UPDATE 7:20 AM: We just learned that James Cameron is telling Hollywood that Fox made a “huge” donation to his environmental green fund, and in return he committed to making the Avatar sequel and threequel his next films. That also caused him to withdraw from Sony Pictures’ Cleopatra with Angelina Jolie, even though he’d told the studio that he’d always wanted to film the Queen Of The Nile’s story.
WEDNESDAY 6 AM: With this move, Twentieth Century Fox effectively ties up James Cameron through December 2015, apparently putting a hold on Sony Pictures’ hopes for the director to helm a fast-tracked Cleopatra starring Angelina Jolie in 2012:
LOS ANGELES (October 27, 2010) __ Moving forward with the most anticipated films of the next decade, Fox Filmed Entertainment Chairmen Jim Gianopulos and Tom Rothman announced today that Academy Award®-winning filmmaker James Cameron has agreed to make AVATAR 2 and 3 as his next films.
Cameron, who had always viewed AVATAR as the creation of a new world and mythology, will begin work on the scripts early next year with an eye towards commencing production later in 2011. Cameron will decide if he will shoot the films back-to-back after he completes the scripts, but the release of the first, as yet untitled sequel, is targeted for December 2014, with the third film contemplated for a December 2015 release.
AVATAR 2 & 3 will be produced by Cameron and Jon Landau for Cameron’s Lightstorm Entertainment.
“AVATAR is not only the highest grossing movie of all time, it is a created universe based on the singular imagination and daring of James Cameron, who also raised the consciousness of people worldwide to some of the greatest issues facing our planet,” said Rothman and Gianopulos. “We had no higher priority, and can feel no greater joy, than enabling Jim to continue and expand his vision of the world of AVATAR. This is a great day in the history of our company, and we thank Jim, Jon Landau, Rae Sanchini and all of their team and all of our Fox colleagues throughout the world, who have made this possible.”
Commented Cameron: “It is a rare and remarkable opportunity when a filmmaker gets to build a fantasy world, and watch it grow, with the resources and partnership of a global media company. AVATAR was conceived as an epic work of fantasy – a world that audiences could visit, across all media platforms, and this moment marks the launch of the next phase of that world. With two new films on the drawing boards, my company and I are embarking on an epic journey with our partners at Twentieth Century Fox. Our goal is to meet and exceed the global audience’s expectations for the richness of AVATAR’s visual world and the power of the storytelling. In the second and third films, which will be self contained stories that also fulfill a greater story arc, we will not back off the throttle of AVATAR’s visual and emotional horsepower, and will continue to explore its themes and characters, which touched the hearts of audiences in all cultures around the world. I’m looking forward to returning to Pandora, a world where our imaginations can run wild.”
“It is very exciting to be teaming again with our partners at Fox to give audiences the opportunity to return to Pandora,” said producer Jon Landau. “With the first movie, Jim only scratched the surface of the stories he wants to tell and the creatures and world he wants to create. Now we will continue his vision.”
AVATAR is the highest grossing film of all time, taking in nearly $2.8 billion in worldwide box office. It is also the top-selling Blu-ray disc of all time. AVATAR won Golden Globe® awards for Best Motion Picture and Best Director; and was nominated for nine Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, and won Oscars for art direction, visual effects and cinematography.
AVATAR was written by Cameron from an idea he nurtured for over a decade, while working on the technology necessary to realize its wholly imagined world. Working with Joe Letteri and his team at Peter Jackson’s WETA Digital, Cameron created a fully immersive 3D cinematic experience of a new kind, where revolutionary technology that was invented to make the film disappeared into the emotion of the characters and the epic nature of the story.
AVATAR 2 & 3 will mark Cameron’s latest collaborations with Twentieth Century Fox, a relationship that spans 25 years and marks one of the most successful filmmaker-studio alliances in motion picture history. Cameron and Fox first joined forces in 1985 for Aliens, which became a sci-fi classic. Next came The Abyss, which revolutionized visual effects technology; and True Lies, a blockbuster starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. In 1996, Fox greenlighted Cameron’s Titanic, which became the most successful film in history, and won a record-breaking eleven Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
Lightstorm partner Rae Sanchini negotiated the deal on Lightstorm’s behalf.






