Monday, 30 September 2013

Grey DeLisle's Dark Spirit - and Eska looks like one

Eska's nightmare face - the one she makes after she comes waterbending her way after Bolin in Varrick's yacht - makes her look like a Dark Spirit. The streaks of makeup look like Dark Spirit facial markings, and the way her hair blows out makes her face look more circular than before. (Heck, even without the Dark Spirit resemblance, anyone seeing emotionless Eska turn into a berserker would freak out). It's a good thing Varrick has practice running from such lunatics, but it makes me wonder how Episode 5 would start off, if not as the punchline of a bad joke. There would be no fun at all if the maniacal Eska caught up with Bolin and froze him in a block of ice. Or are they going to capture Eska so she can't go back and give the location to her father's warships? At least Varrick is still in the bear suit and Tonraq has gone away, so Unalaq doesn't know where those two are.

As for the Dark Spirit, there is confirmation that Azula's voice actor, Grey DeLisle, will voice one of them. Whether it means just providing the sound effects for the screeches and hoots and other noises they'd make or actually speaking like a human, I suspect the latter. Dee Bradley Baker and other voice actors make those noises way better.

That being said, I suspect that the so-called mysterious Avatar's statue is actually that of Grey DeLisle's Dark Spirit.

1. As I pointed out before on this blog, the statue is made of wood and it's missing its arms. If that person had no arms in the first place, that's a spirit characteristic for sure. The Yuki-Onna in the old horror movie Kwaidan had feet but no arms (of course, they just tucked the actress' arms in that kimono). Ghosts and Spirits in a lot of cultures have human form but with some sort of creepy alteration - perhaps this is the same?

2. The figure has a long skirt, which suggests that it is female rather than male - although plenty of men in the Avatar-verse wear long skirts as part of their costume, the high waistline suggests that it is female. The chest may or may not have a bust and the shoulders are somewhat narrow. While it is impossible to definitively say that this is female (it is better classified as androgynous at the point), the somewhat flat hair and absence of a beard make me think that this is not Avatar Wan or an Avatar at all.

3. This thing is being calmed down by swirling spiritual energy, and it has dark spirit markings higher up. These are not signs of any Avatar we've seen, and these are distinctly ominous. I'd say that whoever she is, she's a Dark Spirit, and Grey DeLisle is voicing her.


Friday, 27 September 2013

The Civil Wars Part 2 - Review (Unalaq is going downhill)

Now that Part 2 of the Civil Wars is out, I'm going to put down what I like and what I don't like. SPOILERS, of course.

Deska and Esna are two characters I'm not exactly fond of, and I'm especially unhappy with how Bolin got tangled up with Esna. It's as though they exist to make him a butt-monkey. Anyway, we get to see Esna's sheer craziness by the end. She wants Bolin as her lover, alive or dead. If Esna was a guy and Bolin was a girl, this relationship would be sickening to its core. Male-on-female abuse is prevalent in modern society and it is most certainly NOT a laughing matter. Female-on-male abuse, while much rarer, shouldn't be played for laughs just because of the gender reversal. Abuse of any sort in any gender combination (M-F, M-M, F-M, F-F) is despicable, and I hope that Esna gets it from Bolin later.

Unalaq is more like Fire Lord Ozai than anyone else, a younger brother seeking to usurp chieftainship from his elder brother. Now that judge Hotak revealed that Unalaq paid the barbarians to attack the Northern Water Tribe and then hide in the Spirit Forest so that Tonraq could get banished, this character goes straight into Ozai territory. The only thing redeeming about him is that he seems to have a genuine spiritual side and something like a genuine desire to redeem the south spiritually - but even this seems dubious now. The writers had better play up his good qualities and come up with an explanation for Unalaq's behavior beyond mere jealousy (The judge may have misunderstood what was going on). Unalaq's warning that Dark Spirits will destroy the South if Korra decides to start a Civil War suggests that Unalaq really has the Spirits on his side this time, and it makes me wonder if there really is something going on here. I'd much rather see an angry Spirit pull of a Xanatos Gambit using Unalaq (and the much-missed Amon) than have it turn out to be brother versus brother again.

Ikki ran away and cuddled a bunch of baby Sky Bisons - at least there was nothing ominous going on there! The family aesop is getting hammered a bit too hard here.

Varrick hiding in the Platypus Bear along with Zhu Li was hilarious. It also shows that Eska, Desna and all the Northern Tribe soldiers seriously lack an imagination. Going about from room to room, who wouldn't notice the huge stuffed Platypus Bear with enough room to hide two people in it? The guy has a yacht powerful enough to outrun a loony waterbending teenager, and he has a biplane with folding wings (superb detail on that!). That's neat - but he forgot to put a catapult to launch the darn thing!

