Product Description
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Avatar: The Complete Book One DVD Box Set includes the
collection of all Avatar Water Nation episodes. This six-disc set
will center on the Water Nation and its characters in 20 Avatar
episodes (Chapters 1-20), Five DVD’s plus a bonus disc filled
with incredible special features!
.com
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Book 1: Water, Vol. 1
Mysterious, visually beautiful at times, and surprisingly funny,
Avatar: Book 1, Volume 1 is the exciting story of Aang, a
12-year-old reincarnation of the ancient Avatar, whose purpose
(in an imagined world that seems both ancient and futuristic) is
to restore peace and order between warring armies of the four
elements: fire, earth, water, and air. At one time or another,
over thousands of years, the Avatar has been embodied in masters
of each of the elements. Aang (who is freed from a century-long
inside an iceberg) happens to be an "airbender," capable of
using air and wind as powerful forces for moving objects and
defeating hostile armies of firebenders. The feature-length
Avatar follows Aang and a couple of friends as he becomes
reacquainted with the world he knew before his 100-year
hibernation--a world now lost to history. The story also concerns
internal dramas within the unforgiving world of firebenders, who
are intent on destruction and conquest. This engaging story, very
pleasant to look at in its rich tones of blue and orange, is for
all ages. --Tom Keogh
Book 1: Water, Vol. 2
Avatar The Last Airbender, Book 1: Water, Volume 2 continues the
adventurous if half-comic journey of 12-year-old Airbender Aang,
reincarnation of an ancient avatar, and his friends Katara and
Sokka as they seek a teacher to help Aang fulfill his peacemaking
destiny in a war-torn world. The four episodes on this disc, a
follow-up to the elegant, magical series introduction, find the
trio wandering through sundry Earth Nation cities, where they
encounter signs of troubles between the once-harmonious,
elemental tribes representing fire, earth, air, and water. They
also bump into trouble with the occasional evil kingdom, as in
"The King of Omashu," where Aang must go through various trials
to save Katara and Sokka from a bizarre execution. (They're
encased in growing, crystal structures.) "Imprisoned" finds
Katara inadvertently responsible for the arrest of an
Earthbending boy who dares to use his powers while his people are
under Firebender occupation. The ambitious, two-part "Winter
Solstice" is the best production in this collection, a pairing of
storylines involving the capture of a Firebender war criminal and
the hopes of a frightened village that turns to Aang to defeat a
monster from the spirit world. The action is still original and
fun on this sequel--most of it continues to be based on exciting
uses of the elements--and the lead trio's characters (Aang the
scamp, Katara the idealist, Sokka the skeptic) are still a
pleasure to be with. --Tom Keogh
Book 1: Water, Vol. 3
The Avatar saga continues with four of the anime series'
strongest stories yet on Book 1: Water, Volume 3, mixing goofy
comedy with mythic drama in the spirit of Avatar's magical debut
(Book 1 Water, Volume 1) and engaging follow-up (Book 1 Water,
Volume 2). Volume 3 concerns the continuing (perilous) travels of
Aang, the 12-year-old Airbender destined to heal the rift between
the world's air, water, fire, and earth peoples, and his friends
Katara and Sokka. "The Waterbending Scroll" finds Katara so
jealous over Aang's quick mastery of complicated waterbending
techniques that the trio ends up in trouble with a cluster of
cutthroat pirates. "Jet" is an interesting story of an adolescent
boy leading a Robin Hood-like rebellion against the firebending
occupiers of his land. Charismatic and rakish, Jet makes Katara
swoon and becomes a hero to Aang--until his true colors and
agenda show up later. "The Great Divide" places Aang and company
in the position of mediating a truce between refugees seeking
assistance across a great canyon. Finally, "The Storm" is a
superb piece which shows us, in parallel narratives, how Aang was
fleeing his oppressed life as an avatar-in-training a century
earlier when he became encased in ice, and how the driven,
seemingly merciless Prince Zuko lost his own boyhood innocence
before setting out to capture Aang. This excellent collection
carries on the series' imaginative, graceful animation, making
Avatar a real pleasure to watch. --Tom Keogh
Book 1: Water, Vol. 4
Book 1: Water, Vol. 5
Chapters 17 through 20 of Avatar the Last Airbender: Book 1
Water, Vol. 5 find Aang, the 12-year-old Avatar destined to bring
peace to the world by mastering the four elements, once again in
direct collision with the forces of the Fire nation. In "The
Northern Air Temple," a sad Aang visits the ruins of a monastery
well known to him in his past life. Aang is shocked to discover a
tribe of faux Airbenders living there, presided over by an
inventor with a dark and even treacherous secret. "The
Waterbending Master" introduces Aang to a mentor he would just as
soon avoid: an old Waterbender who can teach him to move, shape,
and fight with liquid, prerequisites to Aang assuming his place
as the worlds savior. Meanwhile, Aang's traveling companion
Katara is frustrated by that same masters refusal to sharpen her
own natural, Waterbending talent; until, that is, an unexpected
link between them becomes clear. (Aang's other friend, Sokka,
stays busy--and crazy--chasing a princess who gives him mixed
signals about her romantic interest.) "The Siege of the North,
Parts 1 and 2" is yet another epic confrontation between Admiral
Zhao's Fire Navy fleet and the Aang gang. The twist this time is
that Zhao attempts the murder of Prince Zuko, an action that
cannot go without consequences. As usual, Avatar is visually
exciting and highly original, an otherworldly yet fully
accessible fantasy full of dreams and good humor. --Tom Keogh