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'Avatar:
The Way Of Water' footage, title revealed at CinemaCon;
'Avatar 1' remaster coming -
April 2022



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After
years of suspense, Disney on Wednesday revealed the
first teaser trailer for director James Cameron's
Avatar sequel and unveiled the movie's official title
at CinemaCon in Las Vegas.
The
Hollywood Reporter, Deadline and IGN confirmed that
Cameron's follow-up to the 2009 blockbuster will be
called Avatar: The Way of Water. A short teaser trailer
also was shown to the audience in Caesars Palace's
Colosseum.
"We
need to make sure [audiences] have an experience they
can't get anywhere else, and that needs to be exclusively
in theaters," producer Jon Landau said when introducing
the teaser trailer, which will be released next week
exclusively in theaters ahead of Disney and Marvel's
Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness.
Landau
said each of the four planned sequels -- the first,
The Way of Water, is set for a Dec. 16 release in
North America -- will center on Jake Sully, played
by Sam Worthington, Neytiri, portrayed by Zoe Saldaña,
and their family. Each will be a standalone film that
"together are an even greater connected epic
saga."
Cameron
also made a brief appearance at the convention in
the form of a pre-recorded message. He expressed his
excitement for the world to see Avatar: The Way of
Water and teased that the team has "set out once
again to push the limits of what cinema can do."
In
a story set more than a decade after the events of
the original film, the footage in the trailer focused
on Jake and Neytiri and included breathtaking shots
of Pandora, according to reports. The teaser featured
lots of underwater footage and showed off new whale-like
creatures.
The
Avatar 2 trailer will go online a week after its exclusive
run in theaters.
In
addition, it was announced that a remastered version
of the original Avatar will be released in theaters
on Sept. 23, 2022. According to Cameron, the visual
effects will be even more realistic.
Cameron's
first Avatar film quickly became the top-grossing
film of all time at the worldwide box office, generating
more than $2.8 billion. The groundbreaking movie was
credited with ushering in the digital 3D era and introducing
new production tools and techniques.

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