Overall, this episode was a downer, because it tarnished a pretty interesting villain. The beauty of Season 1's Amon was that he was a villain who had a point, a villain whose agenda you could actually understand and support. He was actually sincere in his belief that people had to be treated fairly - even if it meant taking their bending away in the most ghastly manner possible. And he had a certain coolness to him that made you look forward to his next appearance. Unalaq started out looking like a more complex character, but now looks like he's degrading into a simple villain. This is not good.






Wednesday, 25 September 2013

Soundbending - the subdiscipline of Airbending?

I'm calling it - Soundbending is going to be the new sub-speciality of Airbending. When Avatar's creators promised to "blow us away" they meant to blow us away with noise.

Think about it - Lightning-bending, a sub-discipline of Firebending, has enough in common with Waterbending that a technique extrapolated from Waterbending can redirect Lightning. And Water and Fire are supposed to be opposites! Air and Earth are supposed to be opposites - one is free-form and swirling, the other being solidly rooted. When is Air most 'solid'? In a shockwave. In sound.

Sound-bending. Shockwave-bending.

It's going to be interesting. I'm putting dibs on this for now. Let me see if this prediction comes true.

Supposing that Amon was "Chosen by the Spirits" after all?

Here's a thought about Amon, the incomparably awesome villain introduced in Legend of Korra's Season One. Creepy, powerful, and oozing cool, Amon was a villain unlike any other, and his tragic backstory helped a lot. Amon/Noatak's Unique Selling Proposition was that he had been chosen by the Spirits to replace the Avatar after the Avatar failed to restore balance in the world. Now we see Book Two : Spirits, complete with a rampaging storm in the South Pole that Korra has to fix, and a portal up in the North she has to open, a storyline involving Spirits of all kinds and the First Avatar, Wan.

Now, supposing that Amon was right about being "Chosen by the Spirits" after all?

Amon, or should I say, Noatak, is flat-out the most powerful bloodbender in the world, able to power through even his own brother Tarrlok's bloodbending. Tarrlok confirms that bloodbending was involved in Noatak's de-bending. But how did he know how to pull this particular trick off? Where did he learn to knock out a bender's connection to the elements? Where had he been during all this time? Some of it, is of course, a deliberate mystery, but supposing that there's room for a ret-con, as there has been for Tonraq's story?

It's likely that sometime in Book Two, we'll learn that Noatak didn't perish in that snowstorm after he left Yakone and Tarrlok because he entered a Spirit Oasis like the one that Tonraq vandalized and Korra visited. He might have been visited by a Spirit and taught this particular, lethal blood-bending technique, and then set loose to find and get rid of the Avatar (helped by his own convictions). My guess is that there's a Spirit out there none too happy about the Avatar, and Noatak was willing to do that Spirit's dirty work gratis. Perhaps the Spirit trouble around the Southern Water Tribe is the orchestration of some kind of Spirit "Chessmaster" working behind the scenes, and using Unalaq as his next willing tool.

Is there a spirit orchestrating all of this? I don't know. But I'd hold on to the notion that we've not seen the last of Amon/Noatak's influence on this series just yet.


Monday, 23 September 2013

Legend of Korra Book 2 Speculation

Kicking off my first post here with a bang. The Legend of Korra is the biggest Western Animation series in some time, and it lives up to the hype as a series with extraordinary writing, high production values, spectacular animation and even more spectacular world-building. I'm no Avatard, but I recognize epic world building where it goes. Anyway, here is my own "Rampant Speculation" about the Legend of Korra in the style of the Halo and Marathon Story Pages.

Special thanks go to Avatar Annotated for giving me some ideas here.

1. I second Avatar Annotated's assessment of the Southern Lights in that episode. There is clearly more to the lights than meets the eye. Especially since there had been an episode in the North Pole in the original series and nothing of the sort had been seen even in mid-winter, and the North Pole Spirit Oasis is a known area with the Moon and Ocean spirits going about in a circle. That forest is probably not what it is made out to be. Could it be the Avatar world's equivalent to the Earth's north and south magnetic poles, rather than the physical north and south poles? After all, the Aurora Borealis and its rarer counterpart, the Aurora Australis, are caused by the interaction of charged particles drawn in by Earth's magnetic field and slammed into the upper atmosphere. Having a spiritual equivalent for magnetism in the Avatar-verse would make sense.

