Avatar: The Last
Airbender is an American animated television series that aired for three
seasons on Nickelodeon from 2005 to 2008. The series was created and produced
by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, who served as executive
producers along with Aaron Ehasz. Avatar is set in an Asian-influenced world
wherein some are able to manipulate the classical elements by use of
psychokinetic variants of Chinese martial arts known as "bending."
The show combined the styles of anime and American cartoons, and relied for
imagery upon various East-Asian, Inuit, and South-American societies, with a
brief reference to the Indic.
The series follows
the adventures of protagonist Aang and his friends, who must save the world
from the evil Fire Lord by ending his war against the neighbor nations The
pilot episode first aired on February 21, 2005and the series concluded with a
widely praised two-hour episode on July 19, 2008The show is obtainable from
various sources, including DVD, the iTunes Store, the Zune Marketplace, the
Xbox Live Marketplace, the PlayStation Store, Netflix Instant Play, and the
Nicktoons Network.
Avatar: The Last
Airbender was popular with both audiences and critics, garnering 5.6 million
viewers on its best-rated showing and receiving high ratings in the Nicktoons
lineup, even outside its 6–11-year-old demographic. Avatar: The Last Airbender
has been nominated for and won awards from the Annual Annie Awards, the Genesis
Awards, the primetime Emmy awards and a Peabody Award among others. The first
season's success prompted Nickelodeon to order secondand thirdseasons. In other
media, the series has spawned a live-action film, titled The Last Airbender,
directed by M. Night Shyamalan, scaled action figures, a trading card game,
three video games based on the first, second and third seasons, stuffed animals
distributed by Paramount Parks, and two LEGO sets. An art book was also
released in mid-2010. Furthermore, the president of Nickelodeon announced on
July 21, 2010 that a sequel called The Legend of Korra will premiere on April
14, 2012.
Avatar: The Last
Airbender takes place in a world home to humans, fantastic animals, and
spirits. Human civilization is divided into four nations: the Water Tribe, the
Earth Kingdom, the Fire Nation, and the Air Nomads. Each nation has a distinct
society, wherein people known as Benders have the ability to manipulate the
eponymous element of their nation using the physical motions of martial arts.
The show's creators based each Bending style on an existing martial art,
leading to clear visual and physical differences in the techniques used by
waterbenders (T'ai chi ch'uan), Earthbenders (Hung Ga kung fu, for the most
part), Firebenders (Northern Shaolin kung fu) and Airbenders (Baguazhang).
At any given time,
there is only one person alive in the story's world capable of 'bending' all
four elements: the show's eponymous Avatar, the spirit of the planet in human form.
When an Avatar dies, this spirit is reincarnated into the next nation in the
Avatar Cycle, in the order of the seasons, and must master each bending art in
seasonal order, starting with their native element. Additionally, the Avatar
possesses an ability called the Avatar State, which briefly endows it with the
knowledge and abilities of all past Avatars as a self-triggering defense
mechanism, which can be made subject to the will of the user by extensive trial
and training.[21] If an Avatar is killed in the Avatar State, the reincarnation
cycle is broken, and the Avatar entity will cease to exist. Through the ages,
the succeeding Avatars have served to keep the four nations in harmony, and
maintain world order. The Avatar serves as the bridge between the physical
world and the spirit world, allowing each to solve problems that normal benders
cannot.
Backstory
The events one
hundred years before the beginning of the show are revealed gradually and out
of order throughout the series.
More than a century
before the beginning of the series, the ruler of the Fire Nation, Fire Lord
Sozin, hatched plans for world subjugation. Knowing that Avatar Roku, a fellow
Firebender and Sozin's best friend, would oppose these plans, Sozin waited for Roku's
death, and the Avatar was reincarnated as an Airbender named Aang. Aang was
initiated into the truth of his status years too early, the needs of the
ongoing world war outweighing that of his childhood, despite the protests of
his mentor Monk Gyatso. Aang, fearful of his new responsibilities, and of
separation from his Monk Gyatso, fled his home on his flying bison Appa; they
were subsequently forced by a storm into the ocean, and Aang's protective
Avatar State encased them in an iceberg, in suspended animation. Fire Lord
Sozin then carried out a genocide of the Air Nomads; the entire people were
wiped out, leaving Aang as the eponymous last Airbender.
