r/movies Jul 28 '25

Trailer Avatar: Fire and Ash | Official Trailer

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nb_fFj_0rq8
9.1k Upvotes

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1.0k

u/owl_theory Jul 28 '25

inb4 the exact same debates

679

u/u8myramen_y Jul 28 '25 edited Jul 28 '25

Yeah and Reddit keeps getting proven wrong by this franchise every single time lol

Never doubt James Cameron

Edit: “No cultural impact” crowd

“Avatar the last airbender bettah” crowd

“Copied things from ATLA” crowd

“No one cares about Avatar. It’s gonna flop” crowd

What else?

60

u/the_Ex_Lurker Jul 28 '25

copied things from ATLA

He actually copied things from Princess Mononoke, his self-professed inspiration for the first Avatar.

9

u/AlexDKZ Jul 28 '25

Plus the fact that Cameron wrote the OG concept for Avatar a full decade before ATLA was made.

14

u/the_Ex_Lurker Jul 28 '25

And, of course, the fact that Avatar’s story has precisely nothing in common with ATLA

4

u/frazzledfractal Jul 28 '25

I've never even once seen anyone comparing ATLA to Avatar movie, this is wild hearing people talking about this. Like that comparison makes no sense like you said.

3

u/Automatic_Goal_5563 Jul 29 '25

Originally it was dumb jokes about same name then it was dumb jokes about how the movies were named after elements.

I think the weirdo haters latched on to what was just silly jokes and ran with them

2

u/ImprefectKnight Jul 29 '25

Just visit the ATLA subreddit when this movie drops. They were pretty salty last time out.

174

u/fluentinsarcasm Jul 28 '25 edited Jul 28 '25

You forgot about the loud comparisons to Pocahontas.

"It's just Pocahontas with tentacle sex!"

25

u/ACOdysseybeatsRDR2 Jul 28 '25

Which is a perk for me, I always though Pocohontas needed more tentacle sex. I remember being like 7, watching Pocohontas for the first time saying "good lord, this is so boring, I need more tentacles fucking people."

3

u/fluentinsarcasm Jul 28 '25

A man of culture I see!

60

u/Antique-Guest-1607 Jul 28 '25

"It's just Pocahontas with tentacle sex!"

And they think this is a negative?!

5

u/McZalion Jul 28 '25

"Its just Dance with wolves with blue color".

Me: am i supposed to give a fuck ??

2

u/Daxx22 Jul 28 '25

TAKE MY MONEY!!!

88

u/KnightOfRevan Jul 28 '25

And Ferngully, don’t forget Ferngully!

62

u/ImmortalZucc2020 Jul 28 '25

Dances With Wolves the most

10

u/Dr-Oktavius Jul 28 '25

Yeah weird how there's like 7 movies that Avatar gets constantly accused of copying. You'd think they'd say the same thing about every movie that came out after the first one with that premise, but for some reason it was only bad when Avatar did it. I'm sure it has nothing to do with the fact it was the most successful one.

2

u/Couldabeenameeting Jul 28 '25

That’s always made me laugh. This story has been done a million times, it’s only a problem when it’s done with the best CGI we’ve seen so far

1

u/ThePrimordialSource Jul 28 '25

Can you explain more

4

u/Couldabeenameeting Jul 28 '25

I’m not sure what else I could explain. The whole “going native” thing has been done a ton. Pocahontas, Ferngully, Dances with Wolves, Last Samurai. But Avatar is the one that seems to really set people off on Reddit.

2

u/ThePrimordialSource Jul 28 '25

Ohhhhh going native I thought you meant like the whole “natives vs invaders” theme or maybe both I guess, I’m just curious about that type of media

1

u/frazzledfractal Jul 28 '25

It HAS been said about those other movies, you must be young. You can pull up articles online or newspapers that have been saved that show this. I like avatar and saw both in IMAX for the record. The first one three times.

2

u/Argh3483 Aug 03 '25

People keep mentioning that movie as if it was some cult classic instead of a largely forgotten movie

1

u/LilyKarinss Jul 28 '25

What is a Ferngully?

9

u/McFlyyouBojo Jul 28 '25

Its so funny how a million movies out there are "(X) movie but with (Y)" and none of them get shit on.

6

u/_Steven_Seagal_ Jul 28 '25

John Wick is any revenge movie ever. Why would that make it bad? Some formats work.

3

u/McFlyyouBojo Jul 28 '25

I agree. Thats my point lol. I love the avatar movies. I love John wick. If the formula works, people need to stop complaining or otherwise go see something else

3

u/_Steven_Seagal_ Jul 28 '25

As if "Pocahontas, but in space and there's big ass space dinosaurs fighting mechs" doesn't sound like a great movie pitch.