2. That statue glows with the same golden light as the spirits, not with the blue-white light associated with the Avatars. Is that the statue of the first Avatar, Avatar Wan? Is that the statue of the Fire Nation Avatar that succeeds him? (More on that later) Or is that an Avatar at all? The golden glow and the wooden statue suggest something like an oddball. Since one of the themes that this show talks about is the balance of Light and Dark in every person, could this person be an Avatar who suffered from an imbalance of Light and Dark and failed in his purpose?

3. As noted, the markings on the Avatar statue resemble the markings on the Dark Spirits. And there's the perfectly good question of why the Dark Spirits would attack someone trying to help them out. Either the Dark Spirits are being extremely silly or they're not on the Avatar's side at all (as ATLA Annotated suggests). The latter interpretation seems to be better. Korra seem to be a pretty frequent target of all the Dark Spirit attacks, and even when they're stealing supplies or sabotaging snowmobiles they seem to be making the time to single her out for attacks. The very first of the monstrosities grabs her by the wrists and holds her, and the one Korra tries to calm with waterbending (unsuccessfully) seems willing to eat her. They certainly don't want that portal to be opened.

4. That Avatar - now, I'd understand having water swirl around a Dark Spirit to calm it down, but why the hell is it swirling around an Avatar??? And why does the Avatar's statue have those Dark Spirit markings? And why does it glow with the very same golden light that the Dark Spirits glow with when they vanish? Seems like someone wanted to calm down that particular Avatar and put him/her into balance, not the other way around! That being said, the Dark Spirits seem to be connected to this particular Avatar - which suggests that this Avatar isn't exactly good in the normal sense. An Avatar equivalent of Fire Lord Ozai, throwing the world out of balance? Hmmm..... or is that even an Avatar in the first place? Jinora asks "What Avatar is that?" but that doesn't mean that the statue in the Avatar room really is an Avatar...does it? Avatar or not, something very creepy and very wrong went on with this person.

5. Those Dark Spirits have a visible Owl/Serpent theme going on. As noted for Wan Shi Tong, the spirit librarian who takes an Owl form (regular) and a Serpent form (when enraged), the Owl is the western symbol of knowledge, and the Serpent is the eastern one. The Dark Spirits mostly have serpent-like heads and owl-like facial markings - all symbolic of knowledge. So these spirits possibly represent knowledge that has been corrupted, or perverted? Knowledge out of balance?

That raises the possibility that there were originally meant to be two Avatars in a sense. The Avatar functions as more than the incarnated Spirit of the Earth (He was supposed to be so in the original series bible, but this information was deleted and never made it into the final print : perhaps the writers had second thoughts about this long ago?) - the Avatar is also the bridge between the physical and spirit worlds, natural and supernatural. Avatar Wan seems to have brawled with spirits before using his bending abilities. He says "I'll show how how I became the Avatar" - which ties in with the Lion Turtle's explanation at the end of TLA that humans once used to bend the energy within themselves rather than bend the elements. Not only is energybending the exclusive domain of the Avatar, it also seems connected with the Spirits - and it seems likely that Wan became the Earth Spirit, just as Yue became the Moon, in order to handle the imbalance between the natural and spirit worlds. There might have been a 'reciprocal' Avatar, a powerful spirit taking on human form, as to form a second bridge between the human and spirit worlds. Ironically, this would make the Avatar an 'ascended' human, as opposed to the meaning of the word, 'descent', implying a descended Spirit or God.

So what is the Avatar, actually? An ascended human or a descended god? The latter explanation never officially became Word of God - so the first possibility is indeed open.

6. It is known that the first Avatar after Wan was a Firebender. When Korra finally goes into the Avatar state to open the Spirit Portal, the pulse that opens the Portal is one of fire (plainly). That would mean that firebending (the opposite element to water) was needed to open the Portal, which would be exceedingly odd - unless that Spirit Portal was sealed up by a Firebender in the first place and needed firebending of a specific sort to open it. It gives rise to the impression that the statue that lights up belonged to a Firebender - but then again, it might not even be an Avatar.

It's worth noting that the statue is missing its lower arms, making it look incomplete. It's also made of wood - it's probably carved out of a single tree. Its proportions seem androgynous - it's hard to tell for certain if that's a man or a woman. Why is it incomplete? Or did someone get rid of its arms?

7. Old Wan Shi Tong looks to be coming back in Owl form. His name translates into "The one who knows ten thousand things" but it might also mean "The one who knows Wan" - assuming that Wan, the first Avatar, has his name translated into Ten Thousand. Wan Shi Tong probably knows a whole lot more than we think - although that's no surprise for an all-knowing spirit librarian.