The finale of Avatar: The Last Airbender, definitive and cohesive as it was, providing an end to a villainous regime as its protagonist finally reached his full potential, did offer up one question: Where do we go from here? A war that lasted a century, eradicated an entire culture, decimated another, and subjugated a third would leave its victors and survivors looking for answers and blame, and the world they lived in would never be the same as it once was.The Legend of Korra Season 1-4 Download.
The Legend of Korra (which premiered on Nickelodeon on April 14, 2012), set 70 years after the conclusion of The Last Airbender, offers some answers: Territory annexed during wartime has been converted into a democratic republic where people of all four nations, element benders and non-benders alike, live amongst each other. Aang has died, and with his death his Avatar self has been reborn as Korra, of the Southern Water Tribe, a powerful bender who has mastered three of the four elements by the time the show starts. Advancements in technology mean factories are now automated, people drive around in vehicles, and inflatable flying warships have become enormous passenger zeppelins.
There’s a lot to love about The Legend of Korra. Korra herself is a buff, self-assured, refreshingly new approach to the Avatar—the polar opposite of gentle, meditative Aang in every way. Her band of friends, the new “Team Avatar,” consists of pro-bending hotties Mako, a firebender, his earthbender brother Bolin, and rich heiress Asami, whose father’s company is one of the harbingers of the industrial age. Korra’s airbending teacher is Tenzin, Aang’s now middle-aged son, father of three plucky young airbenders and often something of an Uncle Iroh surrogate, offering sage advice during Korra’s toughest hours.