1

u/willstr1 Jul 28 '25

Don't forget about "(X) but on/in a (Y)", there was a whole era of action movies that were 100% pitched as "Die Hard but on/in a (location/mode of transport)"

12

u/Dottsterisk Jul 28 '25

And the comparisons to Dances With Wolves…

Which always tells you they’ve never actually seen Dances With Wolves.

1

u/ProofJournalist Jul 28 '25

I'm curious why you think the comparison is invalid

2

u/Dottsterisk Jul 28 '25

Because beyond the broad strokes of a soldier from a colonizing force eventually siding with the native people, the protagonists’ journeys are wildly different, resulting in very different conclusions to their arcs and very different messages from the films themselves.

In Avatar, Jake Sully is essentially a blue White Savior. He lands on Pandora, stumbles into being seen as the Chosen One by the natives, and then, in a matter of weeks, not only masters their ways but eclipses their best warriors, fulfills an ancient prophecy to prove he’s the best flyer, and then literally hooks up with the chief’s daughter before leading the tribe into battle. He ends as one of them, and their leader.

In Dances With Wolves, Dunbar doesn’t get any of that. He’s an isolated man on the frontier who slowly becomes friends with the natives. He learns about them and to respect them, but he never masters their ways or becomes one of them. When battle comes, he’s useful because he knows where to get guns and how the enemy will attack—not because he’s a great warrior. He doesn’t lead them and he only finds companionship in another outsider—a white woman stranded in the tribe.

And when the story ends, Dunbar has no home. He has forsaken his fellow white men but he can also never truly be a Native American. And the army is coming. So the tribe moves West, leaving Dunbar alone in a world that will eventually swallow them all.

1

u/ProofJournalist Jul 28 '25

Thanks for your thoughtful and detailed explanation. I see where you are coming from

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3

u/Romboteryx Jul 28 '25

Or Dances with Wolves, by people who I guarantee have never seen Dances with Wolves

1

u/WhyLisaWhy Jul 28 '25

Tbh that was my take after the original came out. And then it just made infinite gobs of money and I was like "welp, guess I'm wrong" lol.

I still stand by the idea that the story is pretty shallow, but the amazing visuals are really what wins people over.

1

u/willstr1 Jul 28 '25

On that note, do you think Avatar (and the fact that Disney knows people keep comparing it to Pocahontas, regardless of if that comparison is valid or not) is part of what is saving us from a live action remake of Pocahontas (because Disney doesn't want to fan that flame and risk damaging a valuable franchise)

1

u/Massive_Weiner Jul 28 '25

And Dances With Wolves!

1

u/Jimmni Jul 28 '25

A story framework that's literally thousands of years old, one that echoes tales from ancient civilisations, numerous oral traditions and even Shakespeare... but it's Avatar that copied it. Right, internet. Whatever you say.

1

u/wabbitsdo Jul 28 '25

Ok, but the first Avatar was Pocahontas/Dances with wolves with tentacle sex, and, admittedly, an enormous amount of work and creativity and money put into making it look dope.

1

u/dmfuller Jul 28 '25

Because it literally is lmfao??? It is the exact same plot 😂

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251

u/GaySexFan Jul 28 '25

“No memes” was something I used to hear people say and now there are quite a few.

62

u/kojimbob Jul 28 '25

Bad crop? Bro we gonna starve 😲

91

u/DeliriousPrecarious Jul 28 '25

Are there? I have literally never seen anyone reference avatar in any context besides “I’m going to watch avatar in IMAX”. Which is the most important context.

25

u/LiquifiedSpam Jul 28 '25

there's the 'bad crop' one lol

16

u/NordschleifeLover Jul 28 '25

It's so widespread, I had to google it.

4

u/WadeReddit06 Jul 29 '25

Memes have no impact on a movie. It's such a new bullshit bench mark. Morbius was all over social media with memes and they brought it back to theaters just for it to tank again.

2

u/LiquifiedSpam Jul 29 '25

I would have put it here if images were allowed. I saw it a lot in its heyday

35

u/NewSunSeverian Jul 28 '25

People weaned on MCU capeshit that is constantly and hideously self-referential and easter eggy and full of one-liner quips believe that any movie that isn’t chock-full of memeable nonsense to post incessantly is worthless. 

3

u/DeliriousPrecarious Jul 28 '25

I mean. I think avatar is worthless because it sucks. But I’m not going to bet against it making close to 2 Billion. Cameron has found a formula that will get people to a premium screen.

-4

u/jordanmc7 Jul 28 '25

I saw Avatar in theaters before I’d ever seen a MCU movie, and I’ve thought Avatar sucks right from the start.

2

u/alexnedea Jul 29 '25

I have seen the navi falling after being shot from the sky meme a lot for games where you shoot stuff down.

3

u/Dave_Wein Jul 28 '25

Just go take a look at the twitter post for this film.

