After more than two decades immersed in the expansive world of Avatar, James Cameron is preparing to turn his attention to a story rooted in reality and history. His next non-Avatar project will be Ghosts of Hiroshima, an adaptation of Charles Pellegrino’s book of the same name, which explores the real-life story of Tsutomu Yamaguchi, the only officially recognised survivor of both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings. The news follows confirmation that actor Martin Sheen will narrate the audiobook version, suggesting momentum is building behind the long-developing film.
Cameron has held the rights to Pellegrino’s work for some time, and has spoken candidly about his meeting with Yamaguchi just days before the latter's death. "He was handing the baton of his personal story to us, so I have to do it. I can’t turn away from it," the director told Deadline. The film is set to blend survivor testimony with emerging insights from forensic archaeology, aiming for what Cameron calls a "bold, uncompromising theatrical film."
Set against the 80th anniversary of the 1945 bombings, Ghosts of Hiroshima will mark Cameron’s first non-Avatar feature since Titanic in 1997. That’s a long interlude, but not an idle one — Cameron has remained deeply embedded in post-production on his Avatar sequels, with work now underway through Avatar 7.

Still, for all the technical innovation and box office heights of Pandora, Ghosts of Hiroshima appears to be something different: a return to intimate storytelling, shaped by history, memory, and the weight of a promise made.