ljwrites: A typewriter with multicolored butterflies on it. (candleholder)
The fact that I don't like LoK doesn't mean I'm not cool with other people loving the show. In fact I envy them because it means they can keep on loving the franchise without questioning their own involvement in the fandom. But the fact that I don't like something doesn't make me a hater and it doesn't make me irrational.

In fact, I'm just clearing the hell out of threads positive of Korra because I don't want to be That Person who rains on people's parades. I'll just stick to passive-aggressively muttering to myself and feeling petulant about comments that most likely weren't directed at me.

Mostly though, I think I'm just burned out on everything. It's been an intense few weeks trying to finish my semester as both an instructor and a student, a race that ended just last night at midnight when I collapsed into bed after inputting all the exam grades. Then this morning I watched the Korra season finale, which did not help the feeling of general fed-uppedness.

I have a crapload of stuff to post for Dragon King, just need to read it over one last time for typos which are a pain in the ass to fix after uploading. Right now though, I just don't have the energy. It's normal to have a down day, I guess, especially after my life the past few weeks. I just wish I could be more excited about summer break beginning in earnest. Maybe it's a form of adrenaline crash--I've been in a state of such constant panic, having a free day is freaking me out.
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Here is my two parts review/eight parts rant of the last episode of Korra Season 1, and all the episodes I never got around to reviewing because of Real Life and growing frustration with the show:

Spoilers, I guess. Who cares? )
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I have come to the conclusion that The Legend of Korra is turning into the fantasy version of Atlas Shrugged.

[livejournal.com profile] amanda91 brought up Ayn Rand in her recent post comparing the Equalists' energybending to the dystopia of Harrison Bergeron. ([livejournal.com profile] amyraine made the same comparison earlier in an epic thread over on [livejournal.com profile] overlithe 's LJ, which is kind of funny because Amanda and Amy seem to be coming at the issue from opposite directions.)

That, and overlithe's recent post LoK, Being on Team Human, and Stories About Nothing (read it, I say. READ IT!!) made it click for me.

Atlas, as you may know, is all about the blueblood paranoia that the jealous rabble will come after the special talented people. It ignores or makes light of actual social injustice in favor of the fantasy that it's the elites who are truly persecuted.

In Korra, the murder of entire non-bender families is No Big Deal, or the equivalent of Bitches Lie about Rape in Amon's case (via overlithe's comment.). These stories are almost impossible to sympathize with because a) there's next to no detail, and b) every non-bender we know of--except Asami, who is dating a bender--who suffered this tragic loss is a terrorist.

Compare that sparse treatment to the great physical and emotional detail the creators expended on non-lethal energybending, and the way the most sympathetic characters in the show fear it (Korra) or 

end up its victim (Lin).


So in LoK story logic:

Non-bender lives <<<<<< Bender powers

Unfortunate Implications are unfortunate.

Actual members of actual disadvantaged groups in this little place I like to call Real Life are murdered without law enforcement or the judicial system giving a shit about it. In real life people do turn to violence from grief and rage because they have no other recourse, and power-hungry manipulators do use such people to do terrible things.

Discrimination, loss of faith in the system, government failure, and terrorism are real-life issues. Magic kung-fu is not. Between real-life problems and made-up ones, I always find the real ones more interesting, more relevant, and more moving. LoK has chosen to ignore the real issues in favor of fake ones, which is why it's losing my interest. (This paragraph is basically a digest of overlithe's post "Being on Team Human," linked above.)

LoK has turned into a fantasy, not the magical kind but the narcissistic delusion kind, that the privileged are the true victims who are hunted down and hated for being So Very Special. It's a premise I found boring and irrelevant in Atlas Shrugged, and I find it boring and irrelevant here.
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I am just not sure where this thing is going anymore. Maybe that's a good thing, but I'd rather be intrigued than confused and right now I'm in confused territory.

Spoiler? Is that you? )
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I am just not sure where this thing is going anymore. Maybe that's a good thing, but I'd rather be intrigued than confused and right now I'm in confused territory.