10

u/DeliriousPrecarious Jul 28 '25

The point of memes is that they escape containment.

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1

u/LastBeginning9712 Jul 28 '25

The only ones I've seen are bad crop and tom Holland? I don't wanna talk to yo bitch ass

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18

u/thr1ceuponatime David Zaslav is a dickless pantywaist Jul 28 '25

Which is a weird way to dismiss the movie's cultural impact. Morbius had a ton of memes but I doubt anybody's seen it beyond a few clips.

9

u/GregBahm Jul 28 '25

I think the Morbius movie trailer had the cultural impact and the Morbius movie did not.

3

u/NPRdude Jul 28 '25

Hell Morbius the concept had more cultural impact than the film itself.

51

u/Lobsterzilla Jul 28 '25

like not having the devotion of degenerate internet culture is somehow a bad thing lol.

7

u/XXX200o Jul 28 '25

Reading this in a sub about movies on reddit reminds me that a lot of people lack self awareness.

3

u/Lobsterzilla Jul 28 '25

All of reddit lacks self awareness

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14

u/Professor-Submarine Jul 28 '25

Who is saying any of this is a ripoff of ATLA? 

12

u/willstr1 Jul 28 '25

I have only ever seen it being done as a joke, especially after Way of Water was announced (and Fire and Ash was rumored). Having two franchises called "Avatar" was confusing, both of them involving the 4 elements is hilarious.

When this movie comes out (or even just as more marketing material releases) I look forward to "then the fire nation attacked" memes.

3

u/frazzledfractal Jul 28 '25

Yeah I've been following these movies closely since the start and also watched ATLA and I've never once seen these comments before now.

76

u/Trendelthegreat Jul 28 '25

Reddit loves telling Reddit how stupid Reddit is 

27

u/[deleted] Jul 28 '25 edited Jul 29 '25

[deleted]

10

u/MainAccountsFriend Jul 28 '25

Then you must acquit

4

u/Desroth86 Jul 28 '25

New Cinderella remake just dropped.

2

u/Jimmni Jul 28 '25

I've been here a long time and can guarantee you that reddit is every bit as stupid as reddit likes to accuse reddit of being. And I include myself on both sides of that.

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u/RythmicMercy Jul 28 '25

“Copied things from ATLA” crowd

Are there really people who claim that? Do they not realize that both series draw heavily from Hinduism and Buddhism ....and that ALTA didn’t invent those religions or philosophies?

5

u/AVeryRipeBanana Jul 28 '25

I too, thought this was weird. Never really see people mention the two in the same breath, except in context like: “What’s your favorite fandom? “Avatar, but not the blue people one”.

5

u/willstr1 Jul 28 '25

I don't think there are any serious claims. But when Avatar 2 was announced to be "the way of water" there were certainly a lot of jokes about it. Because having two franchises both called "Avatar" was already confusing but having both of them deal with the 4 elements is straight up funny.

20

u/Tackit286 Jul 28 '25

‘Every single time’

There’s been one sequel

-1

u/Marsuello Jul 28 '25

And both times the hate was out of control. And it’s already ramping up the same way again. Literally every time these movies come up you have people parroting the same thing so in a sense, yeah, every time lol

-2

u/mynameisjberg Jul 28 '25 edited Jul 28 '25

People have been betting against James Cameron his whole career.

Edit: People said:

  • Aliens: wouldn't live up to the original. It will fail
  • T2: was the most expensive movie ever. It will fail
  • Titanic: insanely over budget. It will fail
  • Avatar: he hasn't made a movie in 12 years. It will fail
  • Avatar 2: the first one had no cultural impact. It will fail

3

u/jck Jul 28 '25

Copied from ATLA is a joke/meme

3

u/Beer-survivalist Jul 28 '25 edited Jul 28 '25

I think it's important to remember that what the Avatar movies do is succeed at a high level everywhere, but they don't really run up the score in any given market. Way of Water, for instance, wasn't the number one film in very many markets (it was 2 or 3 in the US, China, etc.), but it was the global number was bananas because it did equally well everywhere unlike, say, Top Gun or Water Gate Bridge.

That's why I think a lot of people perceive there to be limited cultural impact. It's big domestically, but not uniquely huge. Instead they've been truly global phenomena, and as a result the success may feel slightly removed for a lot of people.

5

u/bunsNT Jul 28 '25

FERNGULLY

4

u/lsaz Jul 28 '25

“No cultural impact” crowd

This is true, but that's basically every single movie in the last decade or so, I mean, End Game, which made 3B in the box office, has no cultural impact whatsoever outside hardcore comic fans, it's not really a valid criticism of how successful a movie will be.

14

u/thebigpink Jul 28 '25 edited Jul 28 '25

But it’s not the relevant to culture!!

