James Cameron explains why Avatar: The Way of Water has such a long runtime

Avatar: The Way of Water
(Image credit: 20th Century Studios/Lightstorm)

澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:James Cameron does not do things by halves. Now that the long-awaited sequel to Avatar is heading to cinemas, the director wants to make sure audiences are getting their money's worth, with 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Avatar: The Way of Water clocking in at over three hours in length. That runtime, however, isn't arbitrary; the sequel has been designed to address any perceived imbalance when it comes to character and storytelling versus she🍷er spectacle – an accusation previously levied at the original movie.

"The goal is to tell an extremely compelling story on an emotional basis," Cameron tells , featuring Avatar on the cover. "I would say the emphasis in the new film is more on character, more on story, more on relationships, more on emotion. We didn&🎃rsquo;t spend as much time on relationship and emotion in the first film as we do in the second film, and it’s a longer film, because there’s more 🉐characters to service. There’s more story to service."

Above all, however, The Way Of Water is a family story. This is because, 14 years after falling in love, Jake and Neytiri are now the proud parents of five children. "People say, 'Oh my God, a family story from Disney? Just what we want...' This isn’t that kind of family story," Cameron clarifies. "This is a family story l🎉ike how The Sopranos is a family story." 

Though still the same fearless warriors who led the charge against a technologically superior force, as parents🎃 Jake and Neytiri are now "compromised on a much deeper level", according to Zoe Saldaña, who returns behind the performance-capture polka dots as Neytiri. "When you have children and you care for their welfare, different emotions creep in." Sam Worthington, who plays Jake, puts it a little more bluntly: "They’re th💫e parents from hell if you have a go at their kids!"

Jake and Neytiri’s relationship is naturally straine✃d by the burgeoning disobedience of their adolescent brood ("Even though this is all life and death, they’re still arguing about who cleans up the house," Worthington quips), and is challenged even further by the return of the RDA – the human organization from the first movie – to Pandora, back to exploit the planet’s oceans.

That's just a snippet of our huge interview with Cameron and his cast, featured🔯 in (and digital devices) this Thursday, November 10. Meanwhile, Avatar: The Way of Water opens in cinemas around the world on Decem෴ber 16. 

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Jordan Farley
Managing Editor, Entertainment

I'm the Mana🗹ging Editor, Entertainment here at GamesRadar+, overseeing the site's film and TV coverage. In a previous l🌄ife as a print dinosaur, I was the Deputy Editor of Total Film magazine, and the news editor at SFX magazine. Fun fact: two of my favourite films released on the same day - Blade Runner and The Thing.

With contributions from