Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts

Friday, January 13, 2023

Download Wednesday (2022) Hindi Web Series full series

   

   The second-most watched English-language series on Netflix is "Wednesday," with 1.02 billion hours watched.


 

    The most recent smash hit on Netflix, "Wednesday," the Tim Burton-directed "Addams Family" spin-off, has achieved a feat that was previously only attained by "Stranger Things" season four and "Squid Game." In just three weeks since its debut, "Wednesday" has received more than 1.02 billion total hours of viewing, according to the company, with more than 150 million households streaming the program. This makes it the second-most watched English-language Netflix series right now.

     Since its November 16 premiere, "Wednesday" has become a cultural phenomenon. "Mother Monster" herself, Lady Gaga, recreated Jenna Ortega's choreographed dance scene from episode four, "Woe What a Night," which stars Wednesday Addams. On TikTok, the hashtag #wednesdayaddams has received 16.9 billion views.

     Additionally, the quirky young-adult series was to blame for the rise in Spotify plays of The Cramps' "Goo Goo Muck," which as of this writing has received over 16 million. The song "Running Up That Hill" by Kate Bush was also revived by "Stranger Things," and its popularity on TikTok and Spotify soared.

Prize:

    It's important to note that Evan Peters' biographical drama series "Dahmer—Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story," which won the silver medal, was dethroned by "Wednesday." "Wednesday" only required 21 days to become a smash hit, whereas "Dahmer" only required 28 days to reach 856.2 million hours, making it the second most watched English-language series on Netflix. The movie "Dahmer" received more than 1 billion viewing hours in a total of 60 days.

. The accomplishment is noteworthy for the dominant streaming service, particularly after it lost over a million subscribers in 2022. In the third quarter, the company finally added 2.41 million subscribers. Additionally, Netflix lagged behind HBO Max during this year's Emmys, winning only 26 awards as opposed to 37 for HBO and HBO Max.

Netflix received 14 TV nominations and nine film nominations, placing it among the top contenders for the 2023 Golden Globe Awards. Ortega received a nomination for Best Actress, and "Wednesday" received two nominations, including Best Television Series (Comedy).

Movie Name :- Wednesday (2022) Hindi Web Series

Quality :- WEB-DL

Genres :- Comedy, Crime, Family,

Starcast :- Jenna Ortega, Gwendoline Christie, Riki Lindhome,

Length :- 6h 45min

Release Date :- 23 November 2022

Movie Story :- A detective story with supernatural overtones that follows Wednesday (qv) Addams' years as a student at Nevermore Academy. Wednesday's (qv) struggles to control her developing psychic gift, stop a terrifying killing spree that has scared the neighbourhood, and unravel the paranormal mystery that engulfed her parents 25 years ago while juggling her new and extremely complicated relationships at Nevermore..


Download Wednesday (2022) Hindi Web Series


Wednesday 2022 Hindi S01 E08 If You Dont Woe Me By Now Web Dl.Mp4

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» Wednesday 2022 Hindi S01 E06 Quid Pro Woe WEB-DL.mp4 (142 Mb)

» Wednesday 2022 Hindi S01 E05 You Reap What You Woe WEB-DL.mp4 (147 Mb)

» Wednesday 2022 Hindi S01 E04 Woe What a Night WEB-DL.mp4 (140 Mb)

» Wednesday 2022 Hindi S01 E03 Friend or Woe WEB-DL.mp4 (135 Mb)

» Wednesday 2022 Hindi S01 E02 Woe is the Loneliest Number WEB-DL.mp4 (138 Mb)

» Wednesday 2022 Hindi S01 E01 Wednesdays Child is Full of Woe WEB-DL.mp4 (172 Mb)


        Does the programme have a chance of winning a Golden Globe? Probably not. But for Netflix, winning an award for a family-friendly series is a big deal, especially since the programme was up against hits like "Abbott Elementary" and "Only Murders in the Building."

