List of Changes to Legend of Korra
Jun. 25th, 2012 04:20 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This is a list of theoretical changes I would make to Legend of Korra, Season 1. It is by no means complete, and specific scene-rewrites are a long way off.
Two options- one, for Mako to be less of an ass. Two, for Mako to act as he does, but have him be called on it, eventually realize that he needs to shape up his attitude, and make adjustments. He’s got reasons for being an ass, but it does not constitute an emergency on anyone else’s part.
More emphasis on the friendship between all the members of Team Avatar- more of them doing stuff together, of them being an actual team outside of pro-bending, investigating the goings-on of Equalists and of occasionally fighting crime. I can see this ending up with Korra and friends getting celebrity reputations in the papers as hell-raising stars, and further genuine annoyance on the part of Lin when they brush with the law. Gives Mako the opportunity for tension over "This tournament is how my brother and I are supposed to survive! How can you endanger that?!" Also gives Sato the opportunity to show some foreshadowing of his big turnaround, talking to Asami about she can choose her own friends, but is running around with these hoodlums really behavior worthy of her or her mother?
Gives a chance to actually have a Team Avatar and show the main characters as friends with a bond worth fighting for, as well as showing how their position is affecting other parts of their lives.
More build-up to the finale, more interaction with young General Iroh to get a feel of what’s happening, him knowing what’s at stake and being a great tactitian and adult leader as well as a badass warrior. Take the awesome, but make it more all-around and believable, have him fulfill a role of competent adult that’s missing with Tenzin captured rather than just have him there for the hadoken quotient.
Also, the hell happened to the majority of the fleet? Have him sound a retreat at least, or show him pissed beyond telling at the destruction and the slaughter of his men.
Asami gets to be badass, a little moreso. She and Korra should bond, actually interact and have a friendship first, that is then strained by the fact that they both want Mako at first sight. Rather, they come to like each other fast and hard despite their both wanting the same thing, and that’s where the tension comes from. Real passion on everyone’s part.
Also, the thing with her dad- have a little more build-up, having Future Industries/Sato having a reputation for providing equal opportunity and a little bit of an ‘when everyone’s super, no one will be’ reservation about some of his inventions. Sato starts out so friendly and goes so batshit- either emphasize the reason for both the batshit and how out of his way he goes to hide it, show how hurt he is as a widower; or emphasize how he might have turned to the cause in its early days as a form of catharsis, believed it when it was believable, but now he’s in way over his head and Amon has dirt on him, perhaps even a threat to Asami.
Amon and Tarlock- need to think more on this. Certainly the reveal finally answered questions, but it also stole a little of Amon’s thunder and didn’t clarify how he got mixed up in or started the Equalist stuff. I still really like the idea of a Koh connection- have it be that Noatauk escaped his father’s influence, raging over both being controlled and being controlled by the weak, wanting to both find his place and punish the world for making him monstrous and confining him by the rules of unworthy people. So he makes his way to the spirit world, and maybe has a little conversation- and Koh has an opportunity to test this generation’s Avatar and punish them if they fail, setting a great upheaval into motion. I kind of think of Koh as someone who sneakily starts shit in order to both entertain himself, to push for change over stasis no matter who it hurts, and in order to show people their true faces. One of those nasty but ambiguous spirits, he serves a purpose.
Have this connection be subtle, alluded to, but something to be explored for later seasons.
At the end, when Korra’s bending cannot be restored, she grieves and gets depressed for a while, not just for herself, but because she cannot help anyone else who was psychically maimed by Amon. After a few months, some meditation, she goes on a spirit quest, going off onto the ice with Naga, a sled and a tent and the intention to keep going until she finds the cracks between the worlds and gets her answers.
On the spirit quest, she finally makes contact with Aang, who talks with her about what it means to be the Avatar, and how perception shapes things. Amon acted evilly and falsely, but the Equalists did have a point- Kyoshi created the Dai Li to protect the culture of Ba Sing Se, but the peasants probably had a damn good reason to revolt to the point where the kingdom was going to tear itself apart. And now, Korra has lost most of her bending abilities- but she is still the young woman who stood in the role of Avatar, who knows people from all over the world, who fought as hard as she could to protect everyone. Can she accept this, live with the scars of her experience but give up selfish attachment and hold to her rock-steady convictions, to hold on to her passionate love for her family and her world and continue to be their protector for as long as she is able to draw breath?
Korra finds that she can, and even if she can’t- she must. Because that is what it means to be the Avatar, and to be her.
And then Aang takes her back, sweeping through generations of the cycle until they meet an Avatar from some few thousand years back. She is Water-tribe, a peacemaker, an innovator- and a blood-bender. It is a tool that can be used for good or ill, she teaches to Korra, and a technique that has many uses to enhance both a warrior and a healer’s abilities. In her time, she used it to pacify warzones without bloodshed, forcing truce and treaties between people whom she simply would not allow to murder each other without talking. She also knows, from consulting with Aang, about the technique the Lion-Turtle had taught, and how Amon might have mimicked its effects with his advanced abilities to play with a body’s chi, through the same pathways of healing, bloodbending, and affecting the spirit via both.
And between the three of them, they manage to come up with a healing technique Korra can try to restore both her bending and that of Amon’s victims. It takes time to accomplish, especially for those whose bloodbending is not nearly as honed and refined (or naturally inclined to be bloodbending as was in Yakone’s line)- but it can be done.
