FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

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アバター:ファイヤー・アンド・アッシュ
アバター:ファイヤー・アンド・アッシュ

アバター:ファイヤー・アンド・アッシュ

20253h 18m★ 7.3サイエンスフィクションアドベンチャーファンタジー

あらすじ

舞台は、神秘の星パンドラ──地球滅亡の危機に瀕した人類はこの星への侵略を開始。アバターとして潜入した元海兵隊員のジェイクは、パンドラの先住民ナヴィの女性ネイティリと家族を築き、人類と戦う決意をする。しかし、同じナヴィでありながら、パンドラの支配を目論むアッシュ族のヴァランは、人類と手を組み復讐を果たそうとしていた。パンドラの知られざる真実が明らかになる時、かつてない衝撃の"炎の決戦"が始まる!

作品考察・見どころ

ジェームズ・キャメロンが描くパンドラの深淵は、本作で破壊と再生を象徴する火と灰の領域へ至ります。調和の影に潜むナヴィの残酷な側面や内なる葛藤が、荒々しくも神々しい映像美で綴られます。単なる外敵への抵抗を超え、種族の本質的な業に切り込む鋭いメッセージ性は、観る者の価値観を根底から揺さぶるでしょう。 キャスト陣の極限の熱演は最新技術と溶け合い、魂の震えをダイレクトに伝えます。家族の絆をより厳しく、情熱的に問い直す本作は、映画という枠を超えた圧倒的な没入体験として、私たちの心に消えない火を灯すはずです。

興行成績

製作費: $350,000,000 (525億円)

興行収入: $1,482,195,377 (2223億円)

推定収支: $1,132,195,377 (1698億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

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FindKeyのエディトリアルチームがこの作品の深層や歴史を解説しています。

生命の鼓動に震える!『アバター:ファイヤー・アンド・アッシュ』へと繋がる究極の惑星体験3選

FindKey Editorial2026/2/10

キャスト

サム・ワーシントン
サム・ワーシントン
Jake
ゾーイ・サルダナ
ゾーイ・サルダナ
Neytiri
シガニー・ウィーバー
シガニー・ウィーバー
Kiri
スティーヴン・ラング
スティーヴン・ラング
Quaritch
ウーナ・チャップリン
ウーナ・チャップリン
Varang
Jack Champion
Jack Champion
Spider
ケイト・ウィンスレット
ケイト・ウィンスレット
Ronal
クリフ・カーティス
クリフ・カーティス
Tonowari
ジョエル・デヴィッド・ムーア
ジョエル・デヴィッド・ムーア
Norm
CCH・パウンダー
CCH・パウンダー
Mo'at

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: ジェームズ・キャメロン

脚本: ジェームズ・キャメロン / シェーン・サレルノ / リック・ジャッファ

音楽: サイモン・フラングレン

制作: ジョン・ランドー / ジェームズ・キャメロン / リチャード・バネハム

撮影監督: Russell Carpenter

制作会社: 20th Century Studios / Lightstorm Entertainment / TSG Entertainment

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Manuel São Bento
Manuel São Bento
★ 5

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://movieswetextedabout.com/avatar-fire-and-ash-movie-review-james-cameron-finds-himself-between-technical-brilliance-and-creative-stagnation/ "Avatar: Fire and Ash leaves me with mixed feelings of technical admiration and creative exhaustion. It's a film that lives off its scale, scope, and technical audacity but fails to take the step forward the narrative required to become memorable on its own merit. Cinema cannot just be a technology demonstration; it needs characters whose journeys we feel as our own, themes that are explored in depth, and stories that aren't limited to repeating past successes. There are fascinating ideas here, from Neytiri's grief to Kiri's divine isolation and Varang's antagonistic beliefs, but they're lost under a cynical structure and unjustified plot decisions that make the experience truly frustrating. The lack of clarity about the fate of certain characters and the stagnation of some arcs make me fear that the next movies will follow the same path. James Cameron is an undeniable visionary, but he seems to have forgotten that for a flame to keep burning brightly, it needs new fuel and not just the ashes of yesterday." Rating: C

