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Live Blogs Opinionated Guide to The Last Airbender
Korval2011-09-23 19:10:02

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Book one. Nice, Shyamalan, nice. How `bout you wait until your movie doesn't cost your studio twenty million dollars before you start getting ready for a sequel, you presumptuous ass.
Todd in the Shadows, The Last Airbender Review

So, Avatar: The Last Airbender was made into a movie; you might have heard of this. Because James Cameron made a little film around the same time also called Avatar (you might have heard of that), the filmmakers decided to drop the "Avatar" from the title of their movie. Thus, it's just called The Last Airbender.

It is pretty universally agreed upon that this is a terrible movie. Whether you watched the show or not, the general consensus is that this film is garbage. And now I'm going to watch it, because it makes a nice companion piece to my liveblog/review of the show.

I personally feel that it is unfair to judge any adaptation solely by what it is adapting. A movie must ultimately stand on its own, sink or swim based on its merits as a piece of cinema. At the same time, it is an adaptation; it is important to be able to look at what it is adapting, changing, modifying, or removing. It's important to look at how those changes affect the film.

In order to accomplish both, I am going to bifurcate myself into two people for the duration of the review. All of my knowledge of the series will be dumped into text of this color, while analysis of the film as a film will be in this text color.

Before we get started, some interesting info. This film was directed by one M. Night Shyamalan, who is most famous for once being a promising film director who has slowly descended into crap in his latest work. So again, like James Cameron (Zing!). I'm familiar with some of M. Night's work. By which, I mean I watched Unbreakable and The Sixth Sense. I don't seek out crappy movies, so I've avoided his more recent stuff due to bad press. So I don't know much about his descent into badness.

The story behind this movie's creation, at least as I heard it, was that one of M. Night's children was a fan of the show and eventually got him to make this. Which is proof enough why children should never be trusted with anything.

As in my last liveblog, this presents my opinion of this move. As before, you should find that most of these opinions do at least have some evidential support, even if you disagree with the conclusion. Granted, since pretty much everyone hates this movie, you're probably not going to find much praise in the following pages.

Comments

Eegah Since: Dec, 1969
Sep 28th 2011 at 6:59:47 AM
I'm reminded of Shyamalan's presentation of his childhood ghost movie on the Sixth Sense DVD, where he says watching the scene will explain the lack of effects in The Sixth Sense, because he's so bad at them. He really does have a surprising lack of ego in those early clips, compared to what he's like now.
ManwiththePlan Since: Dec, 1969
Sep 28th 2011 at 9:10:26 AM
Aasif actually asks, "What is this?"IT'S FOG, YOU ASSCLOWN!

I laughed out loud at this. Like I said, Aasif provides the best comedy in this movie.
ManwiththePlan Since: Dec, 1969
Sep 28th 2011 at 9:12:57 AM
It should also be mentioned that the guy who played the Judas Monk was none other than Grampa "Prepare to eat DIRT!" Gohan from Dragon Ball Evolution himself. It's as if that guy's an omen that the film's a crappy adaptation.
205.204.248.70 Since: Dec, 1969
Oct 11th 2011 at 11:46:54 AM
Note that the Yu Yan Archers in the series knew where Aang was because he'd already been spotted by a Fire Nation observation post earlier in the episode. The soldiers in the observation post then sounded an alarm. So the archers had some idea of where to look, as opposed to sitting around in an abandoned temple hoping that the Avatar would just stumble in through random chance.
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