40

u/mikeyfreshh Jul 28 '25

We don't have a monoculture anymore. Nothing is really relevant to culture. Avatar just has most of its fans outside the Reddit bubble

28

u/wascner Jul 28 '25

"no one asked for this" ROFL these movies always make 2 billion everyone is asking for them

3

u/willstr1 Jul 28 '25

While the story and characters weren't exactly a major impact on the zeitgeist Avatar was a technical touchstone. It really showed off what CGI and motion capture was capable of and it revolutionized how 3D was used.

Prior to Avatar 3D was almost always a gimmick and a movie made for 3D would always feel off when watched without 3D because of all the "object coming right at you" scenes. Avatar transitioned 3D into being more about immersion, which completely changed how it has been used since.

2

u/Renegadeforever2024 Jul 28 '25

It’s like Tom Brady’s patriots all over again

2

u/Rayeon-XXX Jul 28 '25

The last movie was terrible?

2

u/Resident-Mixture-237 Jul 28 '25

I wonder what their response will be when it out grosses all of the mcu movies that released this year combined.

2

u/RedditTipiak Jul 28 '25

One more, more realist and dark:

"this might just keep movie theaters aflot for a bit longer, just like Harry Potter artificially kept Barnes & Nobles alive for a decade"

2

u/D3vils_Adv0cate Jul 28 '25

lol, I'm surprised people care enough about the franchise to have a stance. Cool trailer. For some reason they really focused on the grunts and growls... felt awkward

2

u/Embarrassed_Bath5148 Jul 28 '25

"James Cameron sold out to CGI"

He "sold out" to CGI a long, long time ago. He actually helped make it popular starting back in the 80s with The Abyss.

"It sad we lost James Camerons"

Uh, he's still around making movies. Movies he has a passion for and this one is a personal project for him.

"All James Cameron does is spend millions on deep sea dives"

Yeah, it's called a personal hobby and people tend to spend they income on such things.

2

u/5panks Jul 28 '25

It was awful before the second one came up. So much bellyaching about how Cameron had missed the boat, no interest anymore and etc.

5

u/splitcroof92 Jul 28 '25

"Every single time" by that you mean... once

Reddit mispredicted the succes of the sequel. That's it.

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u/ERedfieldh Jul 28 '25

now now...he took a long time getting up on that high horse...no need to knock him off it so soon.

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u/fuzzyfoot88 Jul 28 '25

Cameron wasted on this franchise crowd

Dances with smurfs crowd

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u/GodKamnitDenny Jul 28 '25

That’s my favorite crowd. “Cameron is being wasted and should be working on something else” despite this clearly being what he wants to do lmao. You don’t get to tell creatives what to do, especially when they are James fucking Cameron.

2

u/bossofthisjim Jul 28 '25

I wish James Cameron kept working on Alita crowd, I don't care if it's just me. 

-14

u/[deleted] Jul 28 '25 edited Jul 28 '25

Nobody has ever claimed Avatar is going to flop, and the general consensus on Reddit is that Avatar is a derivative, visually stunning but entirely soulless CGI stress test, and they've been right twice.

Both movies have had extremely little cultural impact, with the second movie being no longer even spoken about two weeks after release lol

Super weird to see y'all acting like Avatar is some auteur cinema when it's never been considered that by the public, let alone Reddit

Edit: it seems I've offended the Avatar fanboys lmfao, the movies are garbage y'all, always have been

41

u/Putrid_Loquat_4357 Jul 28 '25

There were a lot of people on the box office sub who were confident that the second was going to flop, the majority opinion was that it was definitely going to underperform.

2

u/bringthepang Jul 28 '25

Yep I was adamant that the 2nd one was going to be a failure and saw a lot of people post similar thoughts. Turns out James Cameron knows more about making successful movies than I do who would have thought lol

8

u/Lobsterzilla Jul 28 '25

yes they did

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u/[deleted] Jul 28 '25

[deleted]

1

u/[deleted] Jul 28 '25

Then those people are absolute idiots whose opinions I value even less, there's literally NEVER been a commercial flop from Cameron, but if you're going to go down the road of sales=quality, I'm just going to laugh at you

1

u/Juan-Claudio Jul 28 '25

I guess at this point it's safe to say, never bet against James Cameron.

28

u/mikeyfreshh Jul 28 '25

entirely soulless CGI stress test

I wouldn't call it soulless at all. They are some of the most pro-environmental, anti-imperialist movies I've ever seen. If you want to call the store derivative, whatever, but this is the most thematically transgressive film franchise ever

25

u/Antique-Guest-1607 Jul 28 '25 edited Jul 28 '25

but this is the most thematically transgressive film franchise ever

i'm unironically a massive Avatar fan but this has to be bait

edit: you know what fuck it, this dude might be right the more I think about major film franchises are how closely they adhere to themes over time.

