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- Dec 16, 2019
Hope you guys are ready
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Well pack it in for more LOK-esque garbage.Hope you guys are ready
I'm pretty sure Bryke were dorky otakus around the 90s/2000s and probably heard of it that way. Though it is a stretch if anything, the tournament storyline in HxH is an example of how to make something like that work.Have either Bryan or Mike ever expressed interest in HxH? The only anime I’ve ever heard them cite directly as inspiration is Miyazaki films, so I just always figured that the pro-bending side plot was because tournament arcs are such a cliche staple to generic shonen at this point.
Bryan and Mike seem more interested in the socio-political aspects of the world of Avatar but were never character-driven guys. Even the praise for Korra (specifically Book 3) is usually focused on the political aspects of the show, but never the characterization. Ehasz was the guy for that, he really had foresight in how these storylines were going and how to flesh it out over the series. Him being head writer and co-producer was a god-send. Even Dragon Prince does characterization much better than Korra. But sadly, I think the main issue with Dragon Prince is that it's kind of a bland, even generic, fantasy world without a clear narrative drive. Which I actually think was an accident in Bryke's case with ATLA. I don't think Ehasz is much of a world builder, or at least, he needed a better premise for Dragon Prince.But yeah, from everything I gathered a lot of the actual world-building (or at least the heavy lifting to make the world-building connect meaningfully to the story/characters/themes) was done by the writing, art, and consultant teams and Bryke had little to do with this process (according to the commentary they spent very little time in the writing room’s brainstorming sessions) and their own process mostly throwing cool images they’ve seen/found together into a blender and chasing whatever aesthetic or isolated concept happened to tickle their fancy that week. By the time they got to LoK they were kinda “over” the martial art based bending system and Eastern mythos/philosophy/culture that served as the basis for ATLA, which was ultimately to LoK’s detriment considering it was replaced with a more generic system & Korra not being spiritual was supposed to be the first season’s whole thing.
I'm gonna be honest, i was a kid when i saw the cartoon (13 years old); and i really dev a crush on Korra & Asami. Lin, Kya, Varrick & Tenzin are my favorite secondary characters.I couldn't get enough of Avatar.
I was hoping to like LOK just as much, but I gave up after 5 episodes.
I tried, I really did.
Which is funny, since I don’t think Bryan or Mike are particularly because the socio-political aspects precisely because their approach to characterization is so shallow. There’s this one interview from last year with them about Korra where they were asked if they had any opinion about how the first season of LoK puts a new light on Aang’s choice with Ozai in the finale, since he is indirectly responsible for the origin of Amon/the equalizers and Amon’s doing the pretty much the same thing as Aang, and their response was basically “Well no you see it’s different because Aang’s actions are good because he’s good, and Amon is bad so what he does is bad.”Bryan and Mike seem more interested in the socio-political aspects of the world of Avatar but were never character-driven guys. Even the praise for Korra (specifically Book 3) is usually focused on the political aspects of the show, but never the characterization. Ehasz was the guy for that, he really had foresight in how these storylines were going and how to flesh it out over the series. Him being head writer and co-producer was a god-send. Even Dragon Prince does characterization much better than Korra. But sadly, I think the main issue with Dragon Prince is that it's kind of a bland, even generic, fantasy world without a clear narrative drive. Which I actually think was an accident in Bryke's case with ATLA. I don't think Ehasz is much of a world builder, or at least, he needed a better premise for Dragon Prince.
I think it would've been cool if Ehasz and Bryan and Mike created their own studio and made "spiritual successors" to Avatar instead of direct continuations. I think Dragon Prince could've actually benefited from Bryke's touch (if only a little.)
I think its just base jealously and Bryke's massive insecurity about their own lack of skill. You have to remember, these guys were held up as the REASON ATLA was so good by the fandom who basically spent a decade felating them over it.And I wouldn’t hold your breath on Bryke ever letting Ehasz near anything Avatar-related, or any collaboration with them, ever again. For whatever reason Bryke seem to have some sort of beef with Ehasz, because over the years they’ve made it a point to stop acknowledging Ehasz’s contributions to their story - they had an event for the finale’s 10 year anniversary where they talked about the writing for the episodes they penned, but when it came to the finale episode written by Ehasz they only talked about the animation and the Lion Turtle - that they don’t even credit him for writing/fleshing out Zuko and Iroh anymore. Made even weirder by how the feeling doesn’t seem to be mutual considering Ehasz has complimented them and LoK on several occasions.
"Original Creators" is what scares me. Bryan and Mike were given some control over ATLA and it was something special. They got full control over LoK and it laid an egg then sucked it. If they don't bring back their tardwranglers as well as these two idea guys then nothing they do will be worth more than one watch. If that.Hope you guys are ready
Dragon Prince was one of those shows where I always planned to watch it, but when the time came there were just other, more interesting things to watch instead.
Dragon Prince is aggressively “okay”. I would not call it good, I would not call it bad; but... it really feels like someone’s D&D campaign. Huge gaps in worldbuilding, brief sparks of uniquely grey morality for a kids show, reasonably entertaining characters.As much as I really wanted to, I could never get into Dragon Prince because of the choppy-ass animation in the first season. It was distracting and legit gave me a headache to watch. My friends tell me it's a pretty decent show, but having to sit through an entire season's worth of 8 fps animation is pretty solidly holding me back.