And thus young, brash, badass warrior Korra becomes a spiritually-enlightened Avatar, as well as a healer who has truly earned her miracles and works hard for years to bring them to the rest of the world.
Things to Change in Legend of Korra-
Two options- one, for Mako to be less of an ass. Two, for Mako to act as he does, but have him be called on it, eventually realize that he needs to shape up his attitude, and make adjustments. He’s got reasons for being an ass, but it does not constitute an emergency on anyone else’s part.
More emphasis on the friendship between all the members of Team Avatar- more of them doing stuff together, of them being an actual team outside of pro-bending, investigating the goings-on of Equalists and of occasionally fighting crime. I can see this ending up with Korra and friends getting celebrity reputations in the papers as hell-raising stars, and further genuine annoyance on the part of Lin when they brush with the law. Gives Mako the opportunity for tension over "This tournament is how my brother and I are supposed to survive! How can you endanger that?!" Also gives Sato the opportunity to show some foreshadowing of his big turnaround, talking to Asami about she can choose her own friends, but is running around with these hoodlums really behavior worthy of her or her mother?
Gives a chance to actually have a Team Avatar and show the main characters as friends with a bond worth fighting for, as well as showing how their position is affecting other parts of their lives.
More build-up to the finale, more interaction with young General Iroh to get a feel of what’s happening, him knowing what’s at stake and being a great tactitian and adult leader as well as a badass warrior. Take the awesome, but make it more all-around and believable, have him fulfill a role of competent adult that’s missing with Tenzin captured rather than just have him there for the hadoken quotient.
Also, the hell happened to the majority of the fleet? Have him sound a retreat at least, or show him pissed beyond telling at the destruction and the slaughter of his men.
Asami gets to be badass, a little moreso. She and Korra should bond, actually interact and have a friendship first, that is then strained by the fact that they both want Mako at first sight. Rather, they come to like each other fast and hard despite their both wanting the same thing, and that’s where the tension comes from. Real passion on everyone’s part.
Also, the thing with her dad- have a little more build-up, having Future Industries/Sato having a reputation for providing equal opportunity and a little bit of an ‘when everyone’s super, no one will be’ reservation about some of his inventions. Sato starts out so friendly and goes so batshit- either emphasize the reason for both the batshit and how out of his way he goes to hide it, show how hurt he is as a widower; or emphasize how he might have turned to the cause in its early days as a form of catharsis, believed it when it was believable, but now he’s in way over his head and Amon has dirt on him, perhaps even a threat to Asami.
Amon and Tarlock- need to think more on this. Certainly the reveal finally answered questions, but it also stole a little of Amon’s thunder and didn’t clarify how he got mixed up in or started the Equalist stuff. I still really like the idea of a Koh connection- have it be that Noatauk escaped his father’s influence, raging over both being controlled and being controlled by the weak, wanting to both find his place and punish the world for making him monstrous and confining him by the rules of unworthy people. So he makes his way to the spirit world, and maybe has a little conversation- and Koh has an opportunity to test this generation’s Avatar and punish them if they fail, setting a great upheaval into motion. I kind of think of Koh as someone who sneakily starts shit in order to both entertain himself, to push for change over stasis no matter who it hurts, and in order to show people their true faces. One of those nasty but ambiguous spirits, he serves a purpose.
Have this connection be subtle, alluded to, but something to be explored for later seasons.
At the end, when Korra’s bending cannot be restored, she grieves and gets depressed for a while, not just for herself, but because she cannot help anyone else who was psychically maimed by Amon. After a few months, some meditation, she goes on a spirit quest, going off onto the ice with Naga, a sled and a tent and the intention to keep going until she finds the cracks between the worlds and gets her answers.
On the spirit quest, she finally makes contact with Aang, who talks with her about what it means to be the Avatar, and how perception shapes things. Amon acted evilly and falsely, but the Equalists did have a point- Kyoshi created the Dai Li to protect the culture of Ba Sing Se, but the peasants probably had a damn good reason to revolt to the point where the kingdom was going to tear itself apart. And now, Korra has lost most of her bending abilities- but she is still the young woman who stood in the role of Avatar, who knows people from all over the world, who fought as hard as she could to protect everyone. Can she accept this, live with the scars of her experience but give up selfish attachment and hold to her rock-steady convictions, to hold on to her passionate love for her family and her world and continue to be their protector for as long as she is able to draw breath?
Korra finds that she can, and even if she can’t- she must. Because that is what it means to be the Avatar, and to be her.
And then Aang takes her back, sweeping through generations of the cycle until they meet an Avatar from some few thousand years back. She is Water-tribe, a peacemaker, an innovator- and a blood-bender. It is a tool that can be used for good or ill, she teaches to Korra, and a technique that has many uses to enhance both a warrior and a healer’s abilities. In her time, she used it to pacify warzones without bloodshed, forcing truce and treaties between people whom she simply would not allow to murder each other without talking. She also knows, from consulting with Aang, about the technique the Lion-Turtle had taught, and how Amon might have mimicked its effects with his advanced abilities to play with a body’s chi, through the same pathways of healing, bloodbending, and affecting the spirit via both.
And between the three of them, they manage to come up with a healing technique Korra can try to restore both her bending and that of Amon’s victims. It takes time to accomplish, especially for those whose bloodbending is not nearly as honed and refined (or naturally inclined to be bloodbending as was in Yakone’s line)- but it can be done.
And thus young, brash, badass warrior Korra becomes a spiritually-enlightened Avatar, as well as a healer who has truly earned her miracles and works hard for years to bring them to the rest of the world.