Avatar 2
âAvatar: The Way of Waterâ didnât make quite as big of a splash as many assumed it would, but James Cameronâs big budget spectacle still helped breathe life into the box office this weekend. The sequel earned $134 million from North American theaters and $300.5 million internationally for a $434.5 million global debut, according to studio estimates on Sunday.
It tied with âThe Batmanâ as the fourth highest domestic debut of the year, behind âDoctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madnessâ ($187.4 million in May), âBlack Panther: Wakanda Forever,â ($181 million in November) and âThor: Love and Thunderâ ($144.2 million in July).
Expectations were enormous for âAvatar 2,â which carried a reported price tag of over $350 million, the pressure of following up the highest grossing film of all time (thanks in part to various re-releases) over a decade later and the daunting task of propping up an exhibition business thatâs still far from normal. Everything âAvatarâ is oversized, though: the Naâvi characters, the runtime (a staggering three hours and 12 minutes), the technical advancements and the release strategy from 20th Century Studios and The Walt Disney Co.
Going into the weekend many were expecting a domestic debut of at least $150 million. Some even said $175 or higher, but tracking has also not been as reliable a metric during the pandemic.
Disney saw early that âThe Way of Waterâ was going to be a different kind of beast when they looked at pre-sales. For a normal, spoiler-heavy movie like many Marvel offerings, post-opening weekend sales are usually around 5%. For âThe Way of Water,â they were at 20%. In other words, the company knew that tracking was overinflated.
âWeâve got a terrific movie that is playing across all demographics and (has) terrific word of mouth,â said Tony Chambers, the Walt Disney Co.âs executive vice president for theatrical distribution. âWeâve got the screens and weâve got a clear run. This isnât about the opening day or the opening weekend. This is about the entire run.â
The film began its international rollout on Wednesday and debuted in North America on Thursday evening. Domestically, âAvatar: The Way of Waterâ was released in 4,202 theaters on over 12,000 screens, 400 of which were IMAX 3D. The studio and filmmakers bet big on the draw, and higher prices, of the 3D format and premium large screens.
By the end of Friday, âAvatar: The Way of Waterâ had already earned $53 million in the U.S. and Canada and $180.1 million globally, aided by a China release â the first major Hollywood release in the country since âMinions: The Rise of Gruâ in August. It blows âAvatarâsâ $26.7 million first day in 2009 out of the water, though that didnât include Thursday previews.
An estimated 66% of the $435 million opening weekend revenue came from worldwide 3D ticket sales. Travis Reid, CEO at 3D company RealD, set a ânew benchmark for the current 3D marketplace.â
Over $48.8 million of the global total came from IMAX screens alone (1,543 in 80 markets), the companyâs second biggest weekend.
âAs excited as we are about these early results, we anticipate a long and successful run for âAvatar: The Way of Water,ââ said Rich Gelfond, CEO of IMAX, in a statement.
As with many ambitious Cameron projects, from âTitanicâ to the first âAvatar,â nerves were high for the costly sequel, one of the most expensive of all time, which began production five years ago. It faced repeated delays and weathered The Walt Disney Coâs acquisition of 21st Century Fox in 2019. Itâs also one of four âAvatarâ sequels Cameron had in mind. Filming on the third movie, which shot simultaneously with âThe Way of Water,â is done, with an expected release in December 2024.
In the 13 years since the first film, âAvatarâ has also been the butt of jokes for the perception that the biggest movie of all time, one that has made nearly $3 billion, has left a relatively minor footprint in the culture. But even so, critics have largely been on board with âThe Way of Water,â not just for the visuals but also for improving on the story of the first. It holds a 78% positive rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes.
The question of whether âAvatar 2â will earn enough is a complicated one with varied answers. Is it enough for exhibitors, whoâve had several significant hits this year, including âTop Gun: Maverick,â âBlack Panther 2â and âDoctor Strange 2,â but are still hurting? Is it enough to justify starting production on fourth and fifth movies? Is it enough for the business as a whole, which is looking at a domestic year-end total in the $8 billion range, as opposed to a pre-pandemic normal of $11 billion?
But like the critics shouting ânever doubt James Cameron,â the studio and analysts are singing a similar tune.
âAvatar: The Way of Waterâ has the benefit of a holiday corridor that is, relatively speaking, lacking in major blockbuster-style movies. Next week sees the debut of Damien Chazelleâs âBabylonâ and the family-friendly âPuss in Boots: The Last Wishâ but there are no comparable blockbusters until âAnt-Man and the Wasp: Quantumaniaâ in February. The hope is that audiences will continue seeking âAvatar 2â out for weeks and months to come, similar to the first movie.
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