The war continued
for a hundred years. Sozin passed away of natural causes, and was succeeded by
first Azulon and then Azulon's second son Ozai, the ruling Fire Lord at the
time of the series.
Season One (Book
One: Water)
Main article:
Avatar: The Last Airbender (season 1)
Katara, a
fourteen-year-old Waterbender girl, and her brother the fifteen-year-old Sokka,
find Aang and Appa in the iceberg. After Aang is revealed to be the Avatar, the
three travel to the Northern Water Tribe from whom Aang and Katara can learn
Waterbending. En route Aang and friends visit the Southern Air Temple, where
Aang discovers the genocide of his people and encounters the spirit of his
predecessor Avatar Roku. Throughout their journey, the trio are pursued by
Prince Zuko, the exiled son of Fire Lord Ozai, who seeks to reclaim his honor
by capturing the Avatar. Zuko travels with his uncle Iroh, a legendary Fire
Nation general and the older brother of Ozai. Competing with Zuko for the
Avatar is Admiral Zhao, who leads an attack on the Northern Water Tribe. Zhao's
rather megalomaniacal attack plans, which include slaying the physical incarnation
of the Moon Spirit and wreaking havoc on the entire world, are stopped by Aang
and his friends, with assistance from Iroh and Zuko. As such, the Fire Lord
orders his daughter Azula to capture Zuko and Iroh, who are now considered
traitors to the Fire Nation.
Season Two (Book
Two: Earth)
After leaving the
Northern Water Tribe, Aang masters Waterbending under Katara's tutelage.
Searching for an Earthbending teacher, the group meets Toph Bei Fong, a blind
Earthbending prodigy, and recruit her as such. Zuko and Iroh, now fugitives
from the Fire Nation, attempt to lead new lives in the Earth Kingdom, where
Zuko, with the help of his uncle, tries to let go of his troubled past and his
obsession with capturing the Avatar. Aang and his friends discover that an
upcoming solar eclipse will deprive Firebenders of their eponymous ability,
leaving them open to invasion and giving Aang his chance to defeat the Fire
Lord; but in learning this Aang's Sky Bison is lost to a group of Sandbenders.
Azula and her two friends Mai and Ty Lee pursue the protagonists, who struggle
to reach Ba Sing Se, the Earth Kingdom's capital, and tell the Earth King of
the eclipse. Disguised as the Kyoshi Island Warriors (disciples of a previous
Avatar), Azula persuades Ba Sing Se's secret police, the Dai Li, to instigate a
revolution, allowing the Fire Nation to capture Ba Sing Se. Both Zuko and
Katara are captured during the coup, and though Katara offers him redemption,
Zuko sides with his sister. Aang attempts to activate the Avatar State, an act
he had formerly avoided because it requires him to abandon his love for Katara,
but Azula hits him with lightning as he powers up, killing him. Iroh, furious
and disappointed in Zuko's choices, intercedes, allowing Katara to escape with
Aang; she is able to revive him, but he can no longer re-enter the Avatar
State, depriving him of one of his strongest weapons just as Ba Sing Se, the
strongest bulwark against Fire Nation conquest, has fallen.
Season Three (Book
Three: Fire)
Aang recovers to
find his allies disguised as Fire Nation soldiers on a Fire Nation ship, while
Zuko has been restored to the position of crown prince and Iroh is imprisoned
as a traitor. Sokka has planned a small-scale invasion of the Fire Nation to
defeat Fire Lord Ozai, taking advantage of the solar eclipse, staged by various
allies encountered in previous episodes. After initial success, the invasion
ultimately fails, and only Aang, Sokka, Katara, and Toph escape. Zuko, in a
change of heart, defies his father and decides to teach Aang Firebending;
though it takes a while to make up for a year's worth of dogged pursuit, he
eventually manages to prove his change of heart and is adopted wholeheartedly
into the Avatar's party.
