We're finally returning to Pandora in Avatar: The Way of Water to explore what fresh experiences James Cameron has planned for the follow-up. The original Avatar hasn't been in theatres for a time. To be exact, thirteen years.
That's a lot of time to try to recall what happened in the first film and what Na'vi mythology is important for comprehending The Way of Water.
Here is everything you need to know about 2009's Avatar so that we may fly to the theatres to witness The Way of Water before mounting our Ikrans.
The events of Avatar take place in the middle of the 22nd century, when humanity is dealing with a serious energy problem. To discover resources to maintain the lights on our tiny blue world, we start to explore the rest of the cosmos.
The major action of Avatar takes place in 2154, decades after humankind first discovers Pandora, a lush habitable moon in the Alpha Centauri System.
The fauna and plants of Pandora's diverse ecology hold the key to many scientific advancements. The planet's vast subsurface supplies of unobtanium, a miraculous metal necessary for human survival, are the most significant resource.
A unique natural material called unobtanium functions as a superconductor at ambient temperature.
That makes this metallic substance the most expensive substance in the universe because it can be utilised to create strong tools, find a solution to the energy dilemma, and improve human technology by centuries in a relatively short period of time.
Unobtanium is a resource that has a value of $20 million per kilogramme when it is raw and doubles in value when it is refined.
. That explains why businesses pursuing the drug include Resources Development Administration, or RDA.