Hey Jim, try providing an original story next time instead of a cross between FernGully and Dances With Wolves.
I hope its better than the first one. Visually stunning. But storywise…inert at best. I see this going where the Matrix sequels ended up being. Visually sumptous, but ultimately hollow inside. Good luck to Cameron because I’m not rushing out to see this unless the reviews are off the charts. 3D tickets by then will be 25 beans a pop.
I’m glad Mr. Cameron….Mr. CarbonFootprint himself…will make another film about everyone else sacrificing to save the planet. I thought Hollywood rebelled at religious movies.
You said it! There is a nice video overview of Mr. Cameron’s contributions to the planet on YouTube. Just search for “James Cameron Hypecrite” (or TKZ4RolQxec).
Avatar was a very good film — and for what aimed for great. The plot could have been stronger, Cameron missed some opportunities, but overall, for the scale and scope of what he was doing, a very impressive writing job.
I saw it a second time expecting to be bored and unimpressed (wanted to see how it looked in 2D) and I was sucked in yet again – and I am a very harsh movie critic.
Avatar was a really fun movie to watch, but to be honest, it was basically only a retelling of the Pocahontas story. How will they make TWO sequels to an already unoriginal story?
How dare Fox make sequels to one of the biggest successes in film history!
I’m so angry! This is sure to be a massive hit, what were they thinking?!
Yeah I don’t get all the hate for Avatar. Clearly, the world responded. It wouldn’t have done so well nor held on for so long had people not left the theaters happy and telling their friends to go see it. It was a uber hit in every market in every part of the world. Was the story filled with holes and dialogue cringeworthy? Yes. BUT, it was beautiful, fun, and at times very poignant. And it had an amazing message. So it did amazingly well and deserved to do so. I look forward to the sequels. I do however hope they’re not QUITE as long. Maybe right at 2 hours would be great. Avatar seemed to drag on a few too many minutes for my liking, and I love epic films.
Oh, and I’d love to see BOTH Sigourney Weaver AND Michelle Rodriguez return. As he said, it’s sci-fi and anybody can return. I’d love to see Trudy back as an Avatar, like perhaps the planet gave her a rebirth for her sacrifice. Or, perhaps she somehow survived by ejecting before her chopper blew up.
Well, it’s the internet, where everyone hates everything. So, its not shocking to me at all. Everyone I know seemed to either like it, or loved it.
Don’t you dare compare Lord of the Rings to Avatar ARE YOU KIDDING ME
So, will Cameron simply lift plots from other Disney films for the sequels, as he did the first one?
Seriously, read the plot of Pocahontas and you’ll see what I mean.
And wasn’t Dances With Wolves itself, in hindsight, a retelling of A Man Called Horse?
This comes as no surprise. Gotta milk the cow dry. I couldn’t stay awake longer than 15mins for the 1st installment but at the same time, I can’t get into make believe and escapism although millions of people can. He won’t get my 10 bucks but it’s not like he’ll miss it. lol
Wow, what an amazing collection of ignorant statements. Drudge must have linked to this story today because clearly none of the remarks questioning the rationale of this announcement are from anyone who understands how industry works. Let me put it in simple terms. When you make a product that sells for $12.50 and you sell 2.8 BILLION worth of that product, it’s known in business terms as a ‘success’. You know, like how a company needs to make a profit to remain in business. It’s kind of how our entire global economy works, outside of North Korea. Only a complete IDIOT could question the logic behind repeating the same process and should therefore move to North Korea.
What will Angelina do without Cameron to direct Cleopatra? I was so looking forward to Jim’s take on ancient Egypt.
Maybe, we can move Cleopatra to Pandora.
New eye candy from Cameron.
Green fund gets some cash.
Who loses here?
I love the comments … well done, guys !!! I went for the special effects, and I was blown away ; the story was derivative beyond belief, tho … Cameron even lifted the opening scene from ‘Mohicans’, almost frame by frame, line by line (even tho it appeared later in the narrative) … unbelievable !?!
