A full version of The Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender leaked online by a fan, seemingly not intrested by Paramount‘s decision not to release the film in theaters and opting for a streaming release, A user on X shared clips of the unreleased film on the microblogging platform, claiming that someone from within Nickelodeon “accidentally emailed” it. The user would also threaten to post the entire movie if Paramount didn’t release a trailer for the animated film.
The posts were hit with copyright notices, but the film has already gone viral, with other users sharing it.
The studio had no comment due to the ongoing investigation into the leak, but sources familiar with the situation ruled out the possibility that it originated from a vulnerability in Paramount’s systems.
The Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender was originally slated to premiere in theaters on October 10, 2025, but it was later pushed back to January 30, 2026. In December 2025, Deadline reported that the film, greenlit by the previous Paramount Animation administration, would not get a theatrical release after all. Instead, the film would stream on Paramount+ on October 9, 2026.
Following the leak, animator Julia Schoel, who worked on the film, took to X to express her thoughts, saying, “We worked on the aang movie for years with the expectation that’d we’d get to celebrate all of our hard work in theaters, just to see people unceremoniously leak the film and pass our shots around on twitter like money"
Paramount is investigating the online leak of its upcoming film “The Legend Of Aang: The Last Airbender,” but the company has determined that it did not come from within the studio, according to sources familiar with the situation.

Paramount declined to comment on the leak. “The Legend of Aang” is based on the Nickelodeon series “Avatar: The Last Airbender.” It was animated by Flying Bark Productions, based in Australia.
The X account that originally posted clips from the film on Saturday — “ImStillDissin” — claimed the leak came from someone at Paramount Global subsidiary Nickelodeon who “accidentally emailed me the entire Avatar Aang movie.” But a source familiar with the situation said that the initial investigation determined that the vulnerability had nothing to do with Paramount’s systems.
After the full movie leaked, animators had the chance to release their work as intended. Others feel the leak is justified in light of Paramount’s marketing blunders.
The online leak of a full version of Avatar: Aang, The Last Airbender—a highly anticipated animated film in a multimedia fantasy franchise—has divided passionate fans while upsetting those who spent years working on the film.
The leaks began on X, about six months before Aang was scheduled to premiere on Paramount+. User @ImStillDissin posted two short clips from the film. “Nickelodeon accidentally emailed me the entire Avatar aang movie,” he claimed. He also threatened to stream the entire movie if Paramount didn’t release an official trailer, and he posted a still from the movie’s end credits, revealing previously undisclosed voice-over cast and roles. The media from @ImStillDissin’s posts were later hit with copyright strikes and removed.
But within 48 hours, links to download the full movie appeared on 4chan and X, where some users also directly streamed the film. Across the web, fans said they had successfully pirated and watched what appeared to be a nearly finished animated film.
While some argued that Paramount deserved to be greedy because of certain creative and marketing decisions around the movie, others noted what disastrous the leak was to the animators and production crew. A number of those team members took to social media to discuss what happened
No comments:
Post a Comment