In the four-part
series finale, Aang and his friends confront Fire Lord Ozai, who plans to use
the power of Sozin's Comet to destroy the other nations and rule the world as
the Phoenix King. Iroh, after breaking himself out of prison, leads the Order
of the White Lotus (an international society of martial-arts masters, including
himself and Aang's allies King Bumi, Master Pakku, Master Piando, and Jeong
Jeong) to liberate Ba Sing Se. Sokka, Toph, and Kyoshi Warrior Suki disable the
Fire Nation's airships, preventing them from burning down the Earth Kingdom,
while Zuko challenges Azula. Initially, Zuko gains the advantage; but when
Azula fires a lightning bolt at Katara, Zuko intercepts the bolt to save her,
injuring himself in the process. Katara then restrains Azula and heals Zuko.
Aang, contending with Ozai, is reluctant to kill him, and is able to overcome
him by permanently stripping him of his Firebending. Zuko is crowned the new
Fire Lord and, with the help of the Avatar and his friends, begins rebuilding
the four nations. After Zuko is crowned he goes to confront his father in
prison and demands the location of his banished mother. The team meets at
Iroh's tea shop, the Jasmine Dragon, in Ba Sing Se to celebrate their victory.
Aang and Katara kiss as the sun sets, ending the series.
Characters
Aang (Voiced By:
Zach Tyler Eisen) is the 12-year-old, fun-loving, airbending protagonist of the
series. Although averse to fighting, Aang is fiercely protective of his
friends, particularly Katara and Appa. He is the current incarnation of the
planet's psyche, and is therefore required to act as arbiter among the various
people. According to the show's creators, the arrow-like tattoos on his
forehead and arms mark Aang as an airbending master, whereas he is the youngest
airbender in history to earn them. His mentor was one of the greatest
airbenders who had ever lived, Monk Gyatso. Through out the series Aang
develops a crush on Katara. He attempts to tell her so but fails continuously.
Katara (Voiced
By:Mae Whitman) is a 14-year-old Waterbender of the Southern Water Tribe. With
her brother Sokka, she accompanies Aang on his quest to defeat the Fire Lord
and, eventually, becomes his Waterbending master. Katara is the only surviving
waterbender of the Southern Water Tribe and one of only two Waterbenders able
to control human bodies by bending the water therein (an ability used twice in
the series). Katara is usually kind-hearted and generous, but is deeply hurt
and often angered by treachery. In an earlier version of the pilot episode,
Katara's name was Kaya; this later is stated to be her mother's name.
Sokka (Voiced By:
Jack DeSena) is a 15-year-old warrior of the Southern Water Tribe. With his
sister, Katara, he accompanies Aang on his quest to defeat the Fire Lord. Sokka
describes himself as "meat-loving" and "sarcastic", and is
often a source of comic relief. At the end of Season 1, Sokka was in love with
Yue, the princess of the Northern Water Tribe; and later shifted his affections
to Suki, leader of the Kyoshi Island Warriors. Unlike his companions, Sokka does
not have any bending ability; his skill lies largely in mechanics, and his
chief weapons are a metallic boomerang and a black jian created from the metals
of a meteorite.
Toph Bei Fong
(Voiced By: Jessie Flower) is a 12-year-old blind female Earthbending
prodigy who first appears in the second
season of the show, in which she is Aang's Earthbending instructor. Though
blind, Toph "sees" by feeling vibrations in the ground through her
feet using Earthbending. This ability also enables her to feel the pulses of
one's heart, allowing her to tell if someone is lying. She is later shown
developing a method of 'Metal-bending' by detecting impurities in the metal.
Momo (Dee Bradley
Baker in both the animated series and the live-action film) is an intelligent
and curious winged lemur, discovered by Aang at the Southern Air Temple .He
often picks fights with other winged and smaller creatures and with Appa over
food. He is capable of understanding Aang's speech; but less so of
understanding others. In "Tales of Ba Sing Se", Momo’s name was
written as 模模 (mó mó) meaning "peach" in japanese.
Appa (Dee Bradley
Baker in both the animated series and the live-action film) is Aang's flying
bison, who serves as the protagonists' mode of transport around the world. He
remains in suspended animation with Aang for 100 years, and shares a very
strong bond with him. He possesses the ability to fly and can use his tail to
create powerful gusts of air. According to Aang, flying bison were the first
Airbenders.
Zuko (Dante Basco)
is the 16-year-old exiled prince of the Fire Nation and original antagonist of
the series. He is determined and strong-willed, and rarely shows compassion
until the third season. Over time, Zuko struggles to deal with his anger,
self-pity, and complex familial relationships, as well as the choice between
good and evil. He is obsessed with regaining his lost honor, only to discover
its true meaning at the end of the series. He takes on the vigilante identity
of "the Blue Spirit" at the end of season one and beginning of season
two. In season three, he defects from the Fire Nation to join the Avatar. At
the end of the series, he is crowned ruler of the Fire Nation, in which
position he ends the war and promises aid in rebuilding the other nations.
Azula (Grey DeLisle)
is the princess of the Fire Nation. She is Zuko's younger sister and one of the
major antagonists of the series. Azula is a Firebending prodigy and is one of
the few living Firebenders capable of casting lightning. She is a master at
manipulation and a great leader, using fear to control her subjects and friends
alike, reserving loyalty solely for her father. She is seen to be extremely
capable and resourceful, bringing down the entire Earth Kingdom in her ruthless
pursuit of the Avatar. She is meticulous and calculating, but also a
megalomaniacal perfectionist. At the end of season three, she loses her sanity
altogether due to deep rooted psychological problems and a fragile mental state
broken by the betrayal of her friends and is subsequently defeated by Zuko and
Katara. She is the primary antagonist of the second season.
Suki (Jennie Kwan)
is the leader of the young (and exclusively female) Kyoshi Island Warriors, a
sect established by Aang's predecessor-once-removed. She is an exceptionally
skilled fighter and staunch ally of the protagonists. She was imprisoned by the
Fire Nation after the Kyoshi Warriors were defeated by Azula, but was
ultimately released by Sokka, Zuko, Hakoda, and Chit-Sang. She remained with
the protagonists thereafter and fought with Toph and Sokka to disable the Fire
Nation's air force. She was Sokka's love interest immediately following the end
of the War.
Iroh (Mako Iwamatsu
in season one and two; Greg Baldwin in season three) is a former Great general
of the Fire Nation, known as the Dragon of the West, and Prince Zuko's paternal
uncle and mentor. Iroh was the heir to the Fire Nation throne until his brother
usurped the throne after Fire Lord Azulon's death. On the surface, Iroh is a
cheerful, kind, optimistic, eccentric old man; but remains a powerful warrior
and a devoted surrogate parent to Zuko. Iroh is a Grand Master of the Order of
the White Lotus, a secret society of men from all nations. Unlike most
Firebenders, Iroh does not use anger as the source of his strength, relying
instead on Firebending secrets learned from the Dragons.
Mai (Cricket Leigh)
is Zuko's love interest and on again off again girlfriend and the friend of Ty
Lee. Mai herself lacks bending, but is agile, swift, and skilled in
dart-throwing and knife-throwing. She assists Azula throughout most of her
role; but later abandons Azula.
Ty Lee (Olivia
Hack) is an acrobat who fights alongside Azula against the protagonists,
notable for her appearance of vivacity, innocence, and youth and for her
ability to disable element-benders by obstructing the chi from their limbs.
Having abandoned Azula, she joins the Kyoshi Island Warriors, whom she had
earlier impersonated. Also has a crush on Sokka.
Ozai (Mark Hamill)
is the father of Zuko and Azula, the much younger brother of Iroh, and ruler of
the Fire Nation. Although he is the primary antagonist for the series, he does
not appear regularly until its third season, in which he is defeated by Aang.
Production
Michael DiMartino,
one of the co-creators of the show, at the 2008 New York Comic Con.
Avatar: The Last
Airbender was co-created and produced by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan
Konietzko at Nickelodeon Animation Studios in Burbank, California. Animation work
was mostly done by three animation studios in South Korea: JM Animation, DR
Movie, and Moi Animation. According to Bryan Konietzko, the program was
conceived in the spring of 2001 when he took an old sketch of a balding,
middle-aged man and re-imagined the character as a child. Konietzko drew the
character herding bison in the sky, and showed the sketch to Mike DiMartino. At
the time, DiMartino was studying a documentary about explorers trapped in the
South Pole. Konietzko described their early development of the concept:
“ We thought, "There's an air guy
along with these water people trapped in a snowy wasteland... and maybe some
fire people are pressing down on them..." ”
The co-creators
successfully pitched the idea to Nickelodeon vice president and executive
producer Eric Coleman just two weeks later.
The series was
first revealed to the public in a teaser reel at Comic-Con 2004, and aired
February 21, 2005. In the United States, first two episodes of the series were
shown together in a one-hour premiere event. A second twenty-episode season ran
from March 17, 2006 through December 1. A third and final season, beginning
September 21, 2007, featured twenty-one episodes rather than the usual
twenty.The final four episodes were packaged as a two-hour movie.
Avatar is notable
for borrowing extensively from East Asian art and mythology to create its
universe. The series' character designs are heavily influenced by anime as well
as Chinese art and history, Hinduism, Taoism, Buddhism, and Yoga.] Traditional Chinese
calligraphy styles represent nearly all the writing in the series. For each
instance of calligraphy, an appropriate style is used, ranging from seal script
(more archaic) to clerical script. The show employed a cultural consultant,
Edwin Zane, and calligrapher Siu-Leung Lee as consultants for the series'
cultural influences. The choreographed martial art bending moves were affected
by Asian cinema. In an interview, Bryan revealed that, "Mike and I were
really interested in other epic 'Legends & Lore' properties, like Harry
Potter and Lord of the Rings, but we knew that we wanted to take a different
approach to that type of genre. Our love for Japanese anime, Hong Kong action
and kung fu cinema, yoga, and Eastern philosophies led us to the initial inspiration
for Avatar."[37] The show's character designs are influenced by anime; but
the show is not considered an example of such.
All music and sound
used in the series was done by Jeremy Zuckerman and Benjamin Wynn, who formed
The Track Team. They experimented with use of a wide range of different
instruments, such as the guzheng, pipa, and duduk, to compose background music.
The term
"Avatar" comes from Sanskrit (अवतार),
wherein means "descent"; its roots are ava, "down," and
tri, "to pass". In the Hindu scriptures, avatar signifies the mortal
incarnation of a god (usually Vishnu). The Chinese characters apparent at the
top of the show's title card mean "the divine medium who has descended
upon the mortal world".According to the plot, Aang unknowingly revealed he
was the Avatar when by choosing four toys out of thousands, each of which were
the childhood toys of previous Avatars. In Tibetan Buddhism, there is a similar
test for reincarnations of a Tulku Lama. In Magic and Mystery in Tibet,
Alexandra David-Neel writes that "a number of objects such as rosaries,
ritualistic implements, books, tea-cups, etc., are placed together, and the
child must pick out those which belonged to the late tulku, thus showing that
he recognizes the things which were theirs in their previous life"[Each
successor is expected to show signs of continuity with the previous Avatar,
such as being born within a week of the death.
