lord canti said:
They probably would have done a much better job at explaining this if they had 4 seasons right from the start or at least a full season. See I think the weakest link about Korra is that it doesn't have any where the amount of time that TLAB had to tell a story and develop it's characters. I definitely understand why people dislike Korra and I was on their side during the awful first half of season 2. Hopefully season 3 will continue on this really nice path they're on because the first 3 episodes made me feel like I was watching the old avatar again.
Sorry, not buying it. If someone can write a hero's journey to fill a 90m movie, you can sure as hell do it in 264ms (and that's excluding commercials).
Just because they didn't have the same amount of time as the original doesn't excuse the squandering of the time they *did* have. In fact, that would have been all the more reason to tell a tight, focused story with a carefully plotted arc of self-discovery.
Again, my problem with Korra is that she never changed from E1 to E14. Things happened *to* her, but she never had to make any decisions about her destiny.
When Amon was proven to be a sham, the whole idea of 'equalists' seemed to be thrown out the window, without any examination as to what was grieving the thousands of equalists in the first place.
When Amon was revealed to be a threat, Korra continued pro bending rather than do her job, and that never seems to be acknowledged as a gross act of negligence. At no point does Korra (or anyone close to Korra) say "You allowed this threat to build while you were off playing Pro Bending".
When Korra lost her bending, she magically was able to air bend from then on without learning anything...then was able to bend again AND reach the avatar state in the span of 10 minutes (again, without learning anything).
I struggle to think of any serious plot problem Korra was able to solve because she made a decision to solve it, and I can't be convinced that 264 minutes is not enough time to convey that.