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Granted, not all of them are masterworks. But, typically, if Cameron is releasing a film, it’s either an event, something that is pushing the film industry forward, or a combination of the two. Let’s find out what the most important and the most entertaining of them all is.
10) Piranha II: The Spawning

While Piranha II: The Spawning was Cameron’s feature film directorial debut, it barely feels like his outside featuring longtime collaborator Lance Henriksen in the lead role. And that makes sense, considering he was fired not long into production, at which point producer Ovidio G. Assonitis took over.
Even still, Cameron co-wrote the script and directed at least some of its scenes, so it is technically his and, for that reason, it’s included here. But, yeah, unlike the first Roger Corman Piranha (Corman was not involved in The Spawning), it’s not a good movie, even if Scream Factory’s Blu-ray isn’t half bad to look at.
Stream Piranha II: The Spawning for free with ads on The Roku Channel.
9) True Lies

Most of Cameron’s movies have aged well, both visually and thematically. True Lies isn’t one of them. Some of its content, be its view of Middle Eastern cultures or the treatment of Jamie Lee Curtis’ character, have aged like countertop gouda.
There are a few fun action sequences, but True Lies is a tough watch these days. It’s also a bit on the long side. It was another win for Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jamie Lee Curtis at the time, but it’s not a necessary watch now.
Stream True Lies on YouTube TV.
8) The Abyss

There’s an argument to be made that The Abyss belongs above the Avatar movies, and that’s a fair argument indeed. And, like those movies and another of Cameron’s filmography we’ll get to later, it pushed the boundaries of what CGI could pull off.
However, for all its effectively tense atmosphere, The Abyss can be a bit of a slog. We get that Cameron sees the ocean as a magical place, but after a while the audience is rolling a finger like a film reel and saying, ‘We get it.’ Plus, once you realize its alien presence is a docile one, the only real source of tension is Michael Biehn crawling around going all Jack Nicholson in The Shining. It’s a relatively powerful one-time viewing, but most audience members aren’t going to be clamoring for round two.
Stream The Abyss on Disney+.
7) Avatar: The Way of Water

Credit is certainly due Avatar: The Way of Water for its worldbuilding. New characters like Kiri, born of Dr. Grace Augustine’s deceased avatar and “Spider,” Col. Miles Quaritch’s son, prove to be fine additions to the canon, and even allow the film to not only bring Sigourney Weaver back but add a slight amount of depth to Quaritch (who is now in a Recombinant avatar) as well.
But Quaritch also represents a problem, which is that, for all its efforts to flesh out Pandora a bit more, it still comes across as a rehash. It’s not a dry film, and it says a lot that it can make you feel truly sorry for a CGI whale creature, but Fire and Ash still feels fresher.
Stream Avatar: The Way of Water on Disney+.
6) Avatar

For a movie that is about embracing another culture and learning its ways, Avatar is surprisingly shallow. It really just boils down to bad people want natural resources, good “people” have resources, bad people try to exterminate them for said resources. It builds a clever, nature-focused world, but it comes off as hokey a little too often for its own good.
But there are certainly upsides, especially when it comes to Zoe Saldaña’s heartbreaking performance. She’s the only one who is really able to make you care about any of the walking talking CGI creations in a meaningful way (to be fair to Cameron and the film, there will always be a disconnect when it comes to viewing CGI individuals in the same light as flesh and blood individuals). Furthermore, it does a great job of making you hate the antagonistic private military operators. But even they only serve to reinforce the criticism that the film is thin. Not to mention, they have some occasionally very weak dialogue (all of the clichés are present, such as “Get some” and Jake Sully’s first act utterance of hooah). In the end, Avatar comes across as an amalgamation of a handful of much better movies, but the fact remains that it was visually a major step forward for the film industry.
Stream Avatar on Disney+.