Spoiler? Is that you? )
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Reviewing Episodes 6 and 7 together because I was laid low by a cold last week.

Which is worse, netabare or netorare? )

Ugh, the week passes so fast. I'm getting the usual mid-season lag in enthusiasm, but I do look forward to seeing Zuko and whether he's become a Badass Grandpa in his old age. Lunatique over and out.
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Late to the party, work's been really crazy.


Who'd have thought there'd be an entire episode devoted to romantic entanglements (spoken with a disdainful sniff) in a 12-episode season? I might have been disappointed, except the episode has good character and relationship developments, sets up a new antagonist, and also builds up to what will probably be an important part of the season arc.

As others have said, a great thing about this episode is that the relationships have the actual chaos and confusion of young romance, or romance in general for that matter. It was entertaining to watch these teenagers struggle to figure out their lives and relationships, priorities and values.

The impetuousness and occasional thoughtlessness that characterize Korra were out in full force when she super-awkwardly courted Mako and unintentionally hurt Bolin in the process. When things came down to the wire, though, her unbending will and the desire to do right by her friends won the day. I think this might be a reflection of her character arc--stumbling progress, huge setbacks, and final heroics.

Mako showed some very interesting new facets in this episode. While his dithering between Asami and Korra is your run-of-the-mill confusion for the most part, I think a part of him, maybe on an unconscious level, finds it hard to let go of the very real material benefits of dating Hiroshi Sato's daughter.

This isn't a slam on his character but rather a natural outgrowth of his life experiences. He's had to survive on zero material advantages while caring for a younger brother since he was a child himself. How could a guy who's lived through all that be blind to the allure of the the life Asami showed him? It doesn't hurt that the girl is drop-dead gorgeous and super nice.

All this is hinted in the conversation with Bolin when Mako says it makes more "sense" for him to go after Asami. Of course it makes a ton of sense to go after Asami, but his feelings for Korra don't go away; instead it makes itself known in uglier forms like jealousy and wild accusations of Korra playing his brother against him. Whatever, dude. You could double as an IMAX theater with all that projecting you're doing.

I think the question of Makorra, and Mako's character in general, will come down to whether he can turn away from what seems the certain road to face dark thickets of emotion. Mako's resourcefulness and reason are traits that define him, have had to define him growing up under pressure and in danger. It'll be fascinating to see if he can use his head without letting it use him.

And Bolin. I could be biased because I like the character so much already, but he really earned my respect this episode. He had the courage to go after what he wanted, didn't shy away from pain when it hit him, and bounded back from his lows without a grudge. I mean, it's rough to see the girl you like kissing your brother on the night of your greatest triumph. Bolin didn't deny those feelings and let it distort him, though, not like the way Mako tried to deny his feelings for Korra until they came out twisted into jealousy and paranoia. Bolin accepted he was in pain, experienced it to the fullest, and came back from it.

It's the kind of healthy, honest emotional response that I didn't expect from a boy who grew up in circumstances of such uncertainty and want, and I think it says a lot about both brothers. It shows how strong Bolin is emotionally, and also how good a job Mako did of providing him with emotional if not material stability. It's hard to afford that kind of genuineness unless you have a bone-deep sense of assurance that someone loves you without reservations and has your back no matter what. For Bolin I think that someone was Mako, even when Mako was the one to hurt him.

I also got my wished-for Borra dates, and they were just what I expected: Fun times between friends who don't have a scrap of romantic potential. Well, maybe Bolin felt something, but I personally believe he confused camaraderie for chemistry as young guys sometimes do. You know, when their romantic imagination is limited to "my best bud, but with a body I'm attracted to." I really hope Korra and Bolin spend more time together because they could get into some crazy funny situations. 

In the end, more than romance, I think this episode was about tempering the friendship between the Fire Ferrets by putting them through the chaos of adolescent hormones. While the evidence grows stronger that Makorra will happen in the end, the developments in this episode also make it clear that they have a lot of maturing to do first. That's fine, since their mutual trust is what's really important for the far greater pressures they'll face as the Equalist threat escalates.

