FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Avatar Rebounds

For most of the six-year period between Disney's 2011 announcement of Pandora: The World of Avatar and the land's opening in 2017, the franchise was associated with massive fan resistance to the concept, lingering questions about whether Avatar deserved a permanent land in the Disney Park, and whether or not the franchise would actually endure at all. Even when Pandora proved critics wrong, it seemed that despite Disney's exclusive, global licensing of the franchise, the Animal Kingdom land would probably be the only Avatar attraction. 

Image: Disney / Lightstorm

That changed when Disney acquired 20th Century Fox altogether in 2019, and was assured when 2022's The Way of Water proved that Avatar would stick around after all. Sure, we might argue that yet again, Avatar has disappeared from pop culture as of the moment its latest film left theaters... a troubling sign given that a franchise's popularity has to persist outside of its big screen releases if you want to create an eternal, intergenerational IP like Star Wars. But bolstered by the second film's astounding box office showing, the news came from on high in 2023: Disneyland Resort would soon become home to an "Avatar experience" of its own.

Let's start out by saying that no one outside of Disney Imagineering and James Cameron's Lightstorm Entertainment knows exactly what Disney's next move is when it comes to Disney Parks and Avatar. Cynics suggested that the carefully-worded "Avatar experience" could be something as simple as an interactive exhibit in Downtown Disney; "Pixie Dusters" speculated it could be as massive as a standalone, boutique Avatar park of intimate animal encounters and rides. Or, of course, it could've also just meant plopping Animal Kingdom's Flight of Passage into Tomorrowland or Hollywood Land.

In Spring 2024, though, the picture became clearer. 

The Land of Avatar

Image: Disney / Lightstorm

Bolstered by shareholders' rejections of an activist investor's pursuit of a seat on Disney's board and Anaheim's anticipated passage of the "DisneylandForward" rezoning effort, Disney CEO Bob Iger began in March 2024 to replace the word "experience" with "land." Then, in April, a piece of "Blue Sky" concept art (above) set the scale. Sure, in the style of Disney's recent, frustrating half-reveals, Disney spokespeople insist this is not an official announcement; just a peek into the kinds of experiences they're considering – subject to change or outright cancellation.

Obviously, there are no concrete details to share. Fans speculate from the art that this version of an Avatar land would contain neither Flight of Passage nor Na'vi River Journey, but a new Avatar E-Ticket... an indoor/outdoor boat ride likely using the ride system (and perhaps layout) of Shanghai Disneyland's one-of-a-kind Pirates of the Caribbean. Then there'd likely be the staples – Avatar shopping, dining, and perhaps "wildlife" encounters, like an Animatronic Banshee meet-and-greet. It's hardly worth wondering if this land could be shoehorned into Disneyland's Tomorrowland, wedged into California Adventure, or built on an expansion plot potentially made real by DisneylandForward, because at this point, nothing may happen at all.

But as a whole, the image is instructive: almost certainly, Disney plans to go big when it comes to their second Avatar land; and notably, to diverge from their "copy and paste" strategy that created two identical Galaxy's Edge lands. Part of that is necessary. Disneyland's two theme parks are far too small to house the massive scale of Animal Kingdom's Pandora, and its neighbors far too hostile to accommodate floating mountains hovering over their backyards. 

If, for a moment, we take this concept art at face value, however, we have to wonder if Disney is making the same mistakes as Galaxy's Edge did all over again... 

Back to Basics

Image: Disney / Lightstorm

If we imagine that the next piece of Pandora brought to life is the one in Disney's concept art, then it appears that Disneyland's version of the land would be heavily influenced by The Way of Water. In fact, the land seems to bring to life the Cove of the Ancestors first seen in that film. A sacred place for the ocean-faring Metkayina tribe of Na'vi first seen in the sequel, the Cove is beautiful – and far more right-sized for Disneyland's small parks that the expansive Valley of Mo'ara at Animal Kingdom.

But it also might lack the flexibility that makes the Valley of Mo'ara work. If, after all, Disneyland's Avatar experience does take the shape of this plucked-from-the-screen Cove, it suggests that you might want to know something about the second film in the series to appreciate it. It could shift the concept of the land from a timeless, choose-your-own-adventure space to a oh yeah, I remember that from the movie space, suggesting we'll follow in the film characters' footprints rather than forging our own.

Image: Disney / Lightstorm

Guided by the park's patron saint, Joe Rohde, Animal Kingdom's Avatar land was severed from the films, ushering us into a new corner of Pandora strengthened and made timeless by the deeply embedded themes of the park. But plopped into Disneyland under the current, IP mandate age of Imagineering, would it be a surprise if the anchoring ride of this new Avatar land connected explicitly to The Way of Water, locking the land into its timeline and requiring knowledge of its characters and plot?  

And like Galaxy's Edge, would that kind of Avatar land look short-sighted when the Avatar franchise's final film releases in theaters? Ten years after? Twenty? Fifty? Without the timelessness inherent in Animal Kingdom's version of the land, will Pandora blend effortlessly into Disneyland's parks, or will it feel like yet another knee-jerk reaction based solely on box office?

Image: Disney / Lightstorm

It might not matter... This is the age of the Disney+ Park mindset, in which the mandate is simple: add hot box office properties to the parks as quickly as possible. Sure, Pandora may not match the timeless, literary bar set by Adventureland, Fantasyland, Frontierland, and Tomorrowland, but like Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge, it's clear that that's not a prerequisite for joining Disneyland anymore. A "plucked from the screen" Avatar land set firmly in the timeline of The Way of Water may be coming... Unless Imagineers work smart and make magic happen again...

What do you think? Without Joe Rohde at the helm, do you think Imagineers will learn the right lessons from Animal Kingdom's version of the land, or will they make the Galaxy's Edge mistakes all over again? And maybe more to the point, does Avatar deserve a permanent land at Disneyland Resort? If so, what form do you hope it takes – a ride? A land? At Disneyland? Or California Adventure? Why?

 
FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Add new comment

About Theme Park Tourist

Theme Park Tourist is one of the web’s leading sources of essential information and entertaining articles about theme parks in Orlando and beyond.

We are one of the world’s largest theme park guide sites, hosting detailed guides to more than 80 theme parks around the globe.

Find Out More About Us...

Plan Your Trip

Our theme park guides contain reviews and ratings of rides, restaurants and hotels at more than 80 theme parks worldwide.

You can even print them.

Start Planning Now...