How about a story about a time traveling killer who goes foreward in time to kill a genetically altered blue human who is traveling on a cruise ship. That Blue human would be the leader of a group of other blue humans that started a revolution that took over the world and saved it from human destructive activity. The killer sinks the ship to kill the blue leader while the blue human leader falls in love with a regular human woman. As the ship sinks, the woman….aw never mind….it was done before.
Sounds like sour grapes from Sony, Fox has helped Cameron establish a foundation, big deal. Do you guys work for Sony?
Any idea on what the charity is, and how much?
Hated the movie the first time. Went back a second time to see if I had “missed the boat” and disliked it even more. Outside of its social preaching, the characters were paper-thin stereotypes across the board and I never felt any sense of emotional engagement.
The movie made all kinds of money — but has anyone met a friend who went crazy for it the way people did for Kate & Leo in TITANIC? It’s like everyone went, and because of the 3-D factor it goosed the grosses even more, but that emotional connection people have with some of the great blockbusters of all-time simply isn’t there with AVATAR.
all my friends who recommended i see it didn’t even see it in 3d. i held off thinking it was an overhyped blockbuster, and finally bought it on bluray, absolutely blown away by the philosophical and underlying themes in it. the spiritual and philosophical content in it gives me much more personal attachment to the movie (as it actually influenced my worldview) than the lovestory in titantic (which is an unbelievable movie, not knocking it)
I liked Avatar for the CGI and all that. The story was flimsy, and I don’t know how you could make two more movies. Let me guess, since the first one was about the forests, #2 will be about the oceans, and #3 about the air. Plot; done.
Y’all need to stop comparing apples and oranges Avatar and LOTR have absolutely nothing in common other than that they are both movies. Why can’t somebody enjoy both of them on their own merits…. sheeesh, they’re just movies, make ‘em, watch ‘em and enjoy ‘em…. or don’t…. whatever.
Hey look everyone, a rational and intelligent response. You might want to leave now Mahtoska, before the Drudge Report folks jump all over you.
Another CGI crapfest with a thin unoriginal story line. I think I’ll sit those out.
Everyone writing will go see both films without question, so just stop with how ‘bad’ avatar was. Overated…maybe, but I saw it twice. I havnt seen an action movie twice in a decade. Can u really say ur not excited to see what james camerons going to do next? Who else can u say that about? Prick, ego maniac, I don’t care…just keep making movies that change cinema every 3, 5, 7 years please james cameron, because u havn’t made one I havnt really enjoyed in some substantial capacity yet. And if/when u do, the body of work before that is still gonna buy u a lot of leway with me, because u just make great movies that no one else could. While not being my favorite filmaker, James cameron is by far the single most defining director of my lifetime.
I can’t believe the whining snobbery in this thread.
Did you forget the business part of show business? Of course they are going to make a sequel. This is Jim’s Star Wars and the revenue from the merchandising alone will make him a billionaire and keep Fox in the black.
Gen Y kids (age 8-20) love these blue people and will ensure a market for Avatar and it’s characters for at least 10 years.
Boy, the dopes who come from Drudge are here early today! I especially love the one who said they were surprised that HBO agreed to show Avatar. They’ve got a great grasp on what makes the industry tick.
It’s amazing how so many are sitting in the underwear, in the basement, and riding the wave of “hate Avatar” threads. When so many people loved the movie by voting with their wallets, these idiots are now spamming their hate. Wake up and get a life.
They are spamming their hate because for literally five straight months, Breitbart’s Big Hollywood was feeding them the arguments they are posting here almost verbatim.
Conservatives claim to be free thinking individuals, but they have this amazing tendency to believe without question what Andrew Breitbart tells them.
Relax, Junior. I’m conservative and I liked AVATAR. Yes, the story was basically a warmed-up Edgar Rice Burroughs yarn but it was very entertaining. I’ll see the sequels.
Well, good on you, but let’s admit that the most shrill of the anti-Avatar arguments put forth on this thread can be found word for word on archived articles from Big Hollywood. This article was linked by Drudge, who is run by Breitbart, hence the groupthink posting.