme parks are big business, and Disney is counting on what its executives call “Avatar Land” — the official name is “Pandora — World of Avatar” — to help keep that engine humming. In the fiscal year that ended in October, parks and resorts accounted for 31 percent of Disney’s nearly $56 billion in revenue, though only 21 percent of its nearly $16 billion in operating profit.

Disney also wants to prove it can turn its newer cultural properties, which include “Star Wars” and the Marvel superhero franchise, into popular theme-park attraction­s. In that, it’s basically playing catch-up with rival Universal Studios, which launched a hugely successful Harry Potter theme park in 2010.

Now the big question is whether Disney can pull that off with Avatar Land, or if it’s just chasing unobtainiu­m. (Yes, that’s an “Avatar” reference . See?)

On Tuesday, Disney reported earnings of $2.39 billion for the quarter ended April 1, up 11 percent from $2.14 billion a year earlier. Revenues rose 3 percent to $13.34 billion in the period, up from $12.97 billion. Parks and resorts revenue rose 9 percent in the period to $4.3 billion; operating profit in the segment jumped 20 percent to $750 million.

Revenue at Disney’s cable networks segment also grew, but operating income declined due to higher programmin­g costs at ESPN. The sports network recently announced layoffs of about 100 employees.

ODD PROPERTY

James Cameron, the mercurial director famous for “Titanic” and several other blockbuste­rs, has been promising “Avatar” sequels almost since the original premiered. One had been in developmen­t since 2010. Disney licensed the park rights in 2011, when a sequel didn’t seem that far off.

Little did Disney know. In 2013, Cameron announced his intention to film three follow-on films simultaneo­usly, for release starting in 2016. But the date was pushed back until 2017, then 2018. In March, Cameron said 2018 was “not happening .” In April, he announced the start of production on four sequels now scheduled to roll out from 2020 to 2025 .

That left Disney to plunge ahead on its own with Avatar Land, which opens May 27 at Disney’s Animal Kingdom theme park in Florida. If all goes well, the park “will promote the films and the new films will of course circle back and promote the land,” Lewison says.

But for the moment, Disney seems to be selling the opposite of such synergy. The company currently aims to wow parkgoers with attraction­s focused on the landscape and wildlife of Pandora, whether or not they remember the original movie. The primary rides showcase the world’s creatures and plant life rather than characters or events from “Avatar.”

Joe Rohde, the park’s design and production leader, makes that disconnect explicit, describing the park as a way to visit part of Pandora that has nothing to do with the movie’s clash between Pandora’s blue Na’vi race and mineral-hungry human industrial­ists. Now, he says, “you’re free to have your own adventure without worrying about what happened to somebody else some other time.”

BEATING HARRY POTTER

One big reason the Walt Disney Co. has pushed ahead with Avatar Land — not to mention “Star Wars”-themed attraction­s scheduled to open in 2019 — is the rising threat posed by Universal’s The Wizarding World of Harry Potter.

 ?? JOHN RAOUX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this April 29 photo, landscapin­g consisting of real Earth plant species mixed with sculpted Pandora flora surrounds a pond at the Pandora-World of Avatar land attraction in Disney’s Animal Kingdom theme park at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista,...
JOHN RAOUX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this April 29 photo, landscapin­g consisting of real Earth plant species mixed with sculpted Pandora flora surrounds a pond at the Pandora-World of Avatar land attraction in Disney’s Animal Kingdom theme park at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista,...

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