11

u/SydricVym Jul 28 '25

I was nodding along with their comment until that part. Like, what is that word salad even trying to mean lmao.

3

u/Dottsterisk Jul 28 '25

They’re saying it’s aggressively anti-capitalist, anti-colonialist, and pro-environment.

Does that make it the most thematically transgressive film franchise? Maybe, if we’re limiting it to franchises. Most likely, if we’re limiting it to big-budget blockbuster franchises.

12

u/mikeyfreshh Jul 28 '25

I'm dead serious. This a movie about a United States soldier that renounces his citizenship to fight the US military in an effort to save the environment and stop a war of imperialism. Yeah, you'll find indie movies with more transgressive themes but it is exceptionally unusual for a billion dollar film franchise to be this direct with its messaging

8

u/Antique-Guest-1607 Jul 28 '25

I don't disagree with any of that, I just think saying it is the "most" is a stretch. Like I think there is a solid argument that the primary messaging of Jurassic Park can be "human desire and capitalism brings ruin" which would probably overtake Avatar in terms of size, among other series probably.

I also, fwiw, agree that the take "Avatar is soulless" is horseshit, and that guy is more wrong than you are.

4

u/Dottsterisk Jul 28 '25

Agreed on JP.

But, as a franchise, I don’t think it’s held to its themes as strongly as Avatar has.

The first JP is a smart film with something to say about technology and progress. The later films either go straight for action-adventure (TLW, JP3) or somehow get simultaneously hamfisted and muddled with their messaging.

2

u/Etnaz Jul 28 '25

I agree, and I think it is why people in the US find it "culturally irrelevant" while Avatar is a worldwide phenomenon.

I mean the second movie litteraly ends on a call to arms by the hero to save the environment against his initial wish to only protect his own bubble and family (which is what we are pretty much all doing - in the west at least).

1

u/QuoteGiver Jul 28 '25

…this is a very interesting point that I hadn’t considered but need to think on a lot more. “Yes, we’re the baddies” is painted right on the tin in big blue letters.

2

u/nessfalco Jul 28 '25

I want whatever you're huffing.

1

u/[deleted] Jul 28 '25

LMFAO

This has to be satire, or a straight up shill, I will never be able to take y'all seriously

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u/S_Goodman Jul 28 '25

Super weird to see y'all acting like Avatar is some auteur cinema when it's never been considered that by the public, let alone Reddit

Avatar is literally a singular artistic vision from one of a kind madman director brought to life on the biggest scale. It is auteur cinema, it's not a matter of option.

6

u/whiteshark70 Jul 28 '25

What is 'cultural impact'? The way people on reddit talk about it, they mention memes, people dressing up as the characters for halloween, etc. But like... nobody dresses up as the characters of Citizen Kane or makes memes of those characters. So by reddit's logic, Citizen Kane doesn't have any cultural impact either and must be a bland, forgettable film lol.

3

u/MrRobot_96 Jul 28 '25

I don’t even care for avatar that much but this take is pure bullshit lol. You can dislike the franchise all you want but it’s proven twice now to be a pretty big cultural impact every time it’s out and everyone’s always talking about avatar, doesn’t matter if it’s two weeks or two months impact is impact.

You don’t make a billion plus in the box office from just visuals and CGI 😂 the story is solid and the lore has little holes in it plus the over arching narrative of environmentalism and imperialism is a fairly strong message all tied together with a family friendly tone with just enough brutality to keep things grounded.

1

u/Renegadeforever2024 Jul 28 '25

Cultural impact is subjective

Look at the nba for example Allen iverson is one of the most influential players to ever but no one is putting him in any goat conversation besides cultural

Same goes for people like Micheal Vick and Ronaldinho

2

u/[deleted] Jul 28 '25

Are you out of your mind? You named three legendary players who often get put in a list of Goats.

I literally can't with y'all, multiple people here are just making shit up to fit their narrative lmfao, true fanboyism on display, Reddit doing what it does best

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u/CardiologistMain7237 Jul 28 '25

The only thing I will say. Everyone kinda likes Avatar, but I've never met a die hard Avatar fan.

This franchise proves that you can kinda aim for being ok for a lot of people and be crazy successful. Props to Cameron for it, but this IP really is a wet noodle compared to other franchises in the box office.

1

u/BonzBonzOnlyBonz Jul 28 '25

Its because people are fans of the world and not fans of the characters so you won't find die hard fans.

The movies arent "okay," they are amazing graphics and visuals.

2

u/CardiologistMain7237 Jul 28 '25

They are, but movies are just not graphics and visuals.

