Avatar: The Way of Water Passes $1.4 Billion in 3 Weeks

Avatar: The Way of Water Passes $1.4 Billion in 3 Weeks

The Way of Water Passes $1.4 Billion

The Midas Touch

If Way Of The Water breaks the $2 billion mark, James Cameron will have 3 billion dollar movies.

Before the release of Avatar: The Way of Water, director James Cameron stated that they’d know if the film was a hit only by the third weekend.

“Titanic didn’t work that way. Avatar didn’t work that way.” And he was right; both those movies were written off prior to release, and their relatively muted openings didn’t quite instill confidence.

They went on to become all-time blockbusters, cementing Cameron as the undisputed king of the box office.

Now that The Way of Water has been in theaters for three weekends, the verdict is pretty much in.

With $444 million at the domestic box office and $956 million from overseas markets, The Way of Water’s global haul now sits at a staggering $1.401 billion.

The film actually showed a 6% improvement over the previous weekend, with $66.8 million as compared to the $63.3 million that it had made in its sophomore weekend.

 

Cameron was right; his movies tend to chart their own unique paths at the box office.

In an era where big tent-poles are all mostly front-loaded, The Way of Water simply refuses to drop.

The first Avatar famously opened to rather low figures back in 2009 – it made around $77 million in its first weekend – before showing phenomenal legs over the holiday period and into 2010, ultimately concluding its run as the highest-grossing movie in history.

Counting the many millions it has made through re-releases over the years, the first Avatar’s final tally sits at $785 million stateside and $2.9 billion globally.

The chances of The Way of Water hitting those figures are slim; recent projections put the film’s final global gross between $1.6 billion and $1.9 billion.

If it manages to top $1.9 billion, it’ll overtake Spider-Man: No Way Home as the highest-grossing movie of the pandemic era.

Cameron had also declared that The Way of Water would have to finish as the third or fourth-biggest movie in history to break even, implying that anything below $2 billion globally would be a matter of concern for the franchise’s future.

Set a decade after the events of the first film, The Way of Water introduces audiences to the water tribes of Pandora, marking a visual shift from the tropical forest setting of the first film.

The Way of Water has a clear path ahead of it – at least until February’s Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania – which means that $2 billion-plus finish might not be out of the question.