
Actress sues Avatar director for 'theft' of facial features
Actress sues Avatar director for 'theft' of facial features13 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GooglePaul GlynnCulture reporterGetty ImagesThe New World actress and activist Q'orianka Kilcher is seeking...
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Key developments are emerging from the global stage. Actress sues Avatar director for 'theft' of facial features13 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GooglePaul GlynnCulture reporterGetty ImagesThe New World actress and activist Q'orianka Kilcher is seeking compensationFilm-maker James Cameron and Disney are being sued by an actress who has accused the director of using her likeness as the basis for one of the lead characters in his hit film series Avatar. German-born US actress Q'orianka Kilcher, who is of indigenous Peruvian descent, alleged that in 2005 - when she was 14 - Cameron "extracted her facial features" from a photograph of her portraying Pocahontas in another film, The New World. In court documents filed on Tuesday in California, her team claimed Cameron "directed his design team to use it as the foundation for the character of Neytiri", depicted on screen by Zoe Saldaña.
News has contacted Cameron and Disney for a comment. Disney/PAAn image from the film poster of Avatar: The Way of the Water, showing the character Neytiri (left)The Avatar movies contain a hybrid of live-action performance mixed with computer-generated characters. The 2009 original remains the highest-grossing film of all time with global box office takings of almost $3bn (£2.
The Details
Now, actress and activist Kilcher has claimed Cameron "extracted, replicated, and commercially deployed her facial likeness" for Neytiri's design, accusing him and Disney of violating her publicity rights. She is seeking compensation, damages and a share of profits. "This case exposes how one of Hollywood's most powerful filmmakers exploited a young Indigenous girl's biometric identity and cultural heritage to create a record-breaking film franchise - without credit or compensation to her - through a series of deliberate, non-expressive commercial acts," the legal claim said.
The image taken from her face went on to appear in the films and on posters and merchandise without her knowledge or consent, it added. Avatar is set in the 22nd Century on the moon Pandora, and follows humans using genetically engineered Na'vi bodies (avatars) to explore the planet. It centres around Jake Sully's journey as he falls in love with local Na'vi native Neytiri, and defends her home from human mining.
EPA/ShutterstockJames Cameron directed the Avatar film series as well as the recent Billie Eilish live in 3D tour film, Hit Me Hard and SoftKilcher's team argued that the "lucrative" film franchise "presented itself as sympathetic to Indigenous struggles, all while silently exploiting a real Indigenous youth behind the scenes". The document said she had no knowledge of the use of her face until she met Cameron at an event in 2010, when he allegedly told her he had a gift for her - a framed signed sketch of Neytiri. His picture, it is claimed, included the handwritten note: "Your beauty was my early inspiration for Neytiri.
Too bad you were shooting another movie.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





