anghraine: noatak/amon from legend of korra standing atop a waterspout overlooking buildings with equalist flags (noatak [waterspout])
My best friend and I were talking about the ways that Legend of Korra does and doesn't work for us, and particularly about the way it feels very erratic on a craft level where ATLA is pretty consistently good to great, yet ultimately LOK engages us both more. Inevitably, we wound around to a point of firm agreement: excepting Unalaq and Vaatu in B2, we consider the main villains of LOK a lot more personally and thematically interesting than Ozai and this has a weird effect on LOK's politics.

I drafted a far longer post about this [ETA: lmao], but anyway: there are many obviously progressive elements to ATLA. Ozai as a villain is fundamentally aligned with things antithetical to progressive ideals. He is a hereditary autocrat carrying on a multi-generational campaign of imperialism that historically (in the show) has been justified by familiar bigoted, reactionary rationales about civilizing and bringing prosperity to other cultures. He's overwhelmingly authoritarian in every aspect of life—as a ruler, as a conqueror, as a father, as a husband. He's less a person than an embodiment of domination, imperialism, autocracy. And the ultimate solution that ATLA provides for the problem of Ozai is 1) a greater power defeating him in combat and 2) replacing him with a good autocrat.

That's not a charitable characterization of a beautifully executed and emotionally satisfying conclusion. And I think the underlying rationale for that resolution owes more to ATLA's mythic and fantastic structure than to any serious commitment to the "what we really need is a good dictator" form of political discourse that has unfortunately become increasingly common. But solving the problem of imperialism with a Chosen One and a kinder and softer absolute ruler over the imperialists is not ... exactly a radical solution, let's say. It's not that different from, say, Lord of the Rings.

It works for ATLA's story! I just don't feel that this resolution is particularly daring or transgressive in the way that it is sometimes represented as being. Other aspects of ATLA are much more daring and revolutionary than this, but the core politics just don't feel that way to me.

LOK, by contrast, has a lot of centrist-at-best baggage. It would take awhile to detail all of this (the fantasy copaganda is probably the most obvious), but it's especially apparent with the villains. LOK essentially has a revolving door of major villains who are each very different in personality, goals, motives, politics, and symbolic alignments, but thematically unified by one very familiar concept that is obvious even before it's explicitly spelled out in B4.

I've talked about this before in relation to LOK and had plenty of criticism of it (here and here), but the basic idea is this: What if the villain actually has the right idea, but just goes too far?

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anghraine: a picture of multnomah falls in oregon: a tall waterfall with a wooden bridge connecting either side (multnomah)

Poll #29117 Shipping Poll 1k
This poll is anonymous.
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 4

According to you, which ship is better?

View Answers

Mako/Asami Sato
1 (25.0%)

Andreth/Finrod
3 (75.0%)

anghraine: tarrlok glowering through his hair; text: lost (tarrlok [lost])
An anon said:

AU where Mako and Bolin completely fuck up Amon and Tarrlok's plans before the escalations (they see Noatak practicing his waterbending one day, and Bolin recognizes his voice from "The Revelation;" they notice he looks like Tarrlok; Bolin blurts out "Councilman! Amon is your brother!" at a press meeting; they describe Noatak's appearance and voice; Tarrlok puts two and two together). How different would everything be?

I replied:

Hmm, it’s pretty hard for me to see Mako and Bolin putting the pieces together on that alone, or probably having that much access to Tarrlok. Even if they did, I think Tarrlok would be mind-meltingly enraged (on both the ‘dead brother’ and ‘nuclear hatred of Amon’ fronts) and instantly have them thrown out without actually being able to accept the conclusion himself. It probably wouldn’t change a whole lot in the long run.

Buuuut.

I could envision some scenario where Bolin associates Amon and Tarrlok (“they’re practically brothers if you think about it…”) and Aang sends his loudest YES! THEY’RE BROTHERS! SOMEONE LISTEN vibes to Korra, who’s like … yeah, Bolin, you’re right, lol, imagine if they were (Aang: AGHHHHH). But she has a ‘weird feeling’ about the whole idea, and she and Mako start to suspect that there’s some connection between Amon and Tarrlok that Aang is trying to communicate, even though of course they’re not literal brothers.

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anghraine: vader extending his lightsaber; text: and now for the airing of grievances! (Default)
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