Most recent blog

Final Fantasy XIII Review

Showing posts with label Avatar: The Last Airbender. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Avatar: The Last Airbender. Show all posts

Monday, 4 March 2024

They made the Avatar show

 

A few weeks back I came across the unsettling realisation that the Avatar live action show as coming at us mach speed at an unstoppable pace, and at that time I resolved to watch it. Even as every preview stunned more and more with the presentation and what the team managed to achieve, behind the scenes comments by the team made me more and more anxious about the fact that no-one abroad seemed to know what made the original special. How it wasn't just the fertile concept, the interesting world or the gorgeously choreographed and animated fight scenes- Avatar was renowned for it's instantly iconic characters with their lovable dynamics, quirks and journeys that made them a family worth siding with. You'd think that would be the least resource intensive part of an adaptation to get right, but I guess spending god knows how much into giant redundant battle scenes is so much easier than actually telling a half decent story over a sensible amount of episodes.

I haven't binged my way through the Avatar show even though all the episodes are currently out, because I wanted to take it as it comes. And in that vein I've actually only watched the first episode but have been fed so much to digest that I don't rightly know what to do. So much was covered by that hour alone and yet I'm swirling with thoughts and opinions about every 30 second stretch that condensing those into coherent thoughts will be a challenge all on it's own. But I try not to make these into big reviews when we're talking about non-gaming content and therefore I'll try to stay general and airy with my thoughts. Focus on the bigger issues and what the show has got right and what it's currently doing wrong- because there is considerable ammo in both barrels.

Firstly, I need to start by commenting about a larger issue in recent content that I lay squarely at the feet of professional reviewers. 8 episodes is a frankly ludicrously little amount of screentime to cover a continuous story in a world as expansive as this one, and the breakneck pace of this show- and others with similar constraints, is hostile to the creative process. This comes after years of professional critics, not just lowly bloggers like myself, parroting the same critique for literally every piece of content ever. It used to be that whenever there was a brilliant show that everyone loved, it was the go-to lazy professional critic response to squawk "Yeah, but it's too long." "There were a few scenes that weren't absolutely critical to the progression of the narrative. If they were cut it would have been better." That seems to have taken route at an industry level where now downtime and narrative spacing has been made illegal in all shows to the point where we get something like Avatar.

Rushing from narrative point to narrative point is not cohesive to a good story. Making sure every episode in a series carries extreme narrative weight removes the concept of ebb-and-flow to storytelling. Trying to present a world you expect to be 'big as Game of Thrones' in a series that covers two less episodes per series than that impeccably better written adaptation is laughable. This shrinking of productions is becoming a noose around content, and it's suffocating writers- squashing out the talent. I genuinely think that many of the character problems this adaptation has come about because the team are too scared to waste a second having characters getting to know each other by sharing a quick joke or telling a quip. Everyone needs to be on task 24/7- making relationships and friendships feel contrived and unnatural. 

Which I suppose brings me around to the characterisation- the show's weakest point. With the news about how the showrunners were smoothing over the actual character traits of Aang's playful side quests and Sokka's 'sexist' pretentions- I was worried about how these performances would pan out. And to be absolutely fair- the actors did what they were told wonderfully, unfortunately what they told to do kind of sucked. Rather than Aang exuberating a playfulness that overwhelmed the grim responsibility of the world's arbiter, literally introducing himself in the show by asking Katara to goof off and go penguin sledding with him- he tells Appa out loud about how he'd prefer to be goofing off rather than be an Avatar. There's so much telling instead of doing that it mutes the audience's connection to these people to a point where they feel personality deprived. But no one got as bad a shake as Sokka.

Sokka doesn't just lose all of his sexist jokes- (for which he was the punchline by-the-way; the show always made a point to clown on Sokka for his backwards viewpoints!) he loses all of his trademark jokiness altogether. Sokka is played as the straight man in every interaction- which misses the point of the character so badly it genuinely drives me mad. Sokka wants to be the straight man- he wants to be the dependable and capable warrior in order to live up to his role as sole man of the tribe since all the grown up warriors left. But he's still just a teenager and he's silly and doesn't command the respect he thinks he does, and ends up the butt of the joke a lot of time. Not in a cruel way, but in a sarky way. But after two live action adaptations that seem utterly oblivious to that, I'm convinced that showrunners are just allergic to children's shows, they bitterly refuse to watch them in their replication attempts.

What the show got right, however- seems to be literally everything else. The casting seems on point, the actors are all solid, (aside from the material they've given to read) the sets are outrageously good and the action is stunning! If only it wasn't all made so damned redundant by being useless. What is the point of the Air Bender destruction scene, which goes on for a while mind you, if we're just going to see Aang pick through the ruins in the same episode? It shows us the brutality of the Fire Kingdom early, gives up the mystery of what happened to the air benders early and removes the audience from the mindspace of the central character. All because these 'storytellers' wanted an early action scene to keep people hooked, it's madness!

Avatar has a good many episodes to go from here, and I seriously wonder for the health of the key character dynamics if this pace is maintained. Are we going to be able to see the friendship blossom between these three? Will Katara and Sokka ever remember to go back and say 'bye' to Gran Gran? Is Sokka going to regain any ounce of his humour in order to be likeable or will he remain the grumpy straight-man throughout? And what about looking further? Are they going to make Toph the incredibly capable and cool-tempered blind girl who jokes about her own condition in a way that makes everyone else the butt of the joke? Will they portray her journey in learning how to be a teacher without forcing the actress to bluntly exposit it all out in a monologue salad like what Aang had in episode 1? And can these shows get an actual decent amount of episodes for once, good god! If 8 is considered enough for a serialised show, what the hell is a limited series anymore? 3 episodes!?