Directed By

The fact that "Wednesday" is a spin-off, which was guaranteed to attract a tonne of nostalgic viewers, should also be highlighted. Yes, the show is brilliant and gives the 1964 TV series, the 1991 film, and the 2019 movie a fresh spin. Tim Burton, the renowned director of "Beetlejuice," "Edward Scissorhands," and "The Nightmare Before Christmas," also serves as the film's director. But in contrast to "Stranger Things" and "Squid Game," which are utterly unique in their own wild ways, "Wednesday" adopts what is perhaps an overused strategy used by many streamers: rebooting franchise after franchise until something sticks.

While Netflix succeeded this time, it must continue to produce high-caliber original series with completely fresh ideas and casts if it hopes to compete with its rivals.

Sunday, January 8, 2023

Bade Miyan Chote Miyan 2023 (BMCM) Budget, release date, casts, story, director

Bade Miyan Chote Miyan (BMCM) new release movie tiger shroff, Akshay Kumar, Janhvi Kapoor.


The movie will be a remake of the classic action film Bade Miyan Chote Miyan (1998), and its release date is set for 2023.

Given that this is a remake, the plot will be identical to that of Bade Miyan Chote Miyan (1998).

 Storyline:

            The roles of Bade Miyan and Chote Miyan, which will be played by Akshay Kumar and Tiger shroff, will cause a lot of misunderstanding in the film because they resemble Arjun and Pyare Mohan. The action comedy will be quite entertaining.

Release date:

          The film is scheduled to hit theatres on Christmas Day, 25 December 2023, and will be a hit because it stars the reunited Akshay and Tiger Shroff.

BMCM Budget:

    The film is anticipated to have a budget of roughly Rs. 250 crores, which is truly a mega budget movie, and on the strength of actors like Akshay-Tiger, the picture is anticipated to perform well on large screens. According to rumours, Akshay and Tiger Shroff both received a large payment for their respective roles.

   Vasu Bhagnani, the film's producer, stated that he holds this movie in the highest regard because it brought together two of the best actors in the business (Amitabh and Govida), and it was also made by David. With the new actors, the remake will hopefully maintain the charm of the original film and generate significant box office cash (Akshay-Tiger).

Casts:


Tiger Shroff, Janhvi kapoor, and Akshay Kumar will play the key roles; the supporting cast members have not yet been identified.

Director and production:

   Ali Abbas Zafar will direct the film, which will be shown in theatres on March 2023 in Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, and Kannada. In collaboration with AAZ films, Vashu Bhagnani and Pooja Entertainment release BadeMiyan Chote Miyan. 

Saturday, January 7, 2023

Black Adam full movie Hindi dubbed 2022| Black Adam 4k review.

         It was a stroke of luck that the Black Adam 4K review copy showed up at the door just as Dwayne Johnson announced that his interpretation of the character wouldn't be receiving a sequel any time soon, which can't have delighted Warner Bros. This came when his staff sent some fabricated data to Deadline in order to make the film appear to be a bigger success than it actually was by including product sales as grosses. Of course, after Johnson made a big issue out of using his fame to persuade Henry Cavill to reprise his role as Superman, James Gunn quickly wiped the slate clean with a new film that will recast Kal-El.

The former wrestler-turned-actor has been advertising the part of Black Adam for fifteen years. He asserted that it would alter the "ladder of power" in the DC cinematic world for at least two reasons, speculating that it would develop around Adam and the JSA characters in his film.


Today, Black Adam as a film feels less like a segue and more like a footnote. It doesn't seem to be a priority given the thinly veiled plot and distinctively Snyder-verse aesthetic. When it comes to how it ties into the DCEU, it functions mainly as a semi-sequel to Shazam!, featuring Djimon Hounsou as Shazam the wizard.. Even so... Johnson declined to star in a movie starring the superhero Shazam. Considering that no one is allowed to use the title "Captain Marvel" in movies, could we kindly give the latter a proper name? "Captain Sparklefingers" is silly, but it's something.




