Advertisement

Beyond Pandora: James Cameron may visit other moons in an ‘Avatar’ sequel

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

Avatar’ has already piled up $285 million in worldwide grosses and, of course, in our ‘what’s next?’ culture that means people are already peppering writer-director James Cameron with questions about a sequel. On the film’s opening night, the Hero Complex and The Envelope hosted a screening of the film and I got a chance to interview Cameron, producer Jon Landau and stars Sigourney Weaver and Sam Worthington on stage and, of course, I asked about the follow-up possibilities for the film. I made a point to mention that Pandora wasn’t the only moon shown orbiting the distant Polyphemus and the filmmaker acknowledged that his story ideas for the ‘Avatar’ universe aren’t boxed in by Pandora.

Check back tomorrow for the fourth and final piece of video from our opening-night event. If you missed the earlier posts, you can go back and hear Cameron talking about the eye-opening theme of the film in the first video snippet and then Worthington talking about his days living in a car in the second installment.

Advertisement

-- Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

COMPANY TOWN: Could ‘Avatar’ hit $1 billion?

James Cameron on ‘Avatar’: Like ‘Matrix,’ it opens doorways

Don’t tell Stephen Lang’s he’s the villain in ‘Avatar’

LAT REVIEW: ‘Avatar’ restores a sense of wonder to moviegoing

James Cameron vs. Robert Zemeckis? The inside scoop

Advertisement

Sigourney Weaver, queen of sci-fi: ‘Outer space has been good to me’

Meet the USC professor who created an entire language for Avatar

Avatar’ designer on Jim Cameron, banshees and ‘Delgo’ comparisons

Michelle Rodriguez says ‘Avatar’ was like making ‘Star Wars’

‘Avatar’ star Zoe Saldana says movie will match the hype: ‘This is big’

Jim Cameron, cinema prophet? ‘Moving a mountain is nothing’

Advertisement

Worthington looks for humanity: ‘I don’t want to be a cartoon’

Advertisement