
By: Michael Dante DiMartino, Joshua Hamilton, Tim Hedrick (story)
The Story: To make a better world, it’s got to be a more violent, crime-ridden one first.
The Review: Gol-ly! It’s been ages, hasn’t it? Mostly my fault; with Korra now exclusively an online show, you’d think I’d have more freedom to watch it than ever, but that hasn’t been the case, unfortunately. My internet being unreliable as it is, it was often the case that I’d stream about five minutes of an episode before the whole thing cut out and I’d have to rejigger the connection to get it back on. Ultimately, I found it easier to—ahem—torrent the episodes and watch them at leisure. Please don’t tell anyone.
In a way, though, it’s nice to review a whole batch of episodes at once because you come away with a better sense of Korra‘s big picture and tackle some big points all at once. For example, instead of spending a paragraph every week rhapsodizing over the gorgeous bending sequences we’ve gotten lately, I can just use this one paragraph to say these are some gorgeous bending sequences. If the Powers That Be ever get foolhardy enough to attempt a live-action adaptation of this series, I’m positive no budget will be able to capture the pulsing choreography and lithe movements of multiple benders flinging, thrusting, whipping their various elements at each other.
Filed under: Reviews | Tagged: Asami, Bolin, Joshua Hamilton, Korra, Mako, Michael Dante DiMartino, The Legend of Korra, The Legend of Korra S03E09, The Legend of Korra S03E09 review, The Legend of Korra S03E10, The Legend of Korra S03E10 review, The Legend of Korra S03E11, The Legend of Korra S03E11 review, The Legend of Korra S03E12, The Legend of Korra S03E12 review, The Legend of Korra S03E13, The Legend of Korra S03E13 review, Tim Hedrick | 3 Comments »






