Sam Worthington Drops Big Update on Avatar 4 and 5 Filming
Cameras have already rolled on Pandora: Sam Worthington says scenes for Avatar 4 and 5 are in the can, fueling fresh hype for the franchise’s next chapters.
Sam Worthington just gave a small-but-meaningful status check on Avatar 4 and 5, and yes, there is actual footage in the can. It is not a full shoot, but it is more than nothing, and the reasoning is one of those practical, behind-the-scenes wrinkles that only pops up with a sprawling franchise like this.
What Sam actually said
- He told Collider, while out promoting Avatar: Fire and Ash, that production on the sequels overlapped a lot and that some material for Avatar 4 and 5 has already been filmed.
- Some of that footage involved the kids, because Avatar 4 jumps forward in time. Translation: they banked certain scenes early to lock in the younger cast before they aged out. Smart.
- On James Cameron pushing ahead: Worthington said Cameron is waiting to see how this new release lands before fully committing to 4 and 5. He framed that as practical, not cold feet.
- He also said Cameron is still writing and tinkering, and when he is ready to move, he will call the cast. Right now, the focus is the movie in front of him.
Cameron is cautious, not indecisive
Worthington pushed back on the idea that Cameron is wavering. He called it a reasonable approach: tell the story, see if it connects, then keep going if the audience is there. That is not hedging so much as following the response in real time.
"James is not an arrogant man. He tells the story. If it connects, and we are lucky to continue the saga, I think that is what he is trying to get at."
Why shoot pieces of 4 and 5 now?
Because of that time jump in Avatar 4, they grabbed certain scenes with the younger performers during earlier phases of production. It is a logistical play you only notice if you are paying close attention to how these long-haul franchises are built. The rest? Cameron will keep refining, and when he is ready to roll, the cast will get the call. In other words: progress is real, momentum depends on the next release, and the big machine keeps quietly humming in the background.