Khushdave
Khushdave

One of the first things that stood out to me was how feminine this film felt in the best possible way. Almost every major female character holds power, agency, or authority: the Tulkun matriarch, Ronal, Tonowari’s clan through Ronal’s influence, Kiri, General Ardmore, Varang, and especially Neytiri, who finally gets the screen presence she deserved after the first film. Across clans and factions, women clearly hold more power than men, and that thematic choice felt intentional and refreshing. Visually, the film is absolutely staggering. The massive set pieces are some of the most impressive James Cameron has ever delivered. Bridgehead City and the Cove of the Ancestors are jaw-dropping, and for the first time since the original Avatar, I didn’t feel that uncanny disconnect between live-action elements and CGI. In The Way of Water, Spider occasionally felt like he didn’t quite belong in the frame. Here, that problem is gone entirely. The human technology continues to be absurdly cool. The submarines, aircraft, ships, and industrial machinery are all terrifying and fascinating in equal measure. Cameron still knows how to make humanity’s tools of destruction visually seductive. Kiri and Spider’s bond is finally made official, and that storyline is one of the film’s emotional cores. Spider, in particular, benefits enormously from the increased focus. After spending much of The Way of Water sidelined, he steps into the narrative in a big way. The sequence where Kiri gives him the ability to breathe Pandora’s air is genuinely suspenseful, even when you can guess where it’s going. Lo’ak’s arc is one of the biggest improvements from the previous film. I wasn’t a fan of him in The Way of Water, where he often came across as reckless without understanding the consequences of his actions. Here, his growth feels earned and deeply affecting. His suicide attempt was shocking in the moment but makes painful sense in hindsight. Jake handles Neteyam’s death terribly and places much of his grief and blame onto Lo’ak, becoming an emotionally absent and often cruel father. Seeing Jake finally tell Lo’ak that he’s proud of him is one of the most satisfying moments in the film. Varang and the Ash People are genuinely terrifying antagonists. A Mangkwan warrior becoming a suicide bomber to take down a Windtrader ship is one of the film’s most chilling sequences, as is the scene where they sever Na’vi kurus. Varang herself is a standout villain. Her rage is rooted in loss and starvation, in a childhood shaped by destruction and abandonment. She doesn’t believe Eywa will save anyone, and her trauma drives her toward annihilation rather than healing. She’s compelling precisely because she’s so damaged. Quaritch continues to be one of the franchise’s most interesting characters. He evolves from insisting he’s “not that man” into slowly accepting himself as an upgraded continuation of his human self. Jake’s words to him during moments when they’re not actively trying to kill each other clearly get under his skin. His dynamic with Varang brings out the worst in both of them, but it feels more like a relationship of convenience than genuine bonding. Quaritch increasingly feels like a ghost with unfinished business, driven by an imprinted need to destroy Jake Sully even when it no longer serves him. The scene where Jake is captured and put on display by the humans is incredibly effective. The voyeuristic curiosity of the crowd makes it feel suffocating, like you’re trapped in the box with him. Jake’s words to Quaritch in that moment are chilling. Neytiri’s return to center stage is another highlight. Her scene freeing Jake is pure catharsis, reminding us why she remains one of the franchise’s most powerful figures. The film works extremely well as a direct continuation of The Way of Water. There’s no need to pause for heavy exposition, and while that might frustrate some viewers, it reinforces the feeling that this is very much Part Two rather than a standalone chapter. In that sense, Fire and Ash retroactively strengthens The Way of Water, which ended in a somewhat unfinished place. The revelation about Kiri feels inevitable and satisfying. She is a clone of Grace’s avatar, with no father, and appears to be Eywa incarnate or at least its physical manifestation. The choice to give Eywa a face that resembles Kiri reinforces that idea beautifully. That said, the film is not without its flaws. Several major plot beats feel like rehashes of earlier films, particularly the final battle. Humans walk into an ambush, the Na’vi initially gain the upper hand, are overwhelmed by superior firepower, Eywa intervenes through wildlife, and the climax ends with a personal duel between Jake and Quaritch, this time with Spider as the third presence. Kidnappings also remain an overused narrative device. Many side characters suffer due to the film’s ambition. Tsireya, Ronal, Tonowari, Aonung, and Rotxo were essential in The Way of Water, but here they’re largely sidelined. Rotxo’s death, in particular, feels underdeveloped and somewhat cheap. Ronal’s arc is disappointing as well. She’s mostly reduced to being pregnant and eventually dying, despite her strong presence in the previous film. Tonowari is barely given anything to do at all. The Windtraders are another missed opportunity. David Thewlis’s Peylak is barely present, and the group disappears from the story far too quickly. It’s unclear whether Peylak is even alive by the end, and that ambiguity feels unearned. There’s also a recurring issue where entire groups of characters seem to vanish during major battles. Just as the Metkayina disappeared during the climax of The Way of Water, large numbers of Na’vi seemingly evaporate here, despite clearly being alive in the aftermath. Norm and Max fare slightly better than before, but the bar was extremely low. Given the lore revelations around Norm having a Na’vi family, it’s frustrating that this isn’t explored further. The ending feels less complete than The Way of Water’s. Important reactions and consequences are missing, such as Tsireya and Tonowari learning about Ronal’s death, the fate of remaining RDA soldiers, and how Quaritch, Varang, and the Mangkwan escape. While Spider’s acceptance into Na’vi society is emotionally satisfying, it doesn’t fully compensate for the unresolved threads. Looking ahead, there are many compelling questions. What happened to Quaritch and Varang, especially given Varang’s visible fear of Kiri? Is Ardmore alive? Who is “the Chairman” that Selfridge references? Was Garvin recording Jake’s imprisonment, and could that footage be used to expose the RDA back on Earth? Why does Eywa have a face, and why does it look like Kiri? And how long can Quaritch realistically remain the central antagonist as he drifts further from human command? Spider’s future is particularly troubling. Neytiri tries to kill him multiple times across the last two films, and Jake attempts to ritually execute him. His question, “Do you still love me?” is heartbreaking. He desperately wants a family, yet both of his parental figures nearly murder him. His bond with Quaritch only complicates things further, creating emotional whiplash that feels intentional and painful. Overall, I loved Fire and Ash. It’s beautiful, emotionally effective, and ambitious to a fault. It tries to juggle too many characters and storylines, and some inevitably suffer for it. Like the original Avatar, this film would benefit enormously from an extended edition with restored scenes. It barely feels like three hours, which suggests a significant amount was left on the cutting room floor. Fire and Ash works best when viewed as the second half of The Way of Water rather than a standalone film. Together, they form a richer, more coherent narrative about grief, responsibility, and resistance. Even if Avatar 4 and 5 never happen, I hope we at least get extended editions to fully flesh out what’s already here. Despite its flaws and It may not tell a particularly unique story, but it tells it beautifully, and the emotions land exactly where they’re meant to.

