Skip to main content

Avatar: The Way of Water review: beautifully basic

A blue-skinned Na'vi child swims underwater in a scene from Avatar: The Way of Water.
Avatar: The Way of Water
“Avatar: The Way of Water ups the ante visually but still puts spectacle over story.”
Pros
  • Gorgeous visuals and visual effects
  • Exceptional use of 3D
  • Easy to get immersed in its world
Cons
  • Messy narrative
  • Hollow characters
  • Lacks dramatic weight

When James Cameron’s Avatar was first released in theaters, the Marvel Cinematic Universe was a mere two films, Christopher Nolan was the king of superhero cinema, and neither Lucasfilm nor Marvel had become Disney brands yet. At that point, there really had been nothing quite like Avatar‘s groundbreaking visual effects and the blend of performance capture and 3D filmmaking that delivered a simultaneously immersive and wonderfully alien experience.

It was a very different time in Hollywood and one that feels incredibly distant now. We’ve come a long way since 2009, and a lot has changed in cinema and the expectations we have for films.

Maybe that’s why it’s a little disappointing that Avatar‘s long-awaited sequel, Avatar: The Way of Water, ends up delivering such a similar, familiar experience — and as such, it doesn’t feel quite as fresh and innovative this time around.

A blue-skinned Na'vi looks out from the forest in a scene from Avatar: The Way of Water.

Back to Pandora

Directed again by Cameron from a script he co-wrote with Planet of the Apes screenwriters Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver, Avatar: The Way of Water is set more than a decade after the events of the original film, and finds Sam Worthington’s character, Jake Sully, now living life among the blue-skinned Na’vi on the planet Pandora. His mind now permanently imprinted within a manufactured, hybrid Na’vi body, Jake serves as chief of the clan that first embraced him and is raising a family with his Na’vi mate, Neytiri, played again by Zoe Saldaña.

Jake and Neytiri’s idyllic life among the natural splendor of Pandora is shattered, however, when a new group of human colonizers arrives on the planet. To make matters worse, the humans are accompanied by Jake’s former nemesis, Colonel Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang), whose mind also resides in a Na’vi avatar now. With Quaritch hunting for him, Jake is forced to flee the forests with his family and take refuge among the water-dwelling clans of Na’vi.

Returning cast members Worthington, Saldaña, and Lang are joined by fellow Avatar actors Joel David Moore, CCH Pounder, Giovanni Ribisi, Dileep Rao, and Matt Gerald, as well as Sigourney Weaver, who portrays a new character in the film. Newcomers this time around include Kate Winslet and Cliff Curtis, who portray the matriarch and chief, respectively, of the water clan that gives Jake and his family sanctuary, while Jamie Flatters, Britain Dalton, and Trinity Jo-Li Bliss play Jake and Neytiri’s biological children.

And no, the questions raised by the children’s existence about Na’vi and human biology are never really addressed, but no one seems to give it much thought. The Way of Water is a film that unabashedly encourages you to shut off your critical thinking and enjoy the ride — and to its credit, it really is quite a ride.

A blue-skinned Na'vi child swims underwater in a scene from Avatar: The Way of Water.

Visionary visuals

Like its predecessor, Avatar: The Way of Water is an absolutely gorgeous film, full of breathtaking cinematography and visual effects that — thanks to the film’s crisp, 3D photography — really do make the world of Pandora feel textured and real. By moving the setting of the story from the forests of Pandora to an oceanic network of islands, Cameron also levels up the visuals with a hefty dose of aquatic elements both above and below the surface of the water, and differentiates the sequel visually in a variety of ways, from its color palette to its characters and environment design.

Water, fire, and hair tend to be the trickiest elements to work with in visual effects, and there’s plenty of all three in The Way of Water, whether in the setting and action or the characters and creatures they interact with. All of these elements are brought to the screen with a degree of detail in the 3D and performance-capture technology that adds depth and physicality to them without slipping into the unsettling “uncanny valley” of digital character design. The Na’vi characters live in the sweet spot between human performance and digital art and work well even when positioned alongside human characters.

Of course, superb presentation can only go so far in making digital characters relatable. Without a well-crafted story behind them, even the most meticulously designed characters can feel hollow — and that’s a situation as problematic in The Way of Water as it was in 2009’s Avatar.

A large Na'vi stands next to a human in a control room in a scene from Avatar: The Way of Water.

Stuck on story

While there are plenty of talented actors portraying the Na’vi characters in Avatar: The Way of Water and Cameron goes to great lengths to make them feel physically present in the action, the story rarely offers the sort of nuance and developmental moments that make them feel emotionally real.

Where many fully animated features have no problem eliciting genuine, intense emotional reactions from their audience (sometimes a little too often, in Pixar’s case), both Avatar: The Way of Water and the 2009 original struggle in that area. They want you to feel powerful emotions, but the stories in both films never quite do enough to forge the sort of connection that merits that level of response. There’s a distance between the audience and the characters that the Avatar films have trouble navigating, and it continues to be one of the franchise’s biggest shortcomings.

