Hey guys, give me a hand and leave a like and comment on this video! RUclips has really been on my with copyright stuff, so posting less often has really made me take a hit on algorithm side of things. You can help by liking and commenting though! Also go watch The Serpent's Pass, and do the same over there, since RUclips royally fucked me on that one the hardest, and that one can't even be monetized. (If that video is even still up at the time you're reading this.) Thanks for the help guys!
Imagine not automatically liking before watching, the comments I owe you most time, but asking for a like is almost an insult, OF COURSE I already did way before I hit play.
Whoa it’s interesting how he suddenly Aang starts to face his problems head on right after learning Earth bending. The essence of earth bending is to stand your ground and face your issues.
I also understand as to why Jeong Jeong said he wasn't ready. As you mentioned, just Aang learning Earthbending has made him think more Earthbender and adding it to a problem he might have not been able to solve. That is what Jeong Jeong needed in Aang, control and steadiness.
9:40 Azula's spinning wheel kick might be my favorite attack in the whole show, just so powerful and flashy. Not just the attack either, but the fact she has to deflect the first couple rocks from Aang's wall/punch, recognizes him overusing the same move, instantly and brutally punishes it. Genius villain
It's worth noting that Sokka is Toph's seeing eye on places she can't "see": in the desert, on Appa, on ice. Toph, on the other hand, is Sokka's seeing eye on dark places: the invasion and entering the drill.
@@WCWEstopmotion By that point, she could metalbend, so she could probably see to some extent. He does protect her from falling debris, though, so your point stands.
@@panther-nk2hn think they mistook the fact of Sokka pointing prior to getting on the airships, as he had to point at the nearest one and be launched by Toph.
Her very first scene is her being unreasonably angry! She expects a captain to fight against the tides and put his ship at risk just because she said so. She's very intelligent, but when she power-trips, she power-trips like _WHOA._
Azula: you're fired! War minister: but i didn't do anything Azula: exactly, the avatar was inside the drill and you nothing War minister: but- Alzula: I SAID YOU'RE FIRED!
My favorite subtle detail in the entire show is when the general says the Dragon of the West was quickly "expunged" (which in this context means "erased from the records"), instead of "expelled". Subtle early hint at the Dai Li's influence, showing that the Earth Kingdom leadership cared more about removing any record of war within the walls than about actually driving out the Fire Nation.
Mai's problem, I feel, is that throwing knives are too gruesome a weapon for a kids show. Other weapons can feasibly be animated to be non-lethal and not cause any major injuries, but you can't have a throwing knife actually hit a person without there also being blood at the very least, and a corpse in the worst case scenario. I feel if she had a different weapon or fighting style, she'd have gotten to be less useless.
It's really sad that Mai has to pin people to surroundings intead of hitting them just for the sole purpose of keeping it a kids show. We need a 16+ version where she shoots everyone down with knifes and arrows! Also this comment is three weeks old, wtf RUclips???
I'd like to think given the length of the drill, the plan was to park it halfway through, then march troops *through* the steel-protected body of the drill after it breached the other side. That way the Earthbenders couldn't just chuck rocks at any troops moving through the breach. Heck, once the slurry tunnel was cleaned out, it'd be the perfect tunnel to march the troops through. Also as an Engineer, I can tell you EXACTLY why that one pipe had 2 valves on either side of a 90 degree turn. That's what happens when somebody screws up and you find out one of the pipes you ordered was 6 inches too short halfway through the assembly process. But you're on a timetable and you don't REALLY need all the valve-pieces in that box yet, so you stick a spare valve between the short pipe and its intended socket and put in a work order for another valve later. We call this phenomenon "F**k it, I'm not delaying this critical job over a bad manifest"
On the first note, I agree. If they pulled the drill out, the earth benders could just earthbend the wall closed like any other doorway, no door required. Any hole blown through the wall can be quickly repaired by a team of earthbenders as long as there's nothing non-earth in the way. I'm sure the plan was to have a metal shell penetrate the wall and stay there to have constant passage, plus shelter from falling rocks since that seems to be their primary form of defense. I'd like to see some sand/mud traps used, but those wouldn't have done much to the drill anyway. And as for the second point, LMAO! Too real xD
@@Rocketsnail1000 Not much of a choice. Walls kinda do that. Especially this wall. Only ever been broken through once. The bottleneck probably did them in, tbh (RIP LT). But there's not really many other options...until they get those war balloons in the sky.
@@DogsRNice it would not sound like a vacuum cleaner, at least not like mine. As an engineer, I was looking for a comment related to the large diameter, relatively short pipe segments. These absolutely do make sense. The shorter pieces are cheaper as far as manufacturing, shipping, and installation logistics. Also, if there was a problem with one, it's easier to replace or repair.
I think after "Bitter WorK" Aang and the crew take more fights, because Aang now has the "Stand your ground" Mentality that he needs to be an Earth Bender, he knows these issues and fights aren't going to go away. in Book One and early Book Two he still has the Air/Water Bender mentality of avoid conflict and look for a way to use the enemy's momentum against him. By the halfway point of Book Two he learns that running away or looking for new angles won't work on their own anymore.
It's also because in season 2 is the first time when they have more than one confident fighter other than aang, kataras water bending is non-existent sokka is honestly pretty pathetic and toph isn't their yet
I feel like Mai is so useless because her style using knives and arrows has the same problem with those dang archers. They can't kill on screen with bladed weapons which just leaves them having to have their attacks blocked or dodged a bunch of the time. It sucks cause Mai's weapon of choice is lethal whereas Ty Lee can just... hit pressure points and win.
