
Now that the Korra series finale one-two punch of "The Day of the Colossus" and "The Last Stand" are available for all the world to stream, I found myself circling back to this post - a single fan who accurately predicted the ending of the entire series, not because of plot context clues (there were some, but they were largely inconclusive) but because that’s what she genuinely wanted to see happen. And those hopes, bless them, included defending the series well after it's over. That’s when I found this post:Īlready fans had hopes and expectations. The last few episodes have been released on and later aired on television, but the web became the place to be a Korra fan ( as a recent poll revealed, it’s the most blogged and re-blogged animated show on Tumblr), so it was last night that I was trolling through the fandom seeing if Nickelodeon managed to keep the wraps on its series finale after two seasons of digital madness. The fourth season started a mere month after the third ended and although fans were elated for the fourth and final installment, Korra had been hobbled in the ratings game beyond repair. Where as the title of the previous series focused on a young boy, the last of the Air Nomads, this one focused on the narrative of our heroine. Where the original series played more Lord of the Rings for preteens, Korra ended up being about the transition from childhood to adulthood and was made for everybody. It’s been a far cry from a series that introduced “bending” elemental combat as a way of having fighting without physical contact or weapons. Since, Avatar Korra has taken down a revolution of non-benders, her spiritual nemesis that posses her Uncle, a roving gang of the world’s most dangerous anarchists and a dictator with global aspirations. The new series, Korra, introduced us to the titular female Avatar as a teenager on the brink of learning the last of the world’s four core bending skills. Night Shamalan for a live action film adaptation of their first animated series, Avatar: The Last Airbender, creators Bryan konietzko and Michael Dante DiMartino returned to their fantasy universe decades after where they left off on Nickelodeon.

After getting a franchise black eye by swimming too close to then-drowning man M. The Legend of Korra on Nickelodeon completed its four season run last night by releasing its final two episodes online at.
