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Unfortunately, Fire and Ash marks the end of a trend. Not only is it the lowest-rated Avatar movie on Rotten Tomatoes (67% as of this writing), it’s also the first time since 1981’s Piranha II: The Spawning that a Cameron-directed feature film is not Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes. Until now, every Cameron movie dating back to the original Terminator, which came out 41 years ago, earned a Certified Fresh mark โ even his documentaries.
| Movie | Rotten Tomatoes Score |
| The Terminator | 90% |
| Aliens | 94% |
| The Abyss | 76% |
| Terminator 2: Judgment Day | 91% |
| True Lies | 77% |
| Titanic | 88% |
| Ghosts of the Abyss | 80% |
| Aliens of the Deep | 84% |
| Avatar | 81% |
| Avatar: The Way of Water | 76% |
| Avatar: Fire and Ash | 67% |
Avatar: Fire and Ash Proves James Cameron Should Take a Break From the Franchise

In order for a film to be considered Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, its critics score needs to be at least 75%. The odds of Avatar: Fire and Ash reaching that figure now are low. Currently, there are 253 reviews counted, meaning a majority of critics have already weighed in with their thoughts. Fire and Ash‘s score could still fluctuate a bit as more reviews are submitted (The Way of Water has 454 reviews counted), but the threequel would need to improve by eight percentage points to get to Certified Fresh territory, which is unrealistic. If Fire and Ash was going to be Certified Fresh, it would have happened by now.
The Avatar franchise continues to astound with revolutionary visual effects, but it has seen diminishing returns with review scores each time out, and Fire and Ash could be an inflection point. The general consensus is that Fire and Ash finds Cameron retreading old ground, with the film struggling to bring new things to the table with regard to the narrative. Perhaps the biggest critique is that Fire and Ash replays some of the same story points as previous entries, which is surprising given Cameron’s penchant for innovating. Even Fire and Ash‘s biggest addition to the series lore (the villainous Ash People) are underdeveloped in favor of hitting familiar beats.