And therein lays the problem, which is abundantly illustrated on the Blu-ray special features. Despite Johnson's extensive, lifelong preoccupation with Black Adam, he appears utterly, wilfully unaware of the character's two defining traits. First, he is a bad guy. He belongs to the Shazam bad guys. Given that he transforms with the same word, it's difficult to miss that last one.    

     When Johnson claims on the extras that he related to Black Adam's strict moral code as a young reader of comic books, he is just outright lying. When Johnson was a child in the 1970s and 1980s, Black Adam was a comic book character published by DC that was purely evil. To avoid contradicting the star, a documentary about the character's past purposefully omits these facts, never openly stating that he had not previously been an antihero.


Frankly, if you want to appreciate the movie, it's best to disregard the extras. Johnson and director Jaume Collet-Sera make a laughably obvious and forced comparison to Clint Eastwood's Man With No Name. Hugh Jackman had put in the time and effort by the time Logan came up, whereas Johnson, who played this character in just one film, had not. Johnson can't even pull off the latter, as required by all comic portrayals, in an universe where Tenoch Huerta can easily pull off winged ankles and pointy ears.


Even still, the current Aquaman movie version doesn't exactly resemble the comics, and most fans are okay with that. The majority of us have come to terms with the fact that the DC universe as it is now shown on screen frequently changes.Black Adam is a mindless burst of big-guy brawling as a standalone film. It's like an Oreo Quadruple Stuf or a box of Cap'n Crunch Oops All Berries in a movie. If The Scorpion King and Black Adam were shown back-to-back to a film critic in the distant future, they might never guess that Dwayne Johnson had a moment as a critically acclaimed actor in the two decades between them, renowned for having more range and screen charisma than any prior wrestler-turned-movie-star.



      The Scorpion King was entertaining, much like Black Adam. With a twist—in this case, superpowers—they're essentially both WWE Monday Night Raw. Only this time, Johnson has transformed into the Hollywood Hogan of the 2000s, a "cool heel" figure in black who, thanks to his contract, controls much too many shots behind the scenes instead of acting in the best interests of the narrative as a whole. Is it possible for anyone to envision a Marvel star refusing to make cameos in related films, as Johnson allegedly did with DC? (We can think of worse movies with any of the JSA from this film, but good luck finding them right now.)


    Unfortunately, the movie's 4K rendering falls short. The home 4K version of superhero movies frequently shows unseen features and more vivid shadows. Instead, Black Adam exhibits a great deal of soft focus, which appears to be an intentional attempt to keep CG backgrounds less detailed/less expensive. Additionally, it draws attention to the depth—or lack thereof. Johnson is plainly seen hanging from cables in front of a loud screen in a number of sequences. Maybe you should blame the transfer or the cinematographer. It's uncommon to state about a Marvel or DC movie that more resolution is not always better, but that is the case in this instance.

  A well-mixed score and clear speech make up the majority of the audio quality. However, there were a few little yet bothersome stutters. Your collection of superhero movies will continue to be arranged in the same order.

The enjoyable, three-star superhero mash-up that Black Adam always was still exists. Its baggage, gimmicky extras, subpar 4K, and immediately outmoded place in the DCEU render the disc less than essential.

Black Adam will be released on DVD, Blu-ray, and 4K. Jan. 3.

                                >>>>Watch now<<<<
 
                             >>>>Download now<<<

Click on the upper links to watch online or download full movie in Hindi.
Hindi dubbed Black Adam movie download.

Thursday, January 5, 2023

13 Movies You Won't Believe Are Turning 20 In 2023

 

13 Movies You Won't Believe Are Turning 20 In 2023

  • Movies that came out in 2003 are turning 20 this year. 
  • Family favorites like "Finding Nemo" and "Cheaper by the Dozen" came out 20 years ago.
  • The cast of "Love Actually" recently reunited to celebrate the movie's 20th anniversary.
  • Thirty-four Movies That Celebrate The Movies

    The end of 2022 offered up a trio of movies by name-brand directors that are about the world of movies: precocious D.I.Y. Filmmaking in Steven Spielberg’s “The Fabelmans,” behind-the-scenes classic Hollywood in Damien Chazelle’s “Babylon,” and even the work and lives of a movie theatre’s staff in Sam Mendes’s “Empire of Light.” 