Dean
Dean
★ 5

I give it 5/10 because, this 5 stars are for technical side. Movie has amazing effects, especially if you're watching it in 3D. It's visually beautiful, however I'm not giving rest 5 stars because of its narrative and agenda. Movie portraits us - humankind as evil, conquering race and simply bad. Yes, sure, we humans made a lots of mistakes in the past and we're not perfect, but we're not that bad and we do a lot of great and kind things as well, but people in Hollywood (those liberals) want us to hate ourselves, to feel guilty, to say how bad we are. Those people who push this agenda, they're obssessed with self-hatred and humilation. They're the one who want to divide people. We even hear in movie how those tribal aliens are calling us "pink-asses" and how they hate us. I think we all know what's happening here folks, it's a same leftist narrative and their propaganda.

Dave
Dave

The first film is a classic and really made 3D movies a thing again. This one brought back that magic just like the original in that it was another roller coaster adventure. The score was terrific, almost as good as the first one. The vibes are dark, dark, and emotional, but strong character builds made for a fantastic plot line execution. Disney fan service was notably fine-tuned and props for that one. The level of real-world issues is turned up to the max, similar to Cameron’s big ones (Terminator, Aliens, Titanic), but an epic trilogy just like the original Star Wars and Lord of the Rings, so tons of strong biblical and spiritual tones.

goinmental-33
goinmental-33
★ 8

I thought overall is really good movie which I've come to expect from this series it takes you on a roller coaster ride of emotions. the cinematography and the graphics are exceptional and sometimes to leave you breathless and really makes you wonder if another world like that can really exist it kept me locked in even though it was a bit long-winded. I like the roles the daughter and son played making it more than just a basic war film, kind of a coming of age thing and gave it a little different twist that shakes your emotions up at times. Id definitely watch it again and recommend it. overall great movie you need to see it but take time to watch the first two before this one

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