Cameron's "Avatar: The Way of Water": The scene is grand and exquisite, but it really has fewer children and more trees!
Avatar: The Way of Water is set more than a decade after Avatar 1. Jack and Natilly have three children, adopt Grace's daughter Kiri, and the human orphan "Spider", and the family lives happily.
The story of Avatar: The Way of Water shifts from the struggle between Na'vi and humans in the first part to a personal conflict between Miles and Jack that focuses on family affection.
Avatar: The Way of Water explores and narrates scattered across five or six children, with the eldest son in charge of stability, the younger son in charge of waves, the goddaughter in charge of immortals, and the spider in charge of wandering. Jack and Natiri were in charge of wiping the children's butts. The children in "Avatar: The Way of Water" are all big troublemakers. "Avatar: The Way of Water" proves that you really have to have fewer children and more trees, and in the end, you will not be reduced to fleeing your hometown and needing the protection of the water tribe.
Avatar: The Way of Water" lasted for three hours, just to shoot that line: Children are our weakness and our armor. But it should not be said that "Avatar: The Way of Water" is absolutely top-notch in terms of production standards.