Saturday, 3 February 2024

Avatar has lost it's damn mind

 Not the blue one

So of all the children's cartoons that we have grown up with, most get put to bed upon reaching maturity for whatever reason- typically because that level of show, writing, production just doesn't appeal to older ages. Which is fine, they're not meant to. They are designed to keep younger minds entertained and therefore it is totally fine for a show as formulaic and uninspired as Miraculous Ladybug to persist for as long as it did. (They recycled at least a minute of animation for every episode!) But what about the shows that do stick with us? The shows that appeal to younger and older generations? That seem to grow as we do, and hit sometimes even stronger upon hindsight? Well, then we have the rare gems like the brilliant 'Avatar' franchise- and the wierdoes trying to capitalise off it with strange and twisted ideas about what best makes that original tick.

'Avatar: The Legend of Aang' was an anime-styled Nickelodeon cartoon following the journey of a fated Bender of all elements trying to restore balance to a world turned on it's head ever since the tyrannical Fire Nation took over. He is joined on his quest by Sokka, wise cracking warrior-to-be from the Water Tribe, and Katara, a Water tribe bender with staunch moral compunctions. This trio are not the most complicated and twisting characters ever put to screen, but considering how nobody seems capable of adapting them faithfully to any medium- they might as well be! Flawed kids thrust into a world they're not ready for who end up rising to the occasion- what does that sound like to you? Does that sound like a Game of Thrones successor? No? Well that can't be right- because the showrunner for the new live action adaptation seems to think that a perfect comparison!

In a recent interview the showrunner claimed that this show needs to cater to fans of Game of Thrones in it's grounded grittiness, and walking the tightrope of nailing that feeling is their job... Which is... horrendously off base on both what Avatar is and what Game of Thrones was! Avatar is a children's show first and foremost- it's world is rich but not complex or shackled by grounded and realistic political stakes. In many ways, the very premise of the show breaks down its world to the most basic identifiers. You have the tyrannical fire nation who represent evil and everyone else who represent good. Game of Thrones, on the otherhand, was all about telling the story of what happens after the great big obvious evil is slain and the shades of human who inhabit that space between the 'ages of heroes'. Martin focused exclusively on the philosophies of power and what it means in various angles of life, and how it chips away at humanity and basic morality. There's much to it than just that- but even in that most surface level observation- Avatar could not be further away as a franchise.

But hey, let's 'benefit of the doubt' this. Let's assume what he meant to say is he simply wants this show to become so popular that it rivals the viewing numbers of one of the biggest shows of all time. Maybe he's a dreamer and I'm choosing to interpret this in the worst way possible. Sure. But then how do you explain the comments made about Sokka? You know- the comments wherein cast members think the new show has toned down elements that could be considered 'iffy' such as Sokka's sexism. Which on the surface sounds rather affronting. Sokka's Sexism? Wasn't this a children's show? What they mean is, the conceited way in which Sokka saw his role of physical superiority in the early series, which is beaten out of him throughout the first series as every woman he meets humbles him. Because you see- that is what is called 'character development'. But it seems this series... just doesn't have characters? Is that what I'm supposed to take from these comments?

But hey- I'm sure the show will have plenty of time to conjure whole new character arcs for it's cast to go on now that- oh wait- no they've stripped the heart of main character too... The Showrunner has gone on record with IGN to brag about how they made it's narrative "A little clearer". (Right, because the animated show for children was so complex!) Now instead of Aang going on adventures and side-activities fleshing out the world and his own childish-nature, the very impetus for him running away from his duties as an Air Temple Monk and getting trapped under water for 100 years in the first place, he is instead fed a "vision" of what is happening at the Water tribe and B-lines there to stop it. He's more serious and less human this time around. That's what we all wanted right? Right?

Now of course I know that a live action show is going to have to cut some corners for the mere fact that it's super expensive to make these episodes, so they can't have side-activities drawing attention away from the core narrative. No 'Tales from Ba Sing Se', no cabbage guy I guess- what about Jin, the girl who Zuko gets close with in Book 2? She probably doesn't factor in enough to the core plot to get a scene, despite how well remembered she is as a representation of the path Zuko could have gone if he dedicated himself to running away completely. Is there space for nuance anymore in a story where we wring out the characters to all but their core most ideals? Aang is the hero, therefore that is all his character is. He's no longer also a child who wants to experience the freedom of not having the weight of the world on his shoulders- he's just a block of wood.

I'm making assumptions, sure- but you have to understand that there's a beating heart to the way that characters are supposed to be written which sounds all but absent in the direction that these show runners are taking it. And never are these choices being made with the right intentions- to make a better story. You might conflate 'clearer' with 'better', but when I read that what I interpret is 'simpler for consumption by the growing caste of media illiterate viewers'. This doesn't even sound like a show interested in capturing the spirit of the beloved original, but rather in making a fantasy drama to compete with other similar fantasy dramas. And when your goals are as vapid as that- well then, comparing yourself to Game of Thrones suddenly makes some sense, doesn't it?

Remember that the show runners of the original Avatar series were actually attached to this project at one point and they choose to drop out over 'creative differences'. Who's willing to bet that we're seeing the face of these differences laid out before us with these comments that deftly miss the point of this franchise that so many of us love? The more I hear about it, the less I'm getting the sense that this is going to be the next One Piece- when everything is sounding more like Season 1 of Halo. A show so painfully off it's course that the showrunner was replaced and they're having to spend all their marketing practically begging people to give them another chance because this time they've got it for sure! Avatar doesn't have enough season-worthy material to waste it's first making fundamental tonal mistakes... Oh god, just imagine what they've done to tone down Azula! One of the only character's on TV to threaten to outright kill someone in her first dedicated scene! Man... I'm not looking forward to the next few weeks...