Republic City Dispatch

Tag: film

Holy cow! Legend of Korra Sound Designer and our friend Ben Wynn (aka Deru) just released his latest album… as a hand-carved wooden video projector! That’s really just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to 1979, which combines Ben’s ambient sounds, short films, and an interactive web element to build a fascinating mythology. Ben teased 1979 on our “Sounds of Book 2” podcast, but we highly recommend exploring the album’s companion website and picking up the album in digital, vinyl, or projector form. 1979 is its own brand of cool.

– Patches

Hey guys! I have to call you on your “prequel story” gripe, citing, of course, midichlorians. First, midichlorians are not the Force, just as Raava is not bending (however she technically is the Avatar spirit, or a component of it). Second, just because you found The Phantom Menace to be a disengaged slog (I happen to find it a brilliant work of science fiction), that doesn’t mean that all origin stories should be feared, and that revealing details about a mythical universe should be discouraged

Fair enough. The Phantom Menace is a good movie with some brilliant design work, and really, that podrace is still a mesmerizing sensory experience (although Da7e makes fun of me for enjoying SW: TPM because I fell asleep for 20 minutes of the 3D re-release when we saw it at midnight — long story). I would like Phantom Menace more if it weren’t a Star Wars movie or one that didn’t tie back to the Anakin Skywalker mythology.

Origin stories/prequels make sense to us fans. We want more answers because we love the mythology. But what I think we actually want is more of what made the first films/shows brilliant — and lingering mysteries are part of that. Beginnings Part 1 & 2 works because we only get a few answers. We can sit here mulling over the intricacies of becoming an Avatar, where the spirits came from and went, and a 1,000 other conjurations we unearth while scrutinizing the episodes. For me, TPM goes too far. Where did Anakin come from? Here. Why is he bad? Here’s why. How does The Force work? Here’s how.

I fear origin stories and prequels because they often cater too much to the fandom, existing to answer rather than tell a story worth investing in. I think we all loved Wan’s story because it catapults the Avatar universe back in the same way Korra propelled it forward. Again, it’s about reverse and forward engineering and watching how time affects the universe. TPM doesn’t really do that. It makes callbacks. It tips its hat. It’s the wrong kind of prequelization and it’s a symbol for how fiction can be responsive to fan cries for explanations.

We should never be into Korra or any show for the details. This is not why we love things, although it often clouds our view. It’s fun to theorize and get pumped for big reveals. But less is always more in this case. Especially with prequels.

Here’s my question to everyone, using Star Wars as an example: They want to make a prequel film centered on Yoda, what his life was like before TPM. What would make you want to see that film? What is Yoda’s story about and why are his early years essential to that arc?

Even though Beginners was about Wan, I learned a lot about Korra during the episodes. In TPM, I don’t know if I learned anything more about the Star Wars U and Darth Vader, mythologically or emotionally. 

– Matt

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