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The first teaser trailer for Avatar: Fire and Ash released in July 2025, attached to the theatrical releasee of Marvel Studios’ The Fantastic Four: First Steps. The trailer brought us back to Pandora and caught up with Jake (Sam Worthington), Neytiri (Zoe Saldaรฑa), Quaritch (Stephen Lang), and more as they come face-to-face with a new tribe of Na’vi, led by Varang (Oona Chaplin). Avatar: Fire and Ash seems to be just as, if not more intense and visually-spectacular than its predecessors โ surely aided by James Cameron’s continued involvement in the Avatar film series.
James Cameron’s Sequels Often Hurt Major Movie Franchises

Throughout the 1980s and ’90s, James Cameron became a celebrated filmmaker of science fiction and action projects, and became known as the man to call if you wanted a movie sequel done right. Cameron’s feature directorial debut was 1982’s Piranha II: The Spawning, though he’d rather you forget that movie and consider 1984’s The Terminator to be his first. Following The Terminator, Cameron wrote and directed some of the most iconic movie sequels in history, including 1985’s Rambo: First Blood Part II, 1986’s Aliens, and 1991’s Terminator 2: Judgment Day.
James Cameron delivering a strong sequel in an established movie franchise was often something bittersweet. In the cases of the Terminator, Alien, and Rambo franchises, Cameron’s successes were incredibly hard to live up to, and subsequent sequels’ directors failed time and again, so Cameron’s movies ultimately hurt their overall franchises. Following Terminator movies directed by Jonathan Mostow, McG, Alan Taylor, and Tim Miller failed to meet Cameron’s success, while Alien 3 and Alien: Resurrection were huge disappointments for Ridley Scott’s original franchise, and all other Rambo movies received a mixed-to-overwhelmingly negative response.