@@Windjammer19 completely so. It's entirely for show. At leadt Sokka gets to use his sword in some interesting ways and actually shows a good mind for tactics later but I can't think of anything like that for Mai unfortunately...
yeah that's kind of the problem with having any kind of "weapon user" character in a kid's show, standards and practice won't let you show anyone (or at least any HUMAN character) actually being cut or stabbed or anything that might cause bleeding, so they never get to do anything cool. they could have given mai or sokka some kind of blunt weapon like those "jitte" swords feudal japanese police used
@@Beem0b0t Her using her knifes as a means to stop the gears and hold back people in the prison episode is pretty badass. He obviously doesn't hurt anyone (Would have been cooler with her having say...throw a dagger into someones hand and have it hold it in place..but obviously that would be WAY too much) but she does have some awesome moves when she is fighting those guards.
It was a problem I had in how to train your dragon. All the characters had swords but nobody gets stabbed, they all just get bonked or tossed or tackled. Made all the fight scenes seem so soulless
And don’t forget his reaction from his nephew Zuko for the “all tea taste like hot leaf juice” line. That drew the line to innovate a tea shops menu of hot tea and of course getting attention from a businessman in letting him open up his own tea shop.
@@CevicheGato In the comics he comes up with the idea of bubble tea of which he gave some to the ganng of which they commented how they've never had a tea that was chewy before, just goes to show how he can revolutionize tea as a whole. I also believe that he turned the anniversary of the 100 year war into a tea appreciation holiday for the fire nation
The poor engineering is probably due to the fact that it was probably one of the first large, complicated machines they have built, along with the fact that it was probably rushed, because the origional attempt at breaking through the wall was not very long before, and a (good) build of that size would take a lot more time than it did.
Indeed, nothing else in the entire series comes close to the drill's scale in terms of vehicles or machines. I would guess that brainstorming for such devices started not long after Iroh's defeat at Ba Sing Se.
@@copterinx0468 must had been hella costy for the fire nation too, makes you wonder how much state money got burned (no pun intended) to build that thing and how much they lost when it failed. might be why we only see the blimps WAY later, they had to delay the production because they spent all the budget for it on the drill.
@unkindled6410 i refuse to believe that the firenation industrial power didn't win the war for so long but was able to build and transport this monster of a drill. It's not like they copied a smaller drill design, they simply made it from scratch and it worked very well. If only they could fill it with more guards inside to avoid sabotage
@@divoulos5758 they might have had outposts and rransportations routes to build the drill not so far away but near enough the wall and then start moving it instead of just going through the whole earthkingdom landmass with the thing already assembled. maybe they repourposed a bunch of battleships hurls and other stuff that was already around.
@@divoulos5758 They SHOULD have copied a smaller drill design, because this one wouldn't function. There's no cutting edge on the face of it, it couldn't bite into the wall, grind or extract material the way a drill needs to.
A note on May: she is the one who causes the Terrateam to go on the defensive, making it much easier for Ty Lee to close the distance, at least that's how it seems they synergize. It's also how they take Azula unawares at the Boiling Rock, likely coincidentally.
That's exactly true because with their wide guard and numbers, she wouldn't have been able to close that distance without a bit of luck or a distraction
"Azula couldn't reasonably be mad at him right?" That's part of her characterization. She gets mad at her subordinates when they give her news she doesn't like. Its classic "This character is a controlfreak" traits.
Calling her control freak is really undersealing her character, she's a fascist nasaistic princes of a fascist regime. She doesn't care what is possible or not, failure is weakness, and weakness needs to die. In her logic things going wrong means somone should have done a better job, and there exist no such thing as "not my fault" Controlfreak makes me think of people that seek to control others out of there own fear, but Azula is not seaking control out of personal fear, not even sure if she has any fear. For her control is is her blood born right, she the princes of the fire nation and her word is final.
@@MouseGoat Azula would be a control freak whether or not she was a fascist with power, so I think that is more fundamental to what she is. And yes, she does fear people. She's afraid that people see her as something she doesn't want to be. She was afraid of her mother labeling her a monster, so she reacted by trying to "own" being a monster. Azula's entire personal arch revolves around how her fear of how others will think of her causes her to alienate herself, harm her friends and become a worse person generally. Its the entire reason her best friends go against her in the end.
4:20 i object to the part where the clerk stamps their passports being "bad animation" - i LOVE this shot specifically for that reason! the way she effortlessly stamps both passports without looking and then slides them forward with barely a thought or a wasted movement shows not just how experienced she is at her job, but also looks really smooth and almost flirtatious in itself. i love that the animators of this show can imbue such a mundane action with so much character and intent, especially when it's conveyed through purposeful LACK of motion!
on aang’s core strength: makes perfect sense to me he’d be able to lift katara and sokka honestly. given the core strength it would take for him to stay in position on his glider where he’s basically planking for up to hours at a time, it doesn’t surprise me he can lift them
She was just badly written and her character wasn't as fleshed out as it could be. I think in order to make a proper Azula redemption arc, you gotta take a little of Azulas evil and dump it on other characters. I wished they would have gone into detail about Ozais manipulation and abuse and Ursas neglect of her in the comics, so we could better understand why she is the way she is. A fanfic that does this excellently with what we know from the show is called "Dominion", in which we not only see what happens to her after the finale, but also flashbacks of key moments of her childhood.
@@1999yasin Imma read that fanfic. Have you heard what her redemption was supposed to be? Apparently she becomes over-apologetic for a while and that sounds hilarious
I think she was spinning it at the balance point of the knife. She has to spin it at just the right speed so the knife falls a bit with each half rotation. If the knife didn't fall a bit, her finger would move towards the tