![]() ![]() ![]() So bending is just a matter of manipulating the elements. ![]() So, this Waterbending/Airbending lark then (gosh, this episode does lay out quite a lot in under twenty-five minutes)… Early on in the episode, Sokka describes Waterbending as “an ancient art unique to our culture blah blah blah”, and Aang notes that his Airbending allows him to manipulate the air currents around him so he can fly. How does Zuko’s honour “hinge on the Avatar’s capture” and why? We’ll be seeing a bit more of them next week… There’s a Fire Nation ship out looking for the Avatar and Aang = AvatarĪboard the ship are Iroh, a warrior and eccentric tea-loving old man, and Prince Zuko, an ill-tempered young man driven by the desire to restore his honour.Aang has been frozen for a hundred years and knows nothing about the ongoing war Avatar: The Last Airbender is an American animated television series created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko.It first aired on February 21, 2005, on Nickelodeon with a one-hour series premiere and concluded its run with a two-hour TV movie on July 19, 2008.(The first catchphrase of the show, said whenever Aang mounts Appa: “Yip-yip!”) There are, however, two spanners in the works here: He’s got barrels of energy, is good with kids and has been awoken from self-induced cryogenic freezing alongside a flying bison called Appa. In that iceberg lies Aang, one of the Air Nomads and, wouldn’t you believe it, an Airbender. While out fishing, the siblings get into an argument that triggers Katara’s waterbending (more on that later) and results in the breaking of an iceberg.
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