AV Club reviewed
Three Men and Adena today in the Homicide recaps. I still can't watch it very often, but I highly, highly recommend anyone who is interested in phenomenal television to watch it as soon as they can get their hands on it, because it is one of the most amazing and brutal hours of television ever filmed, if not the most amazing
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I'm not sure how I feel about how the Southern Raiders would have gone with Sokka instead of Katara...I can't really decide. I did always want more from Sokka re: his mom's death. It's presented as very much Katara's issue, which I don't mind, but I found it strange that the death had such an impact on Katara without really exploring what it meant for Sokka.
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Yeah, I'm glad for him personally, because I didn't want to see him kill anyone, but yes.
I did always want more from Sokka re: his mom's death. It's presented as very much Katara's issue, which I don't mind, but I found it strange that the death had such an impact on Katara without really exploring what it meant for Sokka.
I guess we did get the lovely scene in The Runaway where he tells Toph that he sees Katara's face instead of Kya's now when he thinks about who took care of him, but yeah. I mean, they were able to give both Sokka and Katara emotional arcs with Hakoda.
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Well, they could do that because Hakoda's still alive, you know? With their mom, Sokka's got the sorrow of losing her and the fading memories, but Katara's also got the raging guilt of being the last person to see her mom alive. What if she'd been able to run faster? What if she'd been a capable waterbender? That's been gnawing at her ever since, in a way that it probably couldn't for Sokka.
With regards to Aang and his past lives, I find it interesting that the only one who actually said something even approaching "you're going to have to kill him" was Yangchen. Roku and Kuruk just said "You need to do something (unlike us)" and Kyoshi said "Whatever you do, face up to it and be honest about it." And Aang *did* make the decision "I need to kill the Fire Lord." And *then* the whole ( ... )
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Oh, I agree. I also think that when Katara says "You didn't love her like I did!" she's just being hurtful and also, yeah, the guilt is still eating at her.
And Aang *did* make the decision "I need to kill the Fire Lord."
You're right. I'd forgotten that he actually does say it in all the lion-turtleness of the ending. I actually really liked that it was the airbender avatar who told him that. Because the avatar is in a more difficult position than a regular airbender monk, who would probably never be called upon to save the world.
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