Avatar: Fire and Ice


When I see any Avatar movie, the first three: “Avatar” (2009), “Avatar: The Way of Water” (2022) and “Avatar: Fire and Ice” (2025), I think of Pixar, the company that always puts out outstanding animated movies. Some of the best: “Toy Story” (1995, 1999, 2010, 2019), “Inside Out” (2015, 2024), and “Finding Dory” (2016). Granted, these movies are not nearly as complex and costly as the Avatar movies, which use live-action capture to create the characters. The difference is that Pixar movies consistently deliver a great story and screenplay, as well as exceptional animation. The reason for a high quality story is obvious, “how can we spend so much on great technology and not take the time to create a great story, dialogue and screenplay first”?

Unfortunately, all of the Avatar movies believe that record-breaking special effects are enough; the story is always secondary. “Avatar: Fire and Ice” is very similar to the previous movie; there is no real contiguous story, and too many examples of disconnected scenes and jumping around to different reasons for another special effect or action sequence. As with all of the Avatar movies, this one is once again, way too long at 3 hours and 15 minutes. There is no reason why this movie should be this long, with so many unnecessary scenes that have nothing to do with the overall story. This film could have easily been cut down to 2 hours and 30 minutes with no reduction in quality. Nobody in charge seems to realize that movies that are too long, can potentially greatly reduce the box office. Most people do not want to sit and watch a movie for over 3 hours, with movies normally lasting only two hours.

James Cameron started working on these Avatar movies in 2006, and now almost 20 years later, after the 3rd one has been released, there are plans for two more movies, with Avatar 4 scheduled for release in 2029 and Avatar 5 scheduled for 2031. In my opinion, it makes no sense why Cameron would want to spend the majority of his career as a screenwriter and director with one movie concept, even though these movies have advanced movie-making technology more than any other films.

This movie stars the same three main starts, Sam Worthington as Jake, Zoe Saldana as Neytiri, and Sigourney Weaver as Kiri. Other known actors include Kate Winslet, Stephen Lang, Giovanni Ribisi and Edie Falco as General Ardmore. All of these actors have to be grateful for big paydays that will probably last all the way until 2031 when the last Avatar is completed.

The Rotten Tomatoes ratings are a correct and low 68% with this review, being typical of the critics’ opinions: Michael Compton: “After taking a step forward with the previous film, Fire and Ash takes a giant step back — a film overstuffed with style but completely lacking any meaningful substance.” For a normal movie a 68% rating would mean failure at the box office, but like the other Avatar movies, this one will probably also gross over 2 billion dollars worldwide. My rating is 100% for the special effects and 65% for the story and a moderate recommendation.

Movie Review: Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3


With the 3rd installment of the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise, “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3” it is impossible for anyone to not be highly impressed with the science fiction imagination of this film. The new ideas, the space travel, the amazing movie sets, costumes, special effects, unique alien creatures, computer-generated special effects, and stunts are all first-rate throughout. The production budget for this film is 250 million dollars, and it is easy to be very impressed with the work, money, and planning that went into this latest Marvel film. The only issue with this movie, which is extremely common for all action films like this one, is that the script, while not bad, could have been much better.

This story starts with a severe injury to Rocket (the squirrel alien of the group, whose voice is performed by the actor Bradley Cooper). Rocket needs some kind of software injection from some remote planet to save him. After this, the entire story is all about all of his friends trying to get this code from an evil leader who is the captain of a huge spaceship. Much of the story is convoluted throughout different parts of this screenplay and at times can be hard to follow. The humor is pretty much like all of the two previous movies, but I thought the previous films had more frequent and funnier scenes. All of the main characters return for this 3rd film: Chris Pratt, Karen Gillan, Dave Bautista, Zoe Saldana, and Vin Diesel who is the voice of Groot – the tree-like alien – whose only line through all 3 installments is “I am Groot”.

There are several short cameos in this film, from Sylvester Stallone, Nathan Fillion, and Linda Cardellini. I thought Fillion had some of the best scenes among the 3 of them.

The Rotten Tomatoes rating for this 3rd and possibly last installment of the Guardians of the Galaxy series is a solid 80% and I agree with this rating, but only for the incredible special effects, not the story/screenplay.