             In these films, the story of the greatness of cinema is the story of how the sausage is made and served, and even how the pig was raised. The history of cinema is rich in movies that depict the world of movies—which spotlight the personalities, celebrate the art, look frankly at the business, reveal the off-camera conflicts that fuel and hinder productions, and lay bare the ravenous force of filmmaking’s commercial and emotional demands.

    Several of these films are incontrovertible classics, such as “Singin’ in the Rain” and the first two versions of “A Star Is Born.” (The 1937 one is grittier; the 1954 one is Judy Garland’s greatest showcase.) It isn’t only Hollywood that portrays its own fault lines and idiosyncrasies; the world of movies is depicted with vast variety in international films and in independent ones, and what gets dramatized ranges from moviegoing to gatecrashing, from production to projection, from dreams and plans to fame or failure—from the rising passion of young cinephiles and the tenuous glory of professionals to the retrospective celebration of great achievements and the decrepitude of outcasts. They depict the making of fiction, documentary, and animated movies, reflexive films, student films, even imaginary films.

    Because movies about movies hold their own methods—their own identity—up to scrutiny, they often bend toward aesthetic radicalism. (Almost any film by Jean-Luc Godard would count, including the one that I put at the top of my Sight and Sound list, “King Lear.”) Many of the great ones are relatively recent, because the self-scrutiny of the art, and the development of new forms in which to do so, is the product of decades of consistent and uncompromising cinematic advance. This list brings together a handful of my favorites in the genre, in chronological order.

    Person walking onstage while a projection is on a screen.

    Buster Keaton, at right, in “Sherlock Jr.”Photograph from Everett 

    Sherlock Jr.”
    1924, Buster Keaton

            The loopily sentimental tale—of a projectionist who loses his fiancée over a false accusation and dreams himself into a movie of stunt-filled romantic heroism in order to find the solution to his problem—gives rise to some of Keaton’s most giddily surrealistic and balletically harrowing stunts. It also suggests that popular movies’ hyperbolic action fantasies are merely ego-gratifying delusions.

    1928, Josef von Sternberg

          Impostor syndrome goes both ways: some people are propelled downward, from aristocratic heights, into the workaday tumult of show business. Sternberg’s drama, based on real events, is of a Russian general, a refugee after the Revolution, who lands in Hollywood to serve as a mere extra and finds that his art is inseparable from his life—and from his not-so-distant glory days.

    1928, King Vidor

          Hollywood’s eternal conflict between art and a pie in the face gets worked out with aptly caustic and antic results in Vidor’s fictionalized look behind the scenes at an aspiring actress’s pothole-pocked road to stardom—and at the real-life gallery of cinematic luminaries that she aspired to join.

    Blackandwhite photo of a person looking forlorn with a child and adult seen in a mirror behind the person.

    Anna Magnani in “Bellissima.”Photograph from Everett 

    1951, Luchino Visconti

         The desperation that impels stage parents to drive stage children mercilessly is embodied, in this grand-scale satirical melodrama, by the grandest dramatic personality of the postwar Italian cinema, Anna Magnani.

    1954, Joseph L. Mankiewicz

          Sometimes it takes distance to gain clarity, and this drama of a Spanish dancer discovered in a rough-edged night club by a fading Hollywood director puts the American way of filmmaking—and the fabulous lives that studio business exalts, fosters, distorts, and thwarts—into sharp and grim perspective.

    1962, Vincente Minnelli

          Yet more distance, yet more clarity, or, when is a sequel not a sequel: Minnelli follows up on his 1952 inside-Hollywood drama “The Bad and the Beautiful” by treating it as the work of a fictional character in this tale of Hollywood on the edge of a commercial breakdown, set in Italy, amid the shoot of a studio film at Cinecittà, in Rome, and amid a looming generational shift and an accompanying shift in mores. By being alert to the times, Minnelli was ahead of them.

