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 Aims to Beat the Odds—Again

Save this story Save Save this story Save The Monitor is a weekly column devoted to everything happening in the WIRED world of culture, from movies to memes, TV to Twitter. The predictions are in. As of this writing,  Avatar: The Way of Water is expected to bring in between $150 million and $175 million in North America this weekend. Those are hefty sums, the kind usually reserved for Marvel movies or Star Wars . Yes, the movie’s predecessor is the highest-grossing movie of all time—raking in more than $2.9 billion worldwide since its 2009 release—but people forget that its opening weekend yielded just $77 million, and it wasn’t thought of as a sure thing. It was the repeat viewers that transformed it into a juggernaut. Now, James Cameron and anyone rooting for the survival of theaters are hoping  Avatar  can beat expectations again.  The Monitor The OkCupid Dev Who Built a Hack to Get Taylor Swift Tickets Angela Watercutter The Monitor Cocaine Bear and the New Age of Internet Movies Angela Watercutter The Monitor Bob Iger Is Back—and Disney Is Probably Better for It Angela Watercutter The movie, out now, hits theaters under much different circumstances than its predecessor. The year 2009, despite the recession, still felt like a hopeful time, and all of the technical 3D marvels that  Avatar  pulled off still felt like, well, marvels. Audiences seemed too busy being immersed to mind that the movie’s story was pretty rote. In 2022, movie-making bells and whistles are the rote part, and audiences, two years into the Covid-19 pandemic, may be leery of being immersed in a theater for 3 hours and 10 minutes.  Perhaps even Cameron knows this. Much of the early buzz for  The Way of Water  has focused on the sequel’s improved story. “One of the (valid) knocks against the first  Avatar is that the characters feel like cutouts, there largely to serve as vessels for exploring the fantastical setting,”  New York  magazine’s Bilge Ebiri wrote . “This time around, it feels as if Cameron has taken the criticism to heart.” Cameron has also spent less time in the movie’s promotion cycle talking about the film’s technical achievements.  But will that be enough to get people into theaters? Even though movies like  Top Gun: Maverick  and  Spider-Man: No Way Home  have proven boffo box office is possible in the Covid era, there’s a sense that  The Way of Water  is going to be a litmus test for a certain kind of blow-the-doors-off/some-saw-it-three-times-in-the-theater blockbuster. That’s what happened with the first film. But, as  The New York Times Magazine  noted recently , “Of all the questions raised by  Avatar: The Way of Water , the most pressing seems to be ‘Who asked for this?’” Sure,  Maverick  was able to pull in audiences 36 years after  Top Gun , but  Top Gun  also left a longer-lasting cultural footprint. On one end of the spectrum are fans who still say, “I feel the need, the need for speed”; on the other are BuzzFeed quizzes like “ Do you remember anything at all about  Avatar ? ” But it’s possible all of this gets crossed out by another well-worn Hollywood maxim: Never doubt James Cameron. Even though it may seem like few people care about  Avatar  these days, that might not matter. When the original film got rereleased in China in 2021, it made millions—so many millions that it  reclaimed the top spot as highest-grossing film of all time, beating out  Avengers: Endgame . The film also comes at a time when audiences are  more comfortable than ever going back to the theater. Maybe all they need is for Cameron to show them the way.   

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