Trailer For The Disney+ Doc FIRE AND WATER: MAKING THE AVATAR FILMS Dives Into James Cameron’s Franchise
Fans of James Cameron’s epic sci-fi world of Avatar are about to get an awesome behind-the-scenes look at how this franchise was brought to life.
Disney+ has announced a new two-part documentary titled Fire and Water: Making the Avatar Films, premiering November 7. The series takes viewers into the heart of Cameron’s ambitious filmmaking process and explores how his team transformed imagination into cinematic history.
The documentary goes beyond 2022’s Avatar: The Way of Water to offer a glimpse at the highly anticipated sequel Avatar: Fire and Ash. It features exclusive behind-the-scenes footage and interviews with Cameron, the late producer Jon Landau, and stars Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldaña, and Kate Winslet.
For fans who’ve followed Jake Sully (Worthington) and Neytiri (Saldaña) since the first Avatar back in 2009, this doc promises to be a fascinating deep-dive into how the films evolved from groundbreaking visuals to emotional storytelling.
Both Avatar and The Way of Water earned more than $2 billion worldwide, solidifying Cameron as the only filmmaker in history to direct three movies that have each crossed that milestone, the third, of course, being Titanic.
There’s a trailer that trailer teases just how personal and intricate the process was. As Cameron says, “I’m going to let you in on a little secret. As much as we use computers and technology, Avatar is made by an incredibly talented team of people who bring every expression, every emotional beat and the entire world to life.”
Through motion capture technology, Cameron and his crew transformed the performances of actors into the blue-skinned Na’vi, capturing every emotion and movement in stunning detail. With The Way of Water, the team took this innovation even further by filming underwater using a massive 680,000-gallon tank and training the cast to free dive to perform their scenes.
As Saldaña explains in the trailer, “If not for the actors, Pandora would just be a beautiful world with no life in it.” Worthington adds, “There’s not one thing that you see us do that is animated. It is all us.”
Fire and Water: Making the Avatar Films is directed and produced by Thomas C. Grane, with Cameron and Rae Sanchini serving as executive producers. Interestingly, Saldaña herself had pushed for this kind of documentary, telling Beyond the Noise that she wanted to “finally give us a chance to explain, in a meticulous way, why performance capture is the most empowering form of acting.”
Avatar: Fire and Ash hits theaters December 19, and two more sequels, Avatar 4 and Avatar 5, are set to arrive in 2029 and 2031, continuing the story that began more than 15 years ago.
With Fire and Water: Making the Avatar Films, fans will get to see how Cameron and his team turned performance capture, cutting-edge technology, and raw imagination into one of the most visually breathtaking film universes ever created.
As someone who loves the art of the filmmaking process, I’m very excited about this!