    1963, Pier Paolo Pasolini

    An oblivious, bombastic director of a film depicting the Crucifixion allows his cast to endure real-life scourges in this fierce mockery of the industry as it runs unquestioned and unconsidered; in a wickedly ironic touch, that director is played by Orson Welles.

    1964, Vincente Minnelli

    Hollywood’s rampant and unchallenged sexual harassment of women gets a scathing—and comedic—airing in this hectic but incisive gender-switch fantasy of reincarnation and self-recognition.

    “The Hero”

    1966, Satyajit Ray

    The grandeur and the fragility, the artistic ambitions and the personal compromises of a famous young actor emerge, in the course of a train ride, through his interview with a journalist and the hauntings of his memories and dreams. The very nature of the cinema is examined, during this fateful journey, in the light of Indian cultural politics and the history of the country’s own film industry.

    1982, Kathleen Collins

    This drama, one of the first by a Black female director, is centered on a Black philosophy professor who is invited by one of her students to act in his film. It also dramatizes Collins’s own relationship to the overwhelming power of movies, which it defines as “even”: even a nonprofessional actor, even playing a nonspeaking role, even in a student film, has her life transformed on contact with the art of the cinema.

    Two people sit side by side in a movie theatre pointing their thumbs down.

    Jimmy Woodard and Robert Townsend in “Hollywood Shuffle.”Photograph from Samuel Goldwyn Films / Everett 

    1987, Robert Townsend

    This furious satire on the few and frequently demeaning opportunities for Black actors is also a paradoxical burst of enthusiasm for the power of popular movies and a comedic, but fiercely earnest, vision of what Hollywood could be if it included Black filmmakers to tell Black people’s stories—and to expand the industry’s forms and genres in the light of their own experiences.

    1989, Youssef Chahine

    Chahine plays a director in another film à clef, one that details a fictionalized Egyptian filmmaker’s passion for a young actor who flees him and the subsequent effort to make a film—of “Hamlet”—with a different star. Along the way, the drama details the highs and lows of the filmmaker’s career (complete with musical sequences) and the economic and political crises of the Egyptian cinema, centered on an industry strike and sit-in targeting government control of the arts (based on a real-life event in which Chahine took part).

    1990, Clint Eastwood

    This film à clef, about John Huston’s swaggering, self-defeating frivolity while making “The African Queen,” is based on a novel by Peter Viertel (Huston’s uncredited on-location script doctor). Eastwood also stars, gleefully and sardonically playing the role of a filmmaker whose directorial ethic is antithetical to his own.

    Jacquot de Nantes”

    1991, Agnès Varda

    Agnès Varda’s bio-pic about the childhood and adolescence of her husband, the director Jacques Demy, is perhaps the greatest of all films about a primal passion for movies and hands-on love of the craft. (It also may be the most meticulously observed movie about D.I.Y. Animation.) Varda intercuts the vigorous and exquisite drama (complete with the politics of the German Occupation during the Second World War) with clips of Demy’s own films, and she also provides the tender voice-over commentary; Demy himself, who was terminally ill during its production, appears on-camera to share his reminiscences, and Varda films him with a loving, tactile intimacy.

    1991, Stanley Kwan

    This bio-pic about Ruan Lingyu, a Chinese silent-movie actress who became ensnared in political conflicts and journalistic scandalmongering, expands the bio-pic form—and the story’s historical purview—by way of interviews with her real-life colleagues and with the film’s own cast and crew.


    Person walking among trees carrying a potted plant.

    Photograph from TriStar Pictures / Everett 

    1994, Abbas Kiarostami

    The Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami, whose 1990 film “Close-Up” reënacts the true story of a film fan impersonating a real-life director, here dramatizes—with a blend of documentary and fiction—the peculiarities of casting nonprofessionals in roles that resemble their lives, blurring emotional boundaries and putting them, and the movie, at risk. (It’s also a dramatization of the making of Kiarostami’s previous film, “Life, and Nothing More . . .”)

