AVATAR: THE WAY OF WATER And AVATAR 3 Were Originally Planned As One Movie Before Being Split Into Two

AVATAR: THE WAY OF WATER And AVATAR 3 Were Originally Planned As One Movie Before Being Split Into Two

Avatar: The Way of Water's writers have confirmed that the sequel and Avatar 3 were once one and the same, while also teasing what clues for that planned third chapter fans should be on the lookout for.

By JoshWilding - Dec 23, 2022 05:12 AM EST
Filed Under: Avatar
Source: Variety (via SFFGazette.com)

If you watched Avatar: The Way of Water and thought, "Man, this feels like half a movie," then you aren't alone. In fact, there's a good reason for that because it's now been confirmed that the script, written by Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver, ended up being split into two movies.

Talking to Variety (via SFFGazette.com), the writers confirmed that director James Cameron wanted both The Way of Water and Avatar 3 to serve as satisfying experiences in their own right (that's debatable). However, the fact that the follow-up to 2009's Avatar was split straight down the middle would explain that cliffhanger ending and the huge number of unresolved plot threads! 

While Jaffa and Silver were unwilling to reveal too much about how the events of The Way of Water inform what comes next, the former says fans should keep in mind the tense exchange between Jake and Neytiri and the leaders of the Metkayina clan, Tonowari and Ronal, when the Sully family first arrive requesting sanctuary. 

"There’s a lot going on between husbands and wives and between the two husbands and the two wives," he teases. "There are a lot of dynamics set up that continue to play out."

Silver adds, "You have this kind of deeply relatable series of dynamics, inter-family, interpersonal, inter-clan, played out on these incredibly inflated scales of different worlds. The clans that you’re going to meet and the worlds that you’re going to find on Pandora — you can’t even imagine what they are."

"Just like the tulkun were a revelation for this movie, there’s lots more of that stuff to come. It’s incredibly exciting, the story that happens to the Sullys. You couldn’t predict it."

There was an whole lot of filler in Avatar: The Way of Water, and the ways that Cameron stretched the story out are now more apparent. Once we see Avatar 3 - which has been shot, as have parts of Avatar 4 - we have a feeling the sequel will play a little better, though we can't help but wonder just how big Cameron's vision actually is if movie three is just the rest of movie two! 

That fourth instalment may be in the works but hasn't been green lit, and that happening will hinge on the success of the second and third chapters. 

As always, stay tuned to SFFGazette.com for updates. 

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ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 12/23/2022, 5:23 AM
It's fun watching all the reviews finding polite ways to essentially say the same thing, that it's got good visuals but is utter, utter shit.

Because it's James Cameron. And the movie stands to lose so much money, nobody would dare.
But it is. And the visuals and tech aren't that much more advanced. Nobody's reinventing the wheel here.

It's making some money of course but the drop is gonna be scary for them.
WakandanQueen
WakandanQueen - 12/23/2022, 6:01 AM
Hope 3 has way more Zoe Saldaña.
DocSpock
DocSpock - 12/23/2022, 10:36 AM


I am confused.

Is this somehow why it felt like I sat through 2 movies watching Avatar 2?

zzzzzzzzzzzzz

TheVandalore
TheVandalore - 12/23/2022, 10:41 AM
I'm super divided about Avatar as a franchise.

On the one hand I actually really enjoyed Avatar 2 and despite being able to overlook glaring issues with the plot and still not favoring some of Cameron's writing style, I really had no really big issues with Avatar 2 like I did 1. The only issue is I really felt the run time.

But for the first time I didn't want Cameron to cut anything for time, if anything I wish we had much more time to develop this film somehow without the run time hurting. I'll admit, by the time the final fight began I was ready for the movie to end, but simply because I needed a break, not because I was actually disinterested.

So I'm struggling with deciding if Avatar has to be a theater experience, because I would love to spend time in this world in chapters. I wouldn't have minded this being 4 hours with 4 hour long chapters, if I could break them up like I did watching the Snyder Cut.

I know James would never settle for Avatar on streaming unless it was his last choice, but I'd watch hours of this world if it was on streaming and film quality. I would watch his 9 hour cut of Avatar 3 if it was released in 3 hour chapters over the course of a month.

Could you imagine each part drops month after month? 3 months in a row. A whole month of being able to see chapter 1 of Avatar 3, then the following month is Chapter 2, and then finally the next month the final chapter 3.

They would make soooooo much bank.

I'd go multiple times those 3 months.
bkmeijer1
bkmeijer1 - 12/23/2022, 11:47 AM
@TheVandalore - ''Could you imagine each part drops month after month?''

I actually suggested this on a previous article (I think the one about Avatar 3 being 9 hours). Instead of 3 three hour movies, I even said 8 movies for 8 months.

If anyone can convince a studio to do it, it's James Cameron.
malschla
malschla - 12/24/2022, 8:18 PM
This isn’t a “hot take” at this point, but I don’t think this movie gets close to $2B.
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