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The Last Airbender Showrunner Felt ‘Intimidated’ Making Netflix Live Action Show Without Original Creators


Summary

  • The live action adaptation of Avatar: The Last Airbender is being made without the original creators, which initially felt daunting and intimidating to the person in charge, Albert Kim.
  • Kim had the opportunity to work alongside the original creators in the early days of the show.
  • The live action adaptation will be a new interpretation of Avatar: The Last Airbender, with some changes to the source material and a different starting point in the story.


Next year’s live action adaptation of the beloved animated series, Avatar: The Last Airbender, has been made without the inclusion of original creators Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko. Now, the man in charge of the live action series, Albert Kim, has opened up about the pressures that came with going it alone, admitting it “absolutely” felt daunting when the creators decided not to be involved in the Netflix series.

Speaking with EW, Kim says he felt “intimidated” after DiMartino and Konietzko walked away from the adaptation after two years of development.

“You’d have to be an idiot not to be intimidated a little bit. My first reaction after ‘Hell yeah!’ was ‘Holy s—! Do I really want to do this? Is there a way to improve upon the original?’ Whenever you tackle something that’s already beloved by millions of fans, you have to ask yourself those questions.”

That intimidation no doubt grew after DiMartino and Konietzko released a statement saying they “couldn’t control the creative direction of the series.” However, while the original creators are no longer involved in Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender, Kim reveals that he was able to work alongside them in the early days of the show.

“It ran the range of really nerdy little things that no one except for diehard fans might wonder about — questions about Katara’s mom or Aang’s parentage — to bigger picture stuff about how to translate what made the original so special into a live-action version.”

Netflix/EW

RELATED: Reasons Why Netflix’s Live-Action Avatar: The Last Airbender Series Could Succeed (& Why It Could Fail)


Albert Kim Says the Netflix Adaptation Will Be ‘Our Version of Avatar: The Last Airbender’

However, while he was able to pick the brains of the original creators, Kim states “This is Avatar: The Last Airbender, but it is our version of Avatar: The Last Airbender.” With this in mind, the live action version will make some changes to the source material along the way. Continuing, Kim reveals that Netflix’s Avatar: The Last Airbender will start from a different point in the story when compared to its animated counterpart, while other events will be “a strict one-to-one adaptation.”

“We don’t start the show the way the animated series starts. That was a conscious decision to show people this is not the animated series…We had to sometimes unravel storylines and remix them in a new way to make sense for a serialized drama. So I’m very curious to see what’ll happen in terms of reaction to that.”

One crucial element that Kim was determined to get right was the casting and Avatar: The Last Airbender’s roots in “Asian culture.”

“That was incredibly rare. It still is. A live-action version meant setting new benchmarks for representation by featuring an all Asian and Indigenous cast.”

Featuring an ensemble cast that includes Gordon Cormier, Dallas Liu, Kiawentiio, Ian Ousley, Paul Sun-Hyung Lee, and Daniel Dae Kim, Avatar: The Last Airbender follows a young Air Nomad named Aang, as he reawakens to a world ravaged by war. Together with his newfound friends Sokka and Katara, he embarks on an action-packed quest to take his rightful place as the next AVATAR.

Avatar: The Last Airbender is scheduled to premiere on February 22, 2024, on Netflix. Check out the trailer below:



This story originally appeared on Movieweb

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