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Avatar The Way of Water reviews range from one to five stars as critics disagree over sequel

The Sully family have to adjust to the ways of the Metkayina clan in Avatar: The Way of Water. (20th Century Studios)
Avatar: The Way of Water has been likened to being "waterboarded with turquoise cement".(20th Century Studios)

Avatar: The Way of Water has divided film critics, with some awarding James Cameron's sequel just one star, while others gave it five.

The next installment of the sci fi adventure set on the mysterious planet of Pandora - starring Zoe Saldana, Kate Winslet, Sigourney Weaver and Sam Worthington - has been branded superficial and cliche by some, while others were mesmerised by the spectacular visual effects.

The Telegraph's Robbie Collin gave the film one out of five stars and aid watching the film "feels like being waterboarded with turquoise cement".

Read more: Hollywood star regrets turning down Avatar

He branded the dialogue corny, the plot meaningless "franchise-elongation", dismissed the celebration of nature by using computer generated imagery and said the length of the film would test audience's patience.

Watch: Stephen Lang discusses debating with James Cameron over Quaritch

In contrast Nick De Semlyen of Empire magazine awarded the film five stars, celebrating it as "eccentric, soulful, joyous, dark and very, very blue."

He said the movie reminded viewers of what cinema is capable of and called director Cameron "master and commander of making your jaw drop."

But even he admitted that at over three hours the film may be too long, dubbing it "The Way Of Wishing You Hadn’t Drunk That Water."

Sigourney Weaver returns to the Avatar franchise to portray the teenage Na'vi character Kiri in The Way of Water. (20th Century Studios)
Sigourney Weaver returns to the Avatar franchise to portray the teenage Na'vi character Kiri in The Way of Water. (20th Century Studios)

The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw gave Avatar 2 two stars and his harsh comments included calling it "soggy", "a trillion-dollar screensaver" and he complained the plot was "floating bland" and the images uninteresting and cliche.

Read more: Avatar: The Way of Water: Online reviews hail 'incredible' cinematic masterpiece

Others took issue with the running time.

The Times' Kevin Maher offered a two star review and also took issue with the its length. He said: "Pandora is a mildly diverting place to visit for a couple of hours, probably 90 minutes at best. There is nothing here that warrants a near three-and-a-quarter-hour trip. By the end, it’s aggressively uninteresting."

Zoe Saldana and Sam Worthington have reunited with director James Cameron (left) for sequel Avatar: The Way of Water. (Getty/Disney)
Zoe Saldana and Sam Worthington have reunited with director James Cameron (left) for sequel Avatar: The Way of Water. (Getty/Disney)

The Daily Mail's Brian Viner gave the film four stars but said: "This sequel is tremendous fun, even bigger and better than the original, but by golly it will test your bladder."

Danny Leigh of the Financial Times quipped: "At over three hours, you will have time to quietly mull geopolitics, as well as holiday plans, meeting schedules and recipe ideas."

The Evening Standard's Charlotte O'Sullivan was positive overall, awarding it four stars, but admitted: "Plot-wise, this movie is treading water. But that's fine, because the water's lovely."

The Independent's Clarisse Loughrey gave the film three stars and said visual effects were so clear "that it’s the humans here who look fake", but she also found "there’s little heart to its story."

Avatar: The Way of Water features plenty of eye-catching underwater sequences. (20th Century Studios)
Avatar: The Way of Water features plenty of eye-catching underwater sequences. (20th Century Studios)

Ian Sandwell from Digital Spy agreed the film is a "visual masterpiece that's often beautiful to behold, but one that doesn't always have the substance to go with its considerable style".

Owen Gleiberman of Variety called the film eye-popping and exhilarating, but concluded: "I’m sorry, but as I watched The Way of Water the only part of me that was moved was my eyeballs."

Metro's Larushka Ivan-Zadeh gave the film three stars and called it "a superior version of those show-reel display loops they use in shops like Currys to show off how good the tellies are."

IndieWire's David Ehrlich graded the film A- and called it "rapturous and awe-inducing".

And The Hollywood Reporter's David Rooney hailed the film as "hugely entertaining" and "superb", saying it "successfully marries technology with imagination" even better than the first film and praising "Cameron's "sincerity of belief in this fantastical world that makes it memorable".

Director James Cameron behind the scenes of 20th Century Studios' AVATAR 2. Photo by Mark Fellman. © 2022 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
Director James Cameron behind the scenes of Avatar The Way Of Water. (20th Century Studios)

Director Cameron, 68, first introduced audiences to the planet of Pandora in the original Avatar film 13 years ago and promised to explore different parts of his fantasy world in each subsequent sequel.

Read more: Avatar: The Way of Water: Cast, plot, run time, trailer, release date, and more

Avatar 3 has already been filmed and is due for release in 2024.

Avatar: Way of the Water is released in cinemas and IMAX on 16 December.