New Scientist recommends Avatar: Fire and Ash – especially the whale


Oona Chaplin as Varang in Avatar: Fire and Ash

2025 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

Bethan Ackerley
Subeditor, London

Nobody makes blockbusters like James Cameron. Avatar: Fire and Ash, his third film set on the verdant moon Pandora, is bombastic and beautiful. And from interspecies war to family feuds, there’s also an awful lot going on.

Some 15 years after ex-Marine Jake Sully was adopted by the Indigenous Na’vi, after helping to drive back the human military and fusing with a Na’vi body, he has made a life on Pandora with his partner Neytiri and their children.

But now they are grieving the loss of their eldest son, Neteyam. And their old enemy, Colonel Quaritch, has joined forces with a powerful volcano-dwelling clan of Na’vi, led by Varang (pictured above).

Shakespeare this isn’t (the dialogue is crass, to put it politely), but there is no denying the draw of this meticulously crafted world.

Come for the visuals, stay for Payakan, a member of an intelligent whale-like species called the tulkun and the real heart of the film.

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