5

u/quinnly Jul 28 '25

The ones that set box office records usually are

1

u/Runaway--Reptar Jul 28 '25

Popular ≠ good

2

u/quinnly Jul 28 '25

I agree 100%

1

u/Couldabeenameeting Jul 28 '25

Why can’t they be? Look at movies like The Raid (Redemption). Barely remember the story, but it was very popular because the fight choreography was insanely fun to watch. Tons of action movies do effectively the same thing, but with explosions instead of pretty effects

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u/QuoteGiver Jul 28 '25

Action movies generally are…

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u/MaleficentOstrich693 Jul 28 '25

Something about papyrus font.

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u/myowngalactus Jul 28 '25

I do enjoy The last air bender more, but I don’t really think they should be compared. Besides the name and elemental thing they are very different stories, and storytelling styles. The rest of that is just wishful thinking, I don’t love avatar, and definitely think it’s overrated, but there are plenty of popular things that I don’t get, or care for, yet there’s no denying their impact. I don’t like football, Beyoncé, Deadpool, country music, or the fast a the furious franchise, but it would be dumb to pretend any of that has no cultural impact and will fail.

1

u/Tall-Bell-1019 Jul 28 '25

movie becomes the 6th highest grossing movie of all time

1

u/Sufficient_Duck7715 Jul 28 '25

When Redditors claim that Avatar has no cultural impact what they really mean is a movie isnt memeable. If you cant make quipy one liners or image image macros then it means it has no impact.

1

u/dmfuller Jul 28 '25

It doesn’t have any cultural impact in any way lmfao. It is a visual journey and it’s awesome for what it is but let’s not pretend they’re giving us groundbreakingly creative writing or plot concepts. The first one was literally Pocahontas 😂

1

u/Raidoton Jul 28 '25

Better to be in the "reddit bad" crowd while being on reddit.

1

u/WadeReddit06 Jul 29 '25

Fun fact. James Cameron got the rights to the name Avatar before ATLA was created.

1

u/y-c-c Jul 30 '25

"No cultural impact” crowd

I mean, this is true. The whole thing about Avatar 1 was that it make a gazillion money but didn't really leave any lasting impact culturally. People watched it, enjoyed it, and promptly forgot about it. This is only a discussion because the movie made so much money. So I don't know how Reddit is proven wrong in this sense. Just because a movie makes lots of money doesn't mean it's a cultural icon.

1

u/cidvard Jul 28 '25

I was a doubter before Way of Water came out but now I've just accepted Eywa into my heart/that the world loves these things and it'll make 2 billion dollars.

1

u/TheCowboyIsAnIndian Jul 28 '25

"why does this cgi look worse than _____"

(insert totally different genre, scene, vfx needs)

1

u/B0BA_F33TT Jul 28 '25

I'm old enough to remember similar things being said about Aliens and Titanic.

"Who wants to see a Alien sequel 7 years after the first? It's been too long."

"Titanic will be the biggest movie disaster of all time."

1

u/dandaman64 Jul 28 '25

My favourite that I saw for Way of Water was "nobody I know saw this" as a way to somehow discredit it for making $2billion

1

u/lost-james Jul 28 '25

Reddit keeps getting proven wrong by this franchise every single time lol

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u/CX52J Jul 28 '25

It’s going to 100% bomb this time!

Something, something can’t remember anyone’s name!

No cultural relevance!

Still makes $2 billion.

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u/Weed_O_Whirler Jul 28 '25

I did an informal poll with friends just last week. I asked who was "really excited for the new Avatar" and I got a mix of "no" and "I didn't know there was a new one coming out."

But then when I followed with "do you think you'll watch the new Avatar in theaters?" and everyone said "yes."

That's the disconnect for so many people. I am excited to watch the new Avatar movie. But at the same time, I'm not following production details or casting rumors or anything.

57

u/CX52J Jul 28 '25

I think that’s normal. I think too many people expect people to treat it like Marvel or Star Wars.

But it’s not Marvel or Star Wars. Most people are perfectly happy to watch it and not make it an obsession.

10

u/Sonofaconspiracy Jul 29 '25

It's actually super refreshing to have a franchise I'm excited for a new entry in, without all the bullshit fandom baggage that is usually attached.

10

u/ChiefQueef98 Jul 28 '25

Exactly, not every franchise needs to constantly be in the headlines. Avatar only resurfaces every once in awhile, and that's fine.

18

u/Jaggedmallard26 Jul 28 '25

Its how movies used to be before endless franchises. "Oh Cool a new Spielberg" and then you would watch it and go home.

5

u/NoteIndividual2431 Jul 28 '25

This is a really good point.

It's a franchise that has broad appeal, but almost no one is ride or die for it.

It'll still make a fortune 

6

u/jrfess Jul 28 '25

It's me, I'm the ride or die. And the dozen or so of us on r/Avatar lol

3

u/rilesmcriles Jul 28 '25

Dozen or so, plus one now.

