Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
BANG Premier
BANG Premier

James Cameron permanently moved from USA to New Zealand for 'sanity'

James Cameron and his wife Suzy Amis Cameron

James Cameron permanently moved his family to New Zealand because it handled the COVID-19 pandemic better than the USA.

The 71-year-old esteemed film director "fell in love" with the island country and its people when he first visited in 1994, and he bought a farm there in 2011 so he could spend a big chunk of time "going back and forth" from Southern California.

In an interview on In Depth with Graham Bensinger, James - who has been married to ex-actress-and-model Suzy Amis Cameron, 64, since 2000 - said: "I made myself a promise. 'I'm going to come live here someday.'

"When Suzy and I were first getting serious, she said, 'Fine, no problem.' She was game."

James - who has three daughters, Claire, 23, Quinn, 21, and 18 year old Elizabeth - said he and Suzy eyed properties while they lived in the USA, but they decided to pack up and leave "as a family" during the pandemic in August 2020, whilst he was still working on 2022's Avatar: The Way of Water.

He said: "Now, later, we have children, we have a family, we've got roots in Malibu and Santa Barbara, that conversation had to be amended slightly, but we did say after Avatar, let's make this happen."

James - who has also directed blockbusters, including 1997's Titanic, and 1986's Aliens - said "New Zealand had eliminated the virus completely twice" before a "third time when it showed up in a mutated form, it broke through".

He continued: "But fortunately, they already had a 98 per cent vaccination rate. This is why I love New Zealand. People there are, for the most part, sane as opposed to the United States, where you had a 62 per cent vaccination rate, and that's going down – going the wrong direction."

The Terminator director then asked: "Where would you rather live?

"A place that actually believes in science and is sane, and where people can work together cohesively to a common goal?

"Or a place where everybody's at each other's throats, extremely polarised, turning its back on science and basically would be in utter disarray if another pandemic appears."

During the chat, journalist Graham, 39, hailed the USA as "a fantastic place to live", to which James interjected: "Is it?"

At another point in the discussion, Graham noted New Zealand's stunning natural beauty, but James added: "I'm not there for scenery, I'm there for the sanity."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.