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Lightstorm Entertainment and TSG Entertainment’s Avatar: The Way Of Water (UA; dubbed from the Hollywood film of the same name) is the sequel to Avatar (2009).
Set more than a decade after the events of Avatar, the sequel tells the story of the Sully family. Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and Neytiri (Zoe Saldaña) now have a family of four kids — adopted teenage daughter Kiri (Sigourney Weaver), first son Neteyam (Jamie Flatters), second son Lo’ak (Britain Dalton) and youngest child, Tuk (Trinity Jo-Li Bliss).
Colonel Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang) has been resurrected by the RDA as a recombinant. He seems to colonise Pandora and, therefore, is in conflict with the Na’vi. He, obviously, wants to eliminate Jake Sully. The Sully family can’t put others of their tribe at risk and, therefore, Jake, Neytiri and their four kids leave the forest and reach Metkayina. Tonowari (Cliff Curtis) is the leader of the reef people’s clan of Metkayina. He and wife Ronal (Kate Winslet) give the Sullys refuge.
Meanwhile, Spider (Jack Champion) has been taken hostage by Colonel Quaritch. Although he is human, he was rescued and adopted by the Sullys and preferred his time in the Pandoran rainforest with the Sully family.
Once Colonel Quaritch gets wind of Jake Sully’s presence in the Metkayina region, he and his army strike and wreak havoc. Not just the Sullys but the entire clan of the reef people are at risk of being eliminated. How the Sullys battle it out and how they keep each other safe forms the crux of the drama.
James Cameron, Rick Jaffa, Amanda Silver, Josh Friedman and Shane Salerno have written a heartfelt story which offers drama, action, emotions and even light moments. The screenplay, penned by James Cameron, Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver, is remarkable. The manner in which the drama unfolds is outstanding because it completely sucks the audience into it. Around 20-25 minutes of the drama in the first half gets a little dull but it still manages to keep the audience’s interest alive because of the build-up. The second half does not give the audience even a moment to think because it moves at great speed and also because there’s a lot which happens. Emotions are terrific. The climax is super-thrilling and will draw claps from the viewers.
Sam Worthington does a fantastic job as Jake Sully. His performance is heartfelt. Zoe Saldaña shines as Neytiri, delivering once again a performance that will be cherished by viewers. Sigourney Weaver is first-rate in the role of Kiri. Stephen Lang shines as Quaritch. Kate Winslet makes her mark with an absolutely amazing show of talent in the role of Ronal. Cliff Curtis lends phenomenal support as Tonowari. Jamie Flatters leaves a fine mark as Neteyam. Britain Dalton is terrific as Lo’ak. Trinity Jo-Li Bliss is pretty endearing as Tuk. Jack Champion steals the show as Spider. Joel David Moore makes a mark as Norm. CCH Pounder (as Mo’at), Edie Falco (as General Ardore), Giovanni Ribisi (as Parker Selfridge), Brendan Cowell (as Scoresby), Jemaine Clement (as Dr. Garvin), Bailey Bass (as Tsireya), Filip Geljo (as Aonung) and Duane Evans Jr. (as Rotxo) provide extraordinary support.
James Cameron’s direction is splendid. He has painstakingly made a wholesome entertainer which is a visual delight of the kind one has rarely seen. A good part of the second half is shot in water; those scenes are marvellous. Simon Franglen’s music and background music is just too remarkable. Russel Carpenter’s cinematography is par excellence. The camerawork, coupled with the visual effects, make the film a visual treat. Production designing (by Dylan Cole and Ben Procter) is of an outstanding quality. Editing (by David Brenner, James Cameron, John Refoua and Stephen E. Rivkin) is super-sharp. Dubbing is extraordinary.
On the whole, Avatar: The Way Of Water is a blockbuster. It could prove to be Hollywood’s biggest grosser in India so far. It will also be among the top Hindi grossers of all time.
Released on 16-12-’22 at Metro Inox (daily 5 shows) and other cinemas of Bombay thru UTV Software Communications Ltd. Publicity: excellent. Opening: extraordinary. …….Also released all over. Opening was brilliant at most of the places.