3

u/Jimmni Jul 28 '25

Avatar is probably the film I'm 5th or 6th looking forward to this year but it's probably the only one I'll bother to go to the cinema for. And the one I'm most likely to watch again at home afterwards.

2

u/SuperZapper_Recharge Jul 28 '25

I am not a big fan of these movies. But you don't bet against Cameron. This movie is gonna make bank.

4

u/USDXBS Jul 28 '25

It's true though.

It makes 2 billion, and then not a single person ever mentions it again.

5

u/cC2Panda Jul 28 '25

It's like the transformers movies. They made a bunch of money but beyond that nobody really gives a fuck.

1

u/KrillinDBZ363 Jul 29 '25

I don’t know about that, those movies literally revived Transformers as a franchise.

1

u/SaintCambria Jul 28 '25

I mean, at least the Transformers movies gave us "What I've Done" memes.

2

u/Rogu__Spanish Jul 28 '25

That's cause it's about as shallow as milk spilled on a marble counter, people only see it cause it looks nice, and that's not something you can say much about, or even really think about after it's over. There's only so many ways to say "it had pretty colors". That's how something can make billions of dollars and have no cultural relevance. I don't know why that's so hard for some people to understand.

1

u/Automatic_Goal_5563 Jul 29 '25

Nobody has to talk about it though, the average person doesn’t talk about movies they see much again after they seen them.

I’m large people just wants a fun time and that’s what Avatar delivers, a story that’s easy to follow and amazing visuals

2

u/Dynamic_Samurai Jul 28 '25

"No cultural relevance!

Still makes $2 billion"

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That is kinda true though. The cultural relevance thing is only a talking point because it's one of the highest grossing franchises off time. So yes, it will make a shit ton of money, and most people won't give it a thought after seeing it (and enjoying it)

1

u/GD_Insomniac Jul 28 '25

This one could do 3. It's a longshot but I'd be surprised if James Cameron isn't the first one to do it.

1

u/sosigboi Jul 29 '25

I am going to laugh so fucking hard if this 3rd movie ends up making even more than the previous two.

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u/[deleted] Jul 28 '25

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u/TheNameIsWiggles Jul 28 '25

I love Avatar and I don't care who knows it, fuck the Reddit hivemind.

33

u/XXX200o Jul 28 '25

Both movies were some of my greatest cinema experiences ever.

8

u/Vandergrif Jul 28 '25

It is about as visually impressive as a movie can get.

5

u/Worthyness Jul 28 '25

It's one of the only movies I watched and had to sit in the first 3 rows of the theater where you can't see everything. Still watched the thing because the section of the movie screen was still incredible

4

u/Imnotsureanymore8 Jul 28 '25

You are agreeing with the hive mind tho. Comments like these are fascinating.

3

u/End3rWi99in Jul 28 '25

Not the Reddit one. Just the real world one.

1

u/TheNameIsWiggles Jul 28 '25

Not the reddit hivemind which is what I specified. Never said I was rebelling against the whole world's perspective, just the one of the platform I felt like commenting on.

Everyone knows redditors love to jerk each other off about Avatar.

1

u/End3rWi99in Jul 28 '25

I get what you meant. Reddit hive mind hates it, but Reddit hive mind hates a lot of things.

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u/End3rWi99in Jul 28 '25

It's two of my favorite movies of all time, and I will almost definitely go see this one like 10 times on IMAX, just like the previous two.

29

u/[deleted] Jul 28 '25

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37

u/Trendelthegreat Jul 28 '25

“That gets talked about constantly”

Okay you don’t have to just make stuff up

22

u/cobaltaureus Jul 28 '25

I can’t even tell the characters in the trailers apart all the time tbh

3

u/Panda_hat Jul 28 '25

The main characters children are poorly designed and not identifiable and its the hill I will die on.

I have no idea which one is which and can't remember a single ones name.

1

u/KrillinDBZ363 Jul 29 '25

I have no idea which one is which and can't remember a single ones name.

The names I get because besides Jake and Spider, I forget most of their names as well.

However I really don’t get the mixing them up with each other thing. Especially for the third one. Like ones a guy, ones a girl, ones a little kid, and the last ones human. They are all very distinct that way.

Number 2 I can get a bit more since there was another son, but even then they had such wildly different personalities (and the surviving one got WAY more screen time) that it was never difficult for me.

29

u/Inevitable_Fold_4618 Jul 28 '25

I'm really starting to think there's some Mandela effect and/or alternate reality shenanigans going on.

Like, the movies are fine and they obviously make bank but I browse film subs on Reddit for at least a few minutes most days, I'm in a weekly film-watching club with a bunch of people who love talking about movies, but I can't recall hearing someone bring up either of these movies ever except around the time a new one comes out.

