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By JAKE COYLE
Updated 6:00 AM PST, December 16, 2025
When I came down with a cold the day after I saw the third and latest βAvatarβ film, βFire and Ash,β I half-wondered if I had picked it up on Pandora.
The promise of Cameronβs 3D trilogy has always been immersion: immersion in a science-fiction world, in technological wonder, in a maybe future of movies. βAvatarβ is almost more a place to go than a movie to see.
Still, itβs now been two decades since Cameron set off on this blue-tinted quest. The sheen of newness is off, or at least less pronounced, with new technological advances to contend with. βFire and Ashβ is running with a behind-the-scenes video about how performance capture was used during the filmβs making. The implicit message is: No, this isnβt AI.
The βAvatarβ films, with their visual-effects wizardry and clunky revisionist Western storytelling, have always felt, most of all, like an immersion in a dream of James Cameronβs. The idea of these movies, after all, first came to Cameron, he has said, in a bioluminescent vision decades ago. At their best, the βAvatarβ movies have felt like an otherworldly stage for Cameron to juggle so many of the things β hulking weaponry, ecological wonder, foolhardy human arrogance β that have marked his movies.
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βFire and Ash,β at well more than three hours, is our longest stay yet on Pandora and the one most likely to make you ponder why you came here, in the first place. These remain epics of craft and conviction. You can feel Cameronβs deep devotion to the dynamics of his central characters, even when his interest outstrips our own.
Thatβs especially true in βFire and Ash,β which, following the deep-sea, family-focused part two, βThe Way of Water,β pivots to a new chapter of culture clash. It introduces a violent rival Naβvi clan whose rageful leader, Varang (Oona Chaplin), partners with Stephen Langβs booming Col. Miles Quaritch and the human colonizers.
For those who have closely followed the βAvatarβ saga, I suspect βFire and Ashβ will be a rewarding experience. Quaritch, Pandoraβs answer to Robert Duvallβs Bill Kilgore in βApocalypse Now,β remains a ferociously captivating character. And the introduction of Chaplinβs Varang gives this installment an electricity that the previous two were missing.
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But for those whose trips to Pandora have made less of an impact, βFire and Ashβ is a bit like returning to a half-remembered vacation spot, only one where the local ponytail style is a little strange and everyone seems to have the waist of a supermodel.
Time has only reinforced the sense that these films are hermetically sealed movie terrariums. Theyβre like a $1 billion beta test that, for all their box-office success, have ultimately proven that all the design capabilities in the world canβt conjure a story of meaningful impact. The often-remarked light cultural footprint left by the first two blockbusters only hints at why these movie seem to evaporate by the ending credits. Itβs the lack of inner life to any of the characters and the bland, screen-saver aesthetics. At this point in a trilogy, nine hours in, that hollowness makes βFire and Ashβ feel like almost theoretical drama: more avatar than genuine article.
These movies have had to work extremely hard, moment to moment, just to pass as believable. But almost every gesture, every movement and every bit of dialogue has had something unnatural about it. (The high frame rate is partially to blame.) Thatβs made these uncanny movies a combination, in equal measure, of things youβve never seen before, and things you canβt unsee.
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βFire and Ash,β scripted by Cameron, Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver, picks up with the aftermath of the climatic battle of βThe Way of Water.β The Naβvi and their seafaring allies, the Metkayina clan, are nursing their wounds and recovering the human weapons that sunk to the sea floor.
When a rival clan called the Mangkwan or Ash People come to challenge the Naβvi, those weapons represent an ethical quandary. Should they use such firepower in their own local battles? This is a more difficult question partially because the fire-mad Mangkwan are especially bloodthirsty, led by their slinky sorceress, Vanang (played with seductive sadism by Chaplin, granddaughter of Charlie).
But their fight is only a piece of the larger war of βFire and Ash.β The focus of this third chapter (films four and five are said to be written but not greenlit) is interspecies coexistence. As human and Naβvi lines continue to blur, the question becomes whether the human invaders will transform Pandora or if Pandora will transform them.
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That puts the focus on the three characters in various in-between states. First, thereβs Spider (Jack Champion), the human son of Quaritch who lives happily with the Naβvi while breathing through a machine to survive the Pandora atmosphere. (Champion has the double misfortune of wearing a mask and looking downright puny next to the tall and slender natives.) But in βFire and Ash,β he discovers he can breathe unfiltered, a development that prompts intense military interest in a potentially hugely profitable breakthrough in Pandora assimilation.
Thereβs also Jake Sully (Sam Worthington), the former human who has made a Naβvi family with Neytiri (Zoe SaldaΓ±a). For Neytiri, the growing menace of human warfare causes her to doubt her bond with Jake. The prejudices of βFire and Ashβ seep even into the home.
Most interesting of the three, though, remains Quaritch. He may be violently trying to subjugate Pandora but he also obviously delights in his Naβvi body and in his life on this distant moon. You can see him flinch when his commander, General Ardmore (Edie Falco), refers to their Mangkwan allies as βsavages.β Meanwhile, Quaritch and Vanang hit it off like gangbusters.
βYouβve got new eyes, colonel,β one character tells Quaritch. βAll youβve got to do is open them.β
The βAvatarβ films have done plenty to open eyes over the past 16 years. To new cinematic horizons, to the boundlessness of Cameronβs visions, to the Papyrus font. But the most endearing quality of βAvatarβ is that Cameron believes so ardently in it. I might be caught up less in the goings on Pandora, but Iβm kind of glad that he is. There are worse things than dreaming up a better world, with still a fighting chance.
βAvatar: Fire and Ash,β a 20th Century Studios release, opens in theaters Dec. 19. Itβs rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association for intense sequences of violence and action, bloody images, some strong language, thematic elements and suggestive material. Running time: 195 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.
JAKE COYLE
Coyle has been a film critic and covered the movie industry for The Associated Press since 2013. He is based in New York City.
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