And while at first glance little happened on the plot front, I'm pretty sure the Fire Ferrets' advance in the pro bending arena is an important element of the overall plot. Pro-bending is such a crucial symbol of benders and what they stand for, I find it hard to believe Amon will sit out the final match. The scenes in the arena also served as elegant counterpoints to the relationship chaos the team was going through, so there was some beautiful economy in the writing there in serving both character and plot needs.

There were also an interesting tidbit about Tenzin's dating history, and I guess it's pretty inevitable to speculate that the ex-girlfriend was Lin. I mean she's the only other person we know from that generation, and it seems consistent enough with their interaction. I really hope it's not Lin, though, since there's almost no way to handle the situation without Lin being the career-driven sour grapes to Pema's sweet housebound fertility. Or maybe that's my own sour grapes speaking.

But I mean, did anyone else think Pema was a little smug about it all? Whoever this lady was it was no doubt an awkward situation at the time for her and Tenzin, and Pema walked away from it singing with her man? Ah well, it probably doesn't matter now since it was over a decade ago. Whoever the person is she most likely has an awesome life herself and remembers the past as fondly as Tenzin and Pema do. Just please don't let it be Lin.

I don't have a whole lot to say about Tahno. So far the guy seems the typical arrogant athlete, though he became a whole lot more sinister than your average bully with that end-of-episode match. Good job on the writers' part not showing that match, since that builds  suspense and makes the Wolfbats even more sinister. This Tahno dude is also a good indication of how diverse a place Republic City is. With his pale, pointed features I'd have sworn he was Fire Nation, yet he's a waterbender. I like it when a character illustrates the nuances of the world so succinctly, but the ATLA/LoK team has always been good at doing this kind of worldbuilding without making a big deal of it. It's why the world comes alive so well.

All right, I've rambled enough. This was an enjoyable sports and sex episode, and more besides. Can't wait to see where things go from here.

ljwrites: A typewriter with multicolored butterflies on it. (Default)
Another week, another Korra episode. While I found plenty to like in Episode 4, I thought the writing could have cohered around a theme a bit better. This is parallel to my small complaint about Episode 2 dropping the Equalist plot, as though character/relationship development and the larger plot can't possibly share the same episode.

Other than that bit of complaint, this episode was a lot of fun. The part the episode focused on--character development for Korra--worked well, and I liked the explosive thrown into the shipping docks. The events of forty-two years ago will likely come back to haunt the city and provide plenty of intrigue along the way.

I solemnly swear to spoil you rotten )

Good episode overall, with a lot of buildup for character and plot if not a killer pace. If this were a Primetime Adventures session it would be a character episode rather than a plot episode. I look forward to what the creators do with all this foreshadowing.
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Moving on from Part 1 on the characters and shipping, this section of the review is about the main adversaries Amon and the Equalists. I'd like to talk about why these guys (and they do mostly seem to be guys, though I'd love a ruthless female villain, too) are so dangerous, and why they make excellent long-term adversaries.

Why these are very scary people )

But good as he is Amon will slip, I think, and he will have blind spots occasioned, perhaps, by his very brilliance. And it is that moment, when the writer's stand-in loses control and the story takes on a life of its own, that truly great story is born. I look forward to that moment, because the bigger they are, the harder they fall--and what a show that will be. I will revel in Amon's fall, even as I mourn what is already proving to be a great villain.
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Woo-hoo! Episode 3 of LoK was a blast!!

After a short break in Episode 2, the Equalist plot (both in the story sense and in-world sense) picks up with a vengeance. I was blown away by the expert pace of the writing, the action sequences, everything. I still find Korra's voice acting to be occasionally flat, though that could be the sound quality talking. I CAN'T GET IT ON THE TV MACHINE, OKAY? OKAY!

On the characters and their relationships )

Next: Why I want to be an Equalist when I grow up.