That's what always bothered me. Mako and Bolin were literally given examples of how benders weren't that high up on the food chain and that Class seemed to be the deciding factor of privilege. Once you start to actually think about this entire "equality" hoopla, this little number comes up.Given how Toph in the final season gives a whole speech about how the moral of LoK is about how all the villains (including Amon) made good points and it was just their actions that were wrong, and a lot of statements outside the show by Bryke, the intent was always that the nonbenders/equalists were people with legitimate grievances led astray by one guy.
A lot of that got muddled in Bryke slapping together ideas and everything they thought looked cool without regard for the actual setting. Hence how you get inherent contradictions like the show telling you that benders are the supposed ruling class despite most of the reoccurring non-benders being wealthy (and one being based on Henry Ford) while the most of benders characters are poor.
Are you saying thatThat's what always bothered me. Mako and Bolin were literally given examples of how benders weren't that high up on the food chain and that Class seemed to be the deciding factor of privilege. Once you start to actually think about this entire "equality" hoopla, this little number comes up.
"Why the hell is this millionaire whining about how much a bunch of street rats have it better than him?"
One good subplot would have been to show how full of baloney the Equalists were when it would be shown that benders aren't that well off, that they have to do what amounts to hard labor through their bending and that many of the more prominent figures in the city are mostly non-benders. But, no, this is the era of social justice. Can't have more nuance or gray writing.
If we do a realistic analysis of “what if post-industrial society but some minority of the population has specific elemental manipulation abilities”, it doesn’t make much sense for benders to be inherently high up in society. In ATLA, pretty much all of the benders we see outside of the royal families are soldiers and guards because bending is a primarily offensive, physical ability. With regards to high-paying, skilled labor, non-benders have no inherent disadvantage, because being a bender has no correlation to your ability to be a lawyer or an engineer. If anything they’d be more pigeonholed into blue-collar work, because why pay a normal plumber when a water bending plumber can literally bend the clog out of your drain? Why pay a construction team to lay your foundation when an earthbender can get it done on their own in a tenth of the time?That's what always bothered me. Mako and Bolin were literally given examples of how benders weren't that high up on the food chain and that Class seemed to be the deciding factor of privilege. Once you start to actually think about this entire "equality" hoopla, this little number comes up.
"Why the hell is this millionaire whining about how much a bunch of street rats have it better than him?"
One good subplot would have been to show how full of baloney the Equalists were when it would be shown that benders aren't that well off, that they have to do what amounts to hard labor through their bending and that many of the more prominent figures in the city are mostly non-benders. But, no, this is the era of social justice. Can't have more nuance or gray writing.
Yeah, maybe if the earth or water bender were stupid enough to do that to themselves. They don't have inherent knowledge for that stuff, they still have to train.If we do a realistic analysis of “what if post-industrial society but some minority of the population has specific elemental manipulation abilities”, it doesn’t make much sense for benders to be inherently high up in society. In ATLA, pretty much all of the benders we see outside of the royal families are soldiers and guards because bending is a primarily offensive, physical ability. With regards to high-paying, skilled labor, non-benders have no inherent disadvantage, because being a bender has no correlation to your ability to be a lawyer or an engineer. If anything they’d be more pigeonholed into blue-collar work, because why pay a normal plumber when a water bending plumber can literally bend the clog out of your drain? Why pay a construction team to lay your foundation when an earthbender can get it done on their own in a tenth of the time?
On the other hand, the fire benders control the majority (totality?) of the electrical grid in Republic City. If they ever banded together and said "Pay us more money, give us control of the electric company, or the lights will never work again!", what option would anyone have but to give in? Even if you went in and busted heads, they're still the only ones that can lightning-bend to actually make the energy.If we do a realistic analysis of “what if post-industrial society but some minority of the population has specific elemental manipulation abilities”, it doesn’t make much sense for benders to be inherently high up in society. In ATLA, pretty much all of the benders we see outside of the royal families are soldiers and guards because bending is a primarily offensive, physical ability. With regards to high-paying, skilled labor, non-benders have no inherent disadvantage, because being a bender has no correlation to your ability to be a lawyer or an engineer. If anything they’d be more pigeonholed into blue-collar work, because why pay a normal plumber when a water bending plumber can literally bend the clog out of your drain? Why pay a construction team to lay your foundation when an earthbender can get it done on their own in a tenth of the time?
Yeah, LOK is bad and Bryke are absolute hackfrauds who got lucky to work with the team they had during ATLA. Its pretty much an implicit reality you have to accept entering this thread.On the other hand, the fire benders control the majority (totality?) of the electrical grid in Republic City. If they ever banded together and said "Pay us more money, give us control of the electric company, or the lights will never work again!", what option would anyone have but to give in? Even if you went in and busted heads, they're still the only ones that can lightning-bend to actually make the energy.
Similarly, every building in the city is subject to the random whims of any passing earth bender, since brick and steel are their specialities and on a drunken dare any 3 idiots could knock down half a city block before they're taken out.
Its a schizophrenic mix of "Benders are uber-powerful" and "Benders are treated as wage-slaves and struggle to survive" and both statements can't be true.
lets not even get into how fucking retarded it is that there even ARE enough lightning benders to do this, given how insanely difficult it is to get into the state of mind needed to channel the electricity