<p>James Cameron's epic movie, <em>Avatar: The Way of Water</em>', has sailed past $1 billion in global ticket sales in just 14 days, becoming the fastest movie to cross the coveted box office milestone this year, reports <em>Variety</em>.</p>.<p>Only three films released in 2022 managed to surpass the billion-dollar mark. Apart from <em>The Way of Water</em>, the other two are Tom Cruise-starrer <em>Top Gun: Maverick</em> (which took 31 days to clear the benchmark) and the Chris Pratt-led <em>Jurassic World Dominion</em> (which took more than four months to join the club).</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/dh-talkies/avatar-the-way-of-water-review-emphasising-the-meaning-of-cinematic-1172273.html" target="_blank">'Avatar: The Way of Water' review - Emphasising the meaning of 'cinematic'</a></strong></p>.<p>By comparison, according to <em>Variety</em>, nine movies released in 2019 surpassed $1 billion worldwide. <em>The Way of Water</em> is the fastest to hit the mark since 2021's <em>Spider-Man: No Way Home</em>, which took 12 days. Only six movies in history have cleared $1 billion in their first two weeks of release.</p>.<p>James Cameron's long-delayed sequel to the 2009 <em>Avatar</em> -- which remains the top grosser of all time with box office pickings totalling $2.97 billion worldwide -- has so far generated $317.1 million in North America and $712.7 million overseas, bringing its global tally to $1.025 billion.</p>.<p>It has surpassed <em>Jurassic World Dominion</em> as the second highest-grossing movie of the year, and it's the third highest of the pandemic era, adds <em>Variety</em>.</p>.<p><em>The Way of Water</em> is expected to struggle to near the heights scaled by the original <em>Avatar</em> because the global box office hasn't fully rebounded from the pandemic, according to <em>Variety</em>. Moreover, China, a major theatrical market, is experiencing a resurgence of the coronavirus and Russia, another big territory, won't have access to the film as a result of Western sanctions.</p>
<p>James Cameron's epic movie, <em>Avatar: The Way of Water</em>', has sailed past $1 billion in global ticket sales in just 14 days, becoming the fastest movie to cross the coveted box office milestone this year, reports <em>Variety</em>.</p>.<p>Only three films released in 2022 managed to surpass the billion-dollar mark. Apart from <em>The Way of Water</em>, the other two are Tom Cruise-starrer <em>Top Gun: Maverick</em> (which took 31 days to clear the benchmark) and the Chris Pratt-led <em>Jurassic World Dominion</em> (which took more than four months to join the club).</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/dh-talkies/avatar-the-way-of-water-review-emphasising-the-meaning-of-cinematic-1172273.html" target="_blank">'Avatar: The Way of Water' review - Emphasising the meaning of 'cinematic'</a></strong></p>.<p>By comparison, according to <em>Variety</em>, nine movies released in 2019 surpassed $1 billion worldwide. <em>The Way of Water</em> is the fastest to hit the mark since 2021's <em>Spider-Man: No Way Home</em>, which took 12 days. Only six movies in history have cleared $1 billion in their first two weeks of release.</p>.<p>James Cameron's long-delayed sequel to the 2009 <em>Avatar</em> -- which remains the top grosser of all time with box office pickings totalling $2.97 billion worldwide -- has so far generated $317.1 million in North America and $712.7 million overseas, bringing its global tally to $1.025 billion.</p>.<p>It has surpassed <em>Jurassic World Dominion</em> as the second highest-grossing movie of the year, and it's the third highest of the pandemic era, adds <em>Variety</em>.</p>.<p><em>The Way of Water</em> is expected to struggle to near the heights scaled by the original <em>Avatar</em> because the global box office hasn't fully rebounded from the pandemic, according to <em>Variety</em>. Moreover, China, a major theatrical market, is experiencing a resurgence of the coronavirus and Russia, another big territory, won't have access to the film as a result of Western sanctions.</p>