jamail77 said:
I was upset as it is about Korra having such an easy time with the Avatar State. I know energybending also imparts knowledge, but that is no substitute for experience, wisdom, and training. After everything Aang went through, it just seems wrong. Heck, even when I ignore the first series I know what that power is and how it works, so it still seems wrong. No reasonable explanation, flashback, or struggle has been shown yet to justify it and make me like her better as a character. That's the infuriating thing about this show: I like it, but at the same time it's really annoying. It makes me want to stop watching, but at the same time I enjoy it enough to not want to."
I wholeheartedly agree, I too felt that Korra was simply handed everything in the final episode, NONE of which she deserved.
That includes her pulling airbending out of nowhere. It made no conceivable sense how Korra could airbend while filled with anger, desperation and vengeance when the style is supposed to be about inner peace, joy and freedom. Oh and she did that while throwing an utterly generic PUNCH that didn't even remotely look like an airbending move. At all.
Then everything went over the cliff (no pun intended) when Aang simply "handed over" ENERGY BENDING over to Korra, along with the knowledge and full mastery of the Avatar State. Something that is supposed to trigger as a defense mechanism in young avatars and make them go berserk, something which Aang (an extremely wise monk) had so much trouble mastering...and Korra just floats there, calm and collected, having learned fully mastered the Avatar State within seconds. This girl only
just learned how to finally contact previous avatars, and had learned airbending literally 5 minutes before that. And then she proceeds to use energy-bending to give
everyone their bending back.
That is like a big "hey Avatar fans, fuck you" from the creators, I just sat there with my mouth hanging open in disbelief.
Also regarding the fighting choreography, I remember when I watched these clips and found myself squealing like a fangirl because of the sheer awesomeness of bending styles being based on actual martial arts:
Sadly most of that careful attention paid to the martial-art styles / bending choreography seems to be barely there in Korra, only a shade of what it was in AtLA. Bending styles are barely distinguishable.
Korten12 said:
Yuuki said:
Hopefully they don't murder the entire season in the last 10 minutes of the last episode like they did with Book 1.
They did that because they didn't know if Nik was going to give them more seasons. So they wanted to end it in the case that it didn't work out. I don't know why Nik didn't trust them with multiple seasons considering how successful A:TLA was.
Unfortunately that raises more questions than it answers:
1) How many episodes was the first season
supposed to have?
2) Did the writers know about how many episodes they had to work with? Were they even told?
3) Did the writers craft the story around the fact that Season 2 was guaranteed, or not?
4) If they knew they only had 12 episodes to tie things up then why wasn't the story paced accordingly, why did the last episode feel so bizarrely out of place?
It was WAY too obvious that something unplanned had gone wrong with production. That didn't look like a story that was supposed to end on the 12th episode.