    1999, Mahamat-Saleh Haroun

    The cinematic connections between art and life are dramatized—ambivalently—in this first feature by the Chadian director, who plays a character bearing his name, an aspiring filmmaker who returns home from France and finds his path to filmmaking blocked by Chad’s troubled film industry and his own romantic past.

    2002, Catherine Breillat

    This is why there are intimacy coördinators: based on the real-life production of one of Breillat’s earlier films, this drama is centered on an explicit and risky sex scene that risks shattering the psyches of its actors—and its director.

    2009, Jared Hess

    When a teen-age fantasy author has his work adapted by two teen-age filmmakers, he gets a quick and bitter lesson in creative control—along with a sharper certitude of his own ecstatic vision, of the authentic power of superheroes, and of the movie industry’s woeful diminution of them.

    2009, Hong Sangsoo

    The indignities and petty slights endured by an art-house director who’s a hero in his own mind but one of many in his field get an acerbic comedic workout in this reflexive drama, which wryly celebrates the power of cinema to turn rotten tomatoes into a worthy feast.

    2010, Oliver Laxe

    When a young Spanish filmmaker (played by the director) teaches a filmmaking class for preteens in Morocco, his plan to imbue his pupils with a love of the art gets shredded by their desire to tell a story of their own, their love of Hollywood, and the complexities of local production, which turn into an entirely different story.

    2010, Sofia Coppola

    The daughter of a Hollywood luminary offers an exquisite film about the childhood of a daughter of a Hollywood luminary—and about the delicate bond between father and daughter that’s both enriched by the luxuries and frayed by the demands of his strange milieu.

    Three people stand side by side and look at each other.

    James Gandolfini, Diane Lane, and Tim Robbins in “Cinema Verite.”Photograph from Cinematic Collection / Alamy 

    2011, Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini

    This bustling yet nuanced fiction film—a historical drama about the making of one of the most daring of all documentaries, the public-television series “An American Family,” originally broadcast in 1973—shows what happens when filmmakers embed themselves in a suburban household and, with their interventionist presence, transform the relationships within.

    2011, Joe Swanberg

        The harsh naturalism of ultra-low-budget personal filmmaking veers into expressionistic subjectivity in this story of an independent filmmaker who, when his partner acts in another director’s movie, plots artistic and personal revenge.

    2012, Leos Carax

        The power of an actor’s art and the pressure of an actor’s life are abstracted from the machinery of cinema and displayed as a phantasmagorical odyssey through Paris by limousine, with the actor’s wondrous on-location transformations and hectic emotional extremes converging and clashing with his identity.

    2015, Zia Anger | 2019-22, live performance by Zia Anger

         The 2015 short is a wild, near-apocalyptic comedy of independent filmmaking and its self-destructive pitfalls; Anger’s series of live performances involves the projection of clips of her unfinished feature from her laptop computer, on which she also maneuvers visual sidebars while delivering, in person, her spoken commentary, in an extraordinary story of the crash of a furiously personal story into the institutional norms of the independent-film business.

    2016, Claire Simon

    The changing nature of film school, from technical training to aesthetic conservatory, is examined in detail in this documentary, from France, which looks with ardent yet skeptical curiosity at the academic conversion of enthusiasm and passion into craft and judgment.

    Still from “Shirkers” where a person is walking with a briefcase in hand.

    Sandi Tan in “Shirkers.”Photograph from Netflix / Everett 

    2018, Sandi Tan

    This documentary turns long-vanished footage from one of the great might-have-beens, an on-location fantasy filmed with wild D.I.Y. Creativity by teen-agers in Singapore in 1992, into a grand memory-piece about the place, the time, the young filmmakers’ preternaturally sophisticated inspiration, and the alluring creep who made off with the footage.

    2018, Aaron Schimberg

    In this caustic yet compassionate drama, a German director comes to the United States to make a film about a blind woman—and hires a sighted performer to play the role, alongside other actors who have disabilities; the drama is centered on who makes films about their own stories and how the industry reduces the very concept of stories to fit commercial preconceptions.