Avatar: The Last
Airbender draws on the four classical elements for its bending arts: Water,
Earth, Fire, and Air. Although each has its own variation, most ancient
philosophies incorporate these four elements: examples include the classical
Hindu, Buddhist, and Greek elemental traditions. In the show’s opening, each
element is accompanied by two Chinese characters: an ancient Chinese seal
script character on the left representing the element being shown and a modern
Chinese character on the right describing some feature of the element. The
character 水 (pinyin: shuǐ), which stands for water, is shown with 善 (pinyin: shàn), which
means benevolence and adaptivity. The character 土 (pinyin: tǔ), which stands for earth, is
shown with 強 (pinyin: qiáng), which means strength and stability. The character 火 (pinyin: huǒ), which
stands for fire, is shown with 烈 (pinyin: liè), which means intensity and
passion. Finally, the character 气 (pinyin: qì), which stands for air, is
shown with 和 (pinyin: hé), which means peace and harmony.
In addition to the
use of four classical elements in the series, the fighting styles associated
with each element are derived from different styles of Chinese martial arts,
for which the film-makers employed Sifu Kisu of the Harmonious Fist Chinese
Athletic Association as a consultant. Each fighting style was chosen to
represent the element it projected. T'ai chi was used for
"Waterbending" in the series, which focuses on alignment, body
structure, breath, and visualization. Hung Gar was used for
"Earthbending" in the series, and was chosen for its firmly rooted
stances and powerful strikes to present the solid nature of earth. Northern
Shaolin, which uses strong arm and leg movements was used to represent
"Firebending". Ba Gua, which uses dynamic circular movements and
quick directional changes, was used for "Airbending".[20][42][43] The
only exception to these styles is Toph, who can be seen practicing a Chu Gar
Southern Praying Mantis style.
Reception
Ratings
When the series
debuted, it was rated the best animated television series in its demographic;
new episodes averaged 3.1 million viewers each.A one-hour special showing of
"The Secret of the Fire Nation" which aired on September 15, 2006,
consisting of "The Serpent's Pass" and "The Drill",
gathered an audience of 5.1 million viewers. According to the Nielsen Media
Research, the special was the best performing cable television show airing in
that week. In 2007, Avatar was syndicated to more than 105 countries worldwide,
and was one of Nickelodeon's top rated programs. The series was ranked first on
Nickelodeon in Germany, Indonesia, Malaysia, Belgium, and Colombia.
The series finale,
Sozin's Comet: The Final Battle, received the highest ratings of the series.
Its premiere averaged 5.6 million viewers, 95% more viewers than Nickelodeon
had received in mid-July 2007. During the week of July 14, it ranked as the
most-viewed program for the under-14 demographic. Sozin's Comet also appeared
on iTunes' top ten list of best-selling television episodes during that same
week. Sozin's Comet's popularity affected online media as well; "Rise of
the Phoenix King", a Nick.com online game based on Sozin's Comet,
generated almost 815,000 game plays within three days. IGN listed the complete
series as 35th in its list of Top 100 Animated TV Shows.
Video games
A video game
trilogy about Avatar: The Last Airbender has been created. Avatar: The Last
Airbender, the video game, was released on October 10, 2006. Avatar: The Last
Airbender – The Burning Earth was released on October 16, 2007. Avatar: The
Last Airbender – Into the Inferno was released on October 13, 2008. The three
games were loosely based on seasons one, two and three, respectively. Players
can select characters and complete quests to gain experience and advance the
storyline. Despite lackluster critical reviews, the games did extremely well
commercially; for example, Avatar: The Last Airbender was THQ's top selling
Nickelodeon game in 2006 and even reached Sony CEA's "Greatest Hits"
status.
Avatar: Legends of
the Arena, a massive multiplayer online roleplaying game (MMORPG) for Microsoft
Windows, was launched on September 25, 2008 by Nickelodeon. Each user is able
to create their own character, choose a nation, and to interact with others
across the globe.
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