That’s not to say there aren’t some well-crafted dramatic moments in The Way of Water. Saldana’s Neytiri delivers some of the film’s most heartfelt, impactful scenes, and Cameron’s performance-capture efforts do an impressive job of translating the character’s wide-ranging emotional arc over the course of the film. The journey Dalton’s character takes as Jake and Neytiri’s troubled middle child, Lo’ak, also delivers some powerful moments that are conveyed well in the Na’vi character.

By and large, however, much of the story in The Way of Water treads familiar ground, which limits how impactful it’s ultimately going to feel for audiences. The characters rarely do anything unexpected and the story holds few surprises, so it’s tough to make any character feel truly unique. Like the 2009 film, The Way of Water is a pastiche of existing stories, re-skinned for an alien world and wrapped in breathtaking visuals, but well-worn and familiar at its core.

A crowd of Na'vi stand in the water in a scene from Avatar: The Way of Water.

Sticking with what works

Although The Way of Water ultimately serves as a set-up story for future Avatar films, its flaws aren’t a product of doing anything particularly wrong. Instead, it’s the film’s willingness to follow the same formula that worked for the original film, without breaking any new ground or doing anything especially new and different, that works against it.

Audiences looking for a unique, stunning visual experience that raises the bar for cinematic spectacle won’t be disappointed by what they find in Avatar: The Way of Water. In that respect, the film is a triumph that suggests the last 13 years of development on the film have been well spent.

Those looking for something more, though — something that learns from the shortcomings of Avatar and improves on them, perhaps — will likely be left wanting when the credits roll. Rather than giving fans of the franchise a more well-rounded experience, Cameron clearly chose to build on what worked in Avatar and continue to let that distract from what doesn’t, and the final product goes all-in on that decision.

It might not be the bar-raising, franchise-redefining film some fans hoped for after 13 years of development, but Avatar: The Way of Water still delivers a rewarding experience that makes satisfying use of the best theater technology available. And for plenty of audiences, that’s going to be more than enough to justify the ticket price of a return trip to Pandora.

Directed by James Cameron, Avatar: The Way of Water is in theaters now. If you want to find out what happens at the end of the film, please click here.

Editors' Recommendations

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Rosaline review: Kaitlyn Dever lifts up Hulu’s Romeo and Juliet rom-com riff
Kaitlyn Dever stands on a forest road with Sean Teale in Hulu's Rosaline.

Director Karen Maine’s new comedy, Rosaline, works overtime to find a new perspective in one of the most well-known stories of all time. The tale in question? None other than William Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet, which remains so iconic that its influence continues to be felt today. As its title suggests, Maine's film does not place its focus on either of that play’s eponymous, star-crossed lovers, though, but rather on the woman who had originally captured young Romeo’s heart before he set his eyes for the first time on her cousin, Juliet.

In Shakespeare’s play, Rosaline is mentioned frequently but never given an actual line of dialogue. Here, the character is reimagined as a brash and determined young woman who refuses to simply accept Romeo’s change of heart. Instead, she sets out to win him back through any means necessary. The film, in other words, attempts to build a fairly common rom-com plot out of the most iconic love story of all time. Rosaline, to its credit, mostly succeeds at doing so, thanks in no small part to the fiery and charismatic performance given by its young lead.

Read more
Halloween Ends review: a franchise mercy kill
Michael Myers stares at the camera from the hallway of a house in a scene from Halloween Ends.

Well, that's finally over.

Filmmaker David Gordon Green's revival of the Halloween franchise, which started out strong with 2018's Halloween before stumbling with 2021's Halloween Kills, wraps up with this year's appropriately titled Halloween Ends, a film intended to be the swan song for both his trilogy and original Halloween star Jamie Lee Curtis' involvement with the franchise. And while Green's final installment manages to salvage some of the series' appeal, Halloween Ends ultimately falls short of realizing the trilogy's initial potential.

Read more
Decision to Leave review: An achingly romantic noir thriller
Tang Wei looks at Park Hae-il in Park Chan-wook's Decision to Leave.

With its lush sets and perpetually probing camera, Decision to Leave looks and moves like any other Park Chan-wook film, but it reverberates with the same untempered passion present in Golden Age noirs like In a Lonely Place and Double Indemnity. Unlike those two films, though, which center their stories around a hot-tempered screenwriter and naïve insurance salesman, respectively, Decision to Leave follows another common noir archetype: the lovelorn detective (played here by Park Hae-il).

In the film’s opening moments, Hae-jun, the detective in question, lands a case involving the mysterious death of a recreational rock climber. The case, in typical noir fashion, leads to Hae-jun crossing paths with Seo-rae (a spellbinding Tang Wei), his victim’s gorgeous but eccentric widow. Perturbed by how disinterested she is in unpacking her abusive husband’s death, Hae-jun begins to tail and spy on Seo-rae, unaware that doing so will only further intensify his attraction to her. As far as noir plots go, this is about as familiar as it gets. With its nods to Hitchcock and lightly self-aware attitude, Decision to Leave makes it clear that it doesn’t mind treading the same narrative terrain as so many of the noir classics that have come before it, either.

Read more