Jon Landau struggled to get studios interested in Avatar.
The 62-year-old producer is known for his partnership with director James Cameron on the 1997 Oscar-winning blockbuster Titanic but revealed that when the pair were trying to get the 3D epic science fiction franchise Avatar off the ground less than a decade later, it was tricky to sell the idea to Hollywood studios while the technology was not there.
He told HeyUGuys: "So Jim wrote Avatar before we ever started filming Titanic but we knew the technology did not exist to tell the story the way we wanted to tell the story. So we put it on the back burner and put it on the back burner until 2005 when we looked at the landscape of
technology and said 'We could be the impetus to push it to the next level where we could finally make this movie'. And it wasn't about the 3D, it was about the characters, it was about the world and putting them up there where they could be emotive and engaging."
Jon went on to explain that the pair eventually secured a development deal with 20th Century Fox for the movie - which went on to become overtake Titanic as the highest-grossing film of all time whilst its two sequels claimed became the second and third highest-grossing respectively - but admitted that even being presented with a prototype, the studios were still hesitant to greenlight the project.
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He added: "And we went up to the studio at Fox at the time and we asked them to support us for a year, which they said yes to. We did a prototype test, that was very crude and we thought that was our floor, not our ceiling. We presented them with a whole package in 2006 but they weren't sure people would go see a movie with blue people had tails.
After a series of circumstances, we were finally able to make the movie but it was not easy even after coming off of Titanic.