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February 12, 2012

Home > Movies > Reviews > 2010
The Last Airbender
The successful children's adventure series could have made for a stellar big-screen blockbuster. Unfortunately, this isn't it.






The Last Airbender

Our rating: 1 Star - Weak Your rating:


Your Comments: see all

MPAA rating: PG
(for fantasy action violence)

Genre: Fantasy

Theater release:
July 01, 2010
by Paramount

Directed by: M. Night Shyamalan

Runtime: 1 hour 35 minutes

Cast: Noah Ringer (Aang), Dev Patel (Prince Zuko), Nicola Peltz (Katara), Jackson Rathbone (Sokka), Shaun Toub (Iroh), Aasif Mandvi (Commander Zhao)

Related:
Talk About It/Family Corner


In the press notes accompanying The Last Airbender, director M. Night Shyamalan says he's always dreamed of making a big movie franchise a la Star Wars or Harry Potter. But I can't see that dream becoming a reality. Airbender feels like an overt bid to kick-start a big-budget action-adventure franchise, but it doesn't feel like a movie that actually deserves any sequels.

It's pretty easy to pin the film's failures on Shyamalan himself. The movie is based on an animated Nickelodeon series that was, for its three seasons, a hit with audiences, a ratings earner, and an award winner (include Emmys and Annies). The source material was more than up to snuff, a rich starting point for a big-screen adventure franchise. With its own epic mythology and enticing mixture of martial arts, fantasy, and character-building, this story could have worked well as a nice trilogy of summer blockbusters.

But alas, the once-promising Shyamalan, after making the modern-day classic The Sixth Sense and the dark, undervalued gem Unbreakable, is a director who seems increasingly consumed by his own ego, making movies that reek of the Shyamalan style but have none of the Shyamalan magic. Signs was a hit with audiences, but reviews were mixed; The Village is generally considered to be a letdown, and both Lady in the Water and The Happening met with such bad reviews, they were essentially D.O.A.

Noah Ringer as Aang
Noah Ringer as Aang

So Shyamalan has turned his attention from leaden, implausible suspense thrillers to a tin-eared, clumsy summer adventure; it's a change of pace, but hardly a creative rebirth. To his credit, Airbender bears few stylistic similarities to his earlier movies, and rarely feels as though he's trying to hijack the popular source material. That said, he's been working in the suspense realm for far too long, and it shows here: Rather than being light and nimble, Airbender is dark, solemn, and self-serious—all the things most moviegoers don't want in a summer adventure flick, particularly one geared toward families.

For those unfamiliar with the cartoon, Shyamalan spends plenty of time explaining the backstory. It's a fantasy quest story in the Tolkien mold, set in a world that's split into four nations—Fire, Water, Earth, and Air. Within each nation, there are a few preternaturally gifted conjurers called Benders, who are able to manipulate the element for which their nation is named (a practice the film portrays as a mixture of kung-fu posturing and mysticism). But there aren't many Benders left, because the malevolent Fire Nation has waged war on the other three, gradually taking over the whole world and eradicating all other Benders as a way to maintain their power.

Dev Patel as Prince Zuko
Dev Patel as Prince Zuko

Enter the Avatar—a chosen, long-promised hero in the vein of Luke Skywalker or The Matrix's Neo. The Avatar is the only one who can bend all four elements—and thus, the only one who can restore balance to the world and end the Fire Nation's evil domination. We are introduced to the Avatar early in the movie, and most of the movie follows his Frodo-like quest into the heart of enemy territory—aided by friends and beset by foes at every turn—through various battles, twists, and revelations.

If that sounds like a fair amount of plot to fit into one movie, it is—and the film is barely over 90 minutes. Actually showing us all of this would be too much, of course, so Shyamalan packs his movie with exposition and explanation; there are far too many scenes of new characters and plot twists being introduced not visually, but through other characters simply telling the audience what is going on.

Nicola Peltz as Katara
Nicola Peltz as Katara

It's one of many ways in which Airbender is crippled by its director's own franchise ambitions; this is a movie that begins with text reading "Book One" and ends with a sequel-promising cliffhanger, and everything in between seems custom designed not to tell a story so much as to set up further stories for down the road. The whole movie simply goes through the motions of visiting various locales and establishing character backstories in a way that makes it feel like one overblown "origins" flashback.




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[Reader Reviews]

Displaying 1–3 of 8 comments

J Hall

July 26, 2010  3:58pm

*movie -- typo

J Hall

July 26, 2010  3:58pm

Loved this family! Definitely wonderful for the whole family!! Loved the special effects!! :)

Guest Reviewer

July 15, 2010  8:21pm

Terrible movie.

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