Avatar creator James Cameron faces legal battle as indigenous actress sues director over likeness to character
Q'orianka Kilcher has launched legal action against filmmaker James Cameron and The Walt Disney Company, claiming the director used her facial features from a photograph taken when she was just 14 years old as inspiration for the character Neytiri in the Avatar franchise.
The lawsuit, filed in the US District Court for the Central District of California on Tuesday, alleges Ms Kilcher never permitted her likeness to be used in the films or in related merchandise and promotional material.
Ms Kilcher, a Native Peruvian actress and activist, claims Mr Cameron’s production team used elements of her biometric identity to help shape the iconic character without credit or compensation.
The Avatar franchise has generated more than $6 billion (£4.43 billion) across its three instalments, with the original 2009 film remaining the highest-grossing movie of all time.

According to the filing, the director came across a photograph of Ms Kilcher in the Los Angeles Times while she was promoting her role as Pocahontas in The New World.
The complaint alleges the director was then struggling with the appearance of the Na’vi characters, particularly Neytiri, who allegedly appeared “too alien” to connect emotionally with audiences.
After seeing the teenage actress’s image, the director allegedly instructed his design team to use her facial structure as the basis for the character’s appearance.
The lawsuit describes the alleged process as “a literal transplant of a real teenager's facial structure into a blockbuster movie character”, claiming Ms Kilcher’s lips, chin, jawline, and mouth shape were preserved in Neytiri’s final design.

Her likeness was allegedly captured in production sketches, sculpted into maquettes, and laser-scanned into digital models before being distributed to visual effects teams.
Sources say Ms Kilcher first became aware of Mr Cameron’s interest in her appearance following a chance encounter at a charity event in 2010, months after Avatar’s release.
The director allegedly invited her to visit his office, where staff presented her with a framed sketch of Neytiri drawn and signed by Mr Cameron himself.
Accompanying the artwork was a handwritten note which read: “Your beauty was my early inspiration for Neytiri. Too bad you were shooting another movie. Next time.”
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At the time, Ms Kilcher said she interpreted the gesture as loosely connected to casting discussions and her activism work.
However, the full extent of the alleged use of her likeness only emerged late last year when footage of a broadcast interview with Mr Cameron resurfaced online, in which he explicitly identified Ms Kilcher as an inspiration for the character’s design.
In the clip, Mr Cameron can supposedly be heard saying: “The actual source for this was a photo in the LA Times, a young actress named Q'orianka Kilcher.
"This is actually her...her lower face. She had a very interesting face.”
Ms Kilcher said: “It is deeply disturbing to learn that my face, as a 14-year-old girl, was taken and used without my knowledge or consent to help create a commercial asset that has generated enormous value for Disney and Cameron.”
Her lead counsel, Arnold P Peter, added: “What Cameron did was not inspiration, it was extraction... That is not filmmaking. That is theft.”
The actress is seeking compensatory and punitive damages, disgorgement of profits linked to her likeness, injunctive relief, and corrective public disclosure.
GB News has reached out to representatives for Mr Cameron and Disney for comment.
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