Disney+ will finally become the streaming home of one of the biggest space operas of all time this week. Sci-fi movies have been doing well in recent years, with some genre franchises, like Denis Villeneuve’s Dune movies, managing to excel in terms of quality and also find box office success. There are many worthy subgenres within sci-fi, and most have produced hits.
Looking at the best sci-fi movie franchises of all time, you have space operas like the Star Wars films, hard sci-fi movies like Matt Damon’s The Martian, cyberpunk projects like Harrison Ford’s Blade Runner, time travel epics like the Back to the Future trilogy, and many more. Disney+’s movie roster is filled with sci-fi movies for fans of the genre to get lost in.
The streaming service has also put a lot of effort into creating exciting sci-fi series, with one of them even going on to change formats and become one of 2026’s theatrical sci-fi movies. Of course, I’m talking about Pedro Pascal’s The Mandalorian series becoming the new Star Wars movie, The Mandalorian and Grogu. That said, it is another franchise’s latest space opera that arrives on Disney+ this week.
Avatar: Fire And Ash is officially being released on Disney+ this week. The space opera is the third and latest release in visionary director James Cameron’s record-breaking Avatar franchise. While its box office was a step-down from the other two Avatar movies, Fire and Ash was still a major hit, and its Disney+ arrival should make it a streaming sensation.
Avatar: Fire And Ash Releases On Disney+ This Week
Avatar: Fire and Ash was released in theaters on December 19, 2025. After the sci-fi movie’s successful theatrical run, its first at-home date was March 31, 2026, which marked the third Avatar movie’s digital release. Now, six months after it debuted in theaters and three months after its PVOD release, Avatar: Fire and Ash will be released on Disney+ on Wednesday, June 24. Avatar: Fire and Ash had a reported budget of $400 million, a hefty price tag for any other franchise. However, Cameron’s first two Avatar movies broke the $2 billion barrier, with 2009’s Avatar still standing as the highest-grossing movie of all time.
While it did not reach the same financial heights as the sci-fi franchise’s first two movies, Avatar: Fire and Ash easily cleared the $800 million to $1 billion range it needed to break even. The 2025 space opera finished its theatrical run with a strong $1.49 billion. At the time of writing, Avatar 4 is currently scheduled to be released in theaters on December 21, 2029. Avatar: Fire and Ash‘s ending perfectly sets up multiple plot threads to be followed up in the next chapter of the sci-fi franchise, and there are many reasons why Disney+ subscribers should watch it.
Why Avatar: Fire And Ash Is Worth Watching On Disney+
While Avatar: Fire and Ash only has a decent 66% critics’ score on Rotten Tomatoes, Cameron’s latest space opera boasts a near-perfect 90% audience score based on over 10,000 ratings. That is an impressive feat, with the overwhelmingly positive reception from moviegoers and the Avatar movie’s huge box office showcasing how the space opera is one that Disney+ subscribers should end up enjoying. Avatar: Fire and Ash introduces the ruthless Mangkwan clan, who live in a desert biome and are led by the ruthless Varang. The character is easily the franchise’s second-best antagonist, only losing to Stephen Lang’s Miles Quaritch.
Both villains get a lot of time onscreen together in Avatar: Fire and Ash, and their chemistry is one of the space opera’s best parts. I also believe that the third Avatar movie offers fans the best performance yet from Sam Worthington as Jake Sully, with the actor bringing a nuanced version of the character to life as Jake deals with grief, honor, leadership, and more. His journey is thought-provoking in the best ways. With plenty of action, emotional moments, cutting-edge CGI, and more, Avatar: Fire and Ash is worth watching on Disney+.
- Release Date
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December 19, 2025
- Runtime
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197 Minutes
- Writers
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Amanda Silver, Rick Jaffa, James Cameron, Josh Friedman, Shane Salerno