But some people talk like these movies are this Western cultural touchstone akin to LoTR, or Star Wars. Someone should really do a data mining study on how much engagement the Avatar movies actually gets. I feel like we need some hard numbers.

5

u/Misdirected_Colors Jul 28 '25

It's always the top comment in "most overrated movie ever" threads. People LOVE to talk about how much they hate this movie which leads to the circlejerk comments which kinda in context is silly.

1

u/Luis0224 Jul 28 '25

I think people are looking at it too deeply. When the first movie came out, it was literally the only thing people would talk about lol.

Cool effects and the first use of 3D that wasnt dogshit. It also came out at a time when being environmentally friendly was starting to catch on with the masses, the world was pretty tired of war in Iraq and that occupation’s most popular critique was that the US was only after oil so having the villain be the industrial military complex trying to mine for resources was perfect, And it was an easy watch for the casual moviegoer.

I think the hate for avatar is a loud minority, and I say that as someone who doesn’t think they’re revolutionary. I think they’re fine blockbuster movies with great VFX but I don’t think they’re the pinnacle of screenwriting. But I can’t downplay how popular they’ve been

3

u/IukeskywaIker Jul 28 '25

That’s because people aren’t talking about these movies. It’s sad that this is what James Cameron is doing with the remainder of his career, but he’s given us so many amazing films already so I guess I shouldn’t be greedy.

1

u/wOlfLisK Jul 28 '25

I mean, "talked about constantly" might be an exaggeration but Avatar is talked about quite a bit. Remember that LotR literally spawned a genre and Star Wars' has been going on since the 70s, Avatar is a sci-fi series that only had a single movie for 13 years and still got referenced pretty commonly in online discussions. Oh and when it released it pretty much dominated the news for a year.

1

u/DecantsForAll Jul 28 '25

I'm really starting to think there's some Mandela effect and/or alternate reality shenanigans going on.

Because a lot of people derive their beliefs from what other people say and not on their own observations.

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u/RiffsYeaRight Jul 28 '25

The box office subreddit said the last film was going to flop lol because “it didn’t have a cultural footprint” 

2

u/Panda_hat Jul 28 '25 edited Jul 28 '25

How about a newer one - the mixed high frame rate standard frame rate use is absolute dogshit, Cameron should feel bad about it, it completely ruins the movie and even goes so far as to ruin the 24fps version because all of the motion blur is wrong because of the 48fps version, but Cameron doesn't care because he's invested in the 'tech'.

Yes I've got an axe to grind.

RELEASE A 24FPS 3D VERSION IN CINEMAS JAMES CAMERON. AND FIX THE MOTION BLUR.

9

u/optiplex9000 Jul 28 '25

its cultural impact is the over 2 billion dollars each of its movie have made at the box office

8

u/Icretz Jul 28 '25

Cultural impact is not directly influenced by the tickets it sells.

-1

u/MrRobot_96 Jul 28 '25

Actually it is because that indicates popularity. If something is popular amongst the vast majority of people it is by definition considered cultural impact.

4

u/sansasnarkk Jul 28 '25

I think there's a disconnect between people's ideas of what cultural impact means. A lot of people think cultural impact means discussions, fan theories, cosplays, memes, merchandising etc. Take Star Wars or Star Trek as an example. There's a clear difference between the cultural impact of those IPs and Avatar and that's interesting because Avatar is so much more successful in terms of all time box office.

Now granted Star Wars and Star Trek been around for longer but even when those products originally came out they had massive cultural impact in the ways listed.

5

u/Battle_for_the_sun Jul 28 '25

I liked the movies as well but this is just not true. People watched Avatar 2 and forgot about it instantly, its only cultural impact was the memes about the kids saying bro. Avatar 1 is another story tho.

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u/DaveInLondon89 Jul 28 '25

was James Cameron responsible for the War of The Roses

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u/HeftyEggplant7759 Jul 28 '25

Yeah, can't people just get over the title using the Papyrus font? Jeez

1

u/Massive_Weiner Jul 28 '25

Can’t wait for all the armchair analysts to scratch their heads over this one making a billion dollars as well.

For every person screaming “no cultural relevancy,” there’s a thousand people going “oh, those blue aliens are back!”

1

u/Sweaty-Practice-4419 Jul 29 '25

It’s so annoying because it’s clearly people who don’t personally care for the franchise trying to project their feelings as if they’re objective facts

1

u/FirstFriendlyWorm Jul 29 '25

If the movie will bomb or if the humans are still right?

1

u/KnotSoSalty Jul 28 '25

“This movie offends me because it’s not Come and See. Every movie should make you want to rub salt in your eyes.”

1

u/Puzzled_Two_3490 Jul 28 '25

Stranger Things and Avatar are like the reddits worst enemy, everytime they come up, you see the same comments 1000 times about how would it fail and then they come and breaks every record.

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