<p>It's just six weeks since award-winning filmmaker James Camron's blockbuster sequel <em>Avatar: The Way of Water</em> released and it has surpassed $2 billion in global ticket sales.</p>.<p>It's the sixth film in history - and first in pandemic times - to cross the coveted milestone, joining an exclusive club that includes <em>Avatar</em>, <em>Avengers: Endgame</em>, <em>Titanic</em>, <em>Star Wars: The Force Awakens</em>, and <em>Avengers: Infinity War</em>, reports <em>Variety</em>.</p>.<p>Now, Cameron is responsible for three of the six-highest grossing movies of all time. He's also the only director with three films to cross $2 billion. Notably, Zoe Saldana, who plays Neytiri in the <em>Avatar</em> series, has now starred in four of the six films to cross $2 billion.</p>.<p>She also appears in both <em>Avengers: Endgame</em> and <em>Avengers: Infinity War</em>, reprising her <em>Guardians of the Galaxy</em> role of Gamora.</p>.<p>Notably, <em>The Way of Water</em> has officially hit the lofty goal that Cameron set for himself prior to the film's release. Before the sequel opened in theaters, he told <em>GQ </em>that <em>Avatar </em>2 represents "the worst business case in movie history" because it needs to become one of the three or four top-grossing movies of all time just to break even.</p>.<p>But in the coming days, it'll take down the fourth- and fifth-biggest movies, <em>Star Wars: The Force Awakens</em> ($2.07 billion) and <em>Avengers: Infinity War</em> ($2.04 billion), to achieve that feat.</p>.<p>The original <em>Avatar</em>, which debuted in theaters 13 years ago, remains the biggest movie of all time with $2.9 billion.</p>.<p><em>Avengers: Endgame</em> trails closely behind in second place with $2.79 billion, while <em>Titanic</em> stands as the third-highest grossing release ever with $2.19 billion.</p>.<p>So far, <em>The Way of Water</em> has generated $598 million at the domestic box office and $1.4 billion internationally. Overseas, the standout markets are China ($229 million), France ($129 million), Germany ($117 million), Korea ($96 million) and the United Kingdom ($81 million). It's especially impressive that <em>Avatar 2</em> managed to crack $2 billion, a benchmark that's been impossible in Covid times, because not every market is re-connecting with the Na'vi.</p>.<p>The follow-up isn't playing in Russia, where the original grossed $116 million, and it's flopping in Japan with $28 million, a dramatic decrease from the first film's $176 million haul.</p>.<p>The long-delayed sequel to 2009's <em>Avatar</em> opened in December and remained hugely popular in the weeks since its release.</p>
<p>It's just six weeks since award-winning filmmaker James Camron's blockbuster sequel <em>Avatar: The Way of Water</em> released and it has surpassed $2 billion in global ticket sales.</p>.<p>It's the sixth film in history - and first in pandemic times - to cross the coveted milestone, joining an exclusive club that includes <em>Avatar</em>, <em>Avengers: Endgame</em>, <em>Titanic</em>, <em>Star Wars: The Force Awakens</em>, and <em>Avengers: Infinity War</em>, reports <em>Variety</em>.</p>.<p>Now, Cameron is responsible for three of the six-highest grossing movies of all time. He's also the only director with three films to cross $2 billion. Notably, Zoe Saldana, who plays Neytiri in the <em>Avatar</em> series, has now starred in four of the six films to cross $2 billion.</p>.<p>She also appears in both <em>Avengers: Endgame</em> and <em>Avengers: Infinity War</em>, reprising her <em>Guardians of the Galaxy</em> role of Gamora.</p>.<p>Notably, <em>The Way of Water</em> has officially hit the lofty goal that Cameron set for himself prior to the film's release. Before the sequel opened in theaters, he told <em>GQ </em>that <em>Avatar </em>2 represents "the worst business case in movie history" because it needs to become one of the three or four top-grossing movies of all time just to break even.</p>.<p>But in the coming days, it'll take down the fourth- and fifth-biggest movies, <em>Star Wars: The Force Awakens</em> ($2.07 billion) and <em>Avengers: Infinity War</em> ($2.04 billion), to achieve that feat.</p>.<p>The original <em>Avatar</em>, which debuted in theaters 13 years ago, remains the biggest movie of all time with $2.9 billion.</p>.<p><em>Avengers: Endgame</em> trails closely behind in second place with $2.79 billion, while <em>Titanic</em> stands as the third-highest grossing release ever with $2.19 billion.</p>.<p>So far, <em>The Way of Water</em> has generated $598 million at the domestic box office and $1.4 billion internationally. Overseas, the standout markets are China ($229 million), France ($129 million), Germany ($117 million), Korea ($96 million) and the United Kingdom ($81 million). It's especially impressive that <em>Avatar 2</em> managed to crack $2 billion, a benchmark that's been impossible in Covid times, because not every market is re-connecting with the Na'vi.</p>.<p>The follow-up isn't playing in Russia, where the original grossed $116 million, and it's flopping in Japan with $28 million, a dramatic decrease from the first film's $176 million haul.</p>.<p>The long-delayed sequel to 2009's <em>Avatar</em> opened in December and remained hugely popular in the weeks since its release.</p>