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Saturday 3 August 2013

AVATAR Coming Back with Three Sci-fi Sequels

Avatar  Coming Back in 2016

  Three   New  "Avatar," Sequel which will be released between 2016 and 2018, Fox Studios announced Thursday since it last gross  the  highest-grossing movie on record, having netted $2.8 billion at the box office worldwide.



Cameron had originally planned for only two sequels but  as he seems that Two  is Never enough
"In writing the new films, I've come to realize that 'Avatar's' world, story and characters have become even richer than I anticipated, and it became apparent that two films would not be enough to capture everything I wanted to put on screen," Cameron said in a statement.
The three sequels  are planned to  be  filmed simultaneously beginning in 2014, Fox said in a statement. They will be scheduled  for release  near to Christmas  period   towards  2016, 2017 and 2018, respectively.

Cameron, who wrote "Titanic" and "Avatar" by himself, has enrolled  4 more top  screenwriters for the project including Josh Friedman ("War of the World"), Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver ("Dawn of the Planet of the Apes") and Shane Salerno ("Armageddon" and "Savages") will work on the sequels. The  same writers  who has  brought everybody  the   Wonder to  the Magic Screen  and definitely  they  will continue and expand his vision of the world of 'Avatar

Avatar (Three-Disc Extended Collector's Edition)

 
Remember Then  ; After 12 years of thinking about it (and waiting for movie technology to catch up with his visions), James Cameron followed up his unsinkable Titanic with Avatar, a sci-fi epic meant to trump all previous sci-fi epics. Set in the future on a distant planet, Avatar spins a simple little parable about greedy colonizers (that would be mankind) messing up the lush tribal world of Pandora. 

A paraplegic Marine named Jake (Sam Worthington) acts through a 9-foot-tall avatar that allows him to roam the planet and pass as one of the Na'vi, the blue-skinned, large-eyed native people who would very much like to live their peaceful lives without the interference of the visitors. Although he's supposed to be gathering intel for the badass general (Stephen Lang) who'd like to lay waste to the planet and its inhabitants, Jake naturally begins to take a liking to the Na'vi, especially the feisty Neytiri (Zoë Saldana, whose entire performance, recorded by Cameron's complicated motion-capture system, exists as a digitally rendered Na'vi). 




The movie uses state-of-the-art 3D technology to plunge the viewer deep into Cameron's crazy toy box of planetary ecosystems and high-tech machinery. Maybe it's the fact that Cameron seems torn between his two loves--awesome destructive gizmos and flower-power message mongering--that makes Avatar's pursuit of its point ultimately uncertain. That, and the fact that Cameron's dialogue continues to clunk badly. If you're won over by the movie's trippy new world, the characters will be forgivable as broad, useful archetypes rather than standard-issue stereotypes, and you might be able to overlook the unsurprising central plot.


 (The overextended "take that, Michael Bay" final battle sequences could tax even Cameron enthusiasts, however.) It doesn't measure up to the hype (what could?) yet Avatar frequently hits a giddy delirium all its own. The film itself is our Pandora, a sensation-saturated universe only the movies could create. --Robert Horton




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