    2019, Suhaib Gasmelbari

    This documentary, about the effort of Sudanese filmmakers to push back against a longtime government ban on movies and reopen a movie theatre, rescue their own earlier works, and attempt to make films again, should shake the most jaded of viewers back to alert gratitude for the plethora of films available at the touch of a button; nothing proves the awe-inspiring power of images like governments’ readiness to ban them.

  • Max’s Film Début” (1910, Louis J. Gasnier and Max Linder)

  • Little Nemo” (1911, Winsor McCay)

  • A Film Johnnie” (1914, George Nichols)

  • The Masquerader” (1914, Charlie Chaplin)

  • The making of movies was part of the art from its earliest days, as in this quartet of short films. The earliest of them features the reflexivity of the first international film-comedy star, Max Linder, who acts out the start of his movie career (and his hiring by the primordial mogul Charles Pathé, who plays himself) complete with deft physical comedy and startling special effects. The pioneering animator Winsor McCay dramatizes his own creative and technical processes (adding slapstick antics) and shows some of the resulting cartoons (which, regrettably, feature racist caricatures). Just over a month into his movie career, Charlie Chaplin plays a crazed movie fan who, after wreaking havoc in a theatre, sneaks into a studio—Keystone, Chaplin’s real-life employer—and raises hell there, too. A few months later, Chaplin, by then his own director, displays the refinement and the complexity of his Little Tramp character, in a story of a lazy and careless version of himself, behind the scenes in the studio, getting into costume and getting into trouble with his director, his producer, and his colleagues. ♦


    Wednesday, December 28, 2022

    Avatar 3 Release date, Budget, cast, Actors, villain, all you want to know.

    Warning: The Way of Water spoilers follow.


    If Avatar: The Way of Water has taught us anything, it is that people are naturally greedy, whether it be for more Avatar movies, vengeance, or perpetual life. Audiences are hungry for more of that adorable Jake Sully voice-over following the success of James Cameron's blockbuster sequel to his 2009 Best Picture winner. The Way of Water, released thirteen years after the original movie, broadened the universe of the series and generated a lot of ideas for potential sequels thanks to its formulaic narrative. Here is all the information we currently have on Avatar 3.



    It isn't known as Avatar 3

    Potential sequel titles were released by the BBC in 2018. Avatar: The Seed Bearer was the title of the second instalment.Even though it hasn't been formally acknowledged.



    Filming is already (95%) complete.

    Beginning in 2017, Avatar: The Way of Water and its follow-up were simultaneously filmed. Cameron revealed to Variety in 2021 that he had finished shooting all of the motion-capture scenes and had finished working with the young actors. He still needed to film "a little more on some of the adult characters" at the moment in live action. In December of last year, producer Jon Landau stated to Collider that "95% of Avatar 3" and the first act of Avatar 4 have been shot.


    … But it won't happen for another two years.

    The movie will debut on December 20, 2024. Making Pandora requires much post-production time look fantastic.


    So there won't be any more extremely long time leaps.

    not yet, at least. According to Cameron, the third movie will once again centre on Sully, Neytiri, and their children, who owing to concurrent filming won't have completely outgrown their roles. Miles Quaritch would still serve as the antagonist, he added.


    It will be better and drier in Avatar 3

    According to director of photography Russell Carpenter, "the other movie had more underwater work done."


    More of Pandora will be revealed, as well as at least one new Na'vi clan.

    The third movie would introduce the viewer to "cultures different from those I have already presented," including the fire-based Ash tribe, according to Cameron, who recently told the French television programme 20 Minutes.

    Since I've only revealed the Na'vis' positive features thus far, I want to shed light on them from another angle. Very bad human examples coexist with excellent Na'vis ones in the early movies. We'll take the opposite approach with Avatar 3. Along with continuing the story of the core protagonists, we'll also explore new universes.



    More will follow.

         Although Ronal, played by Kate Winslet, only had a small part in the second movie, she didn't just manage to beat Tom Cruise's record for maintaining air underwater: It was for a scene in the third movie that the famous photo of her waving a large cape while wearing a mo-cap outfit was taken.