>>110226803Why would anyone be excited about that, however?
Make no mistake, there is material for a good trilogy.
(Avatar II: Ten years later, Sully and Neytiri have kids who are really precocious and curious due to their mixed heritage. They discover underground ruins which threaten to break the ancient beliefs of the Na'Vi. Meanwhile, a small fleet of battle ships, actual Navy this time, is on its way to conquer Pandora because "unobtainium" has become a desperately needed resource on the increasingly uninhabitable Earth.
As Earth's forces threaten to destroy everything, Jake jr (a girl) and Tsu'tey (boy) unveil Pandora's ancient but serviceable planetary defense grid, which could wipe out a thousand ships if given the command. The shocked humans request permission to remain as they never made provisions to return, and the shocked Na'Vi learn their ancestors were every bit as wasteful and destructive as the Earthlings... they nearly destroyed themselves, but the survivors rejected technology and returned to nature, and thousands of years later managed to attain a symbiosis with the planet.
Avatar III: Ten years later again, and Earth's government is trading with the Na'Vi who donate vast stores of "unobtainium" from ancient vaults... a faction in Earth's government, however, requests that the Na'Vi show them how they saved their world from the brink, so maybe the same can be done for Earth. Against the wishes of their parents, Tsu'tey and Jake jr travel to Earth, but, in order to survive in Earth's now-toxic atmosphere, require remote-controlled human avatar bodies to perform their desperate quest for any remnant of Mother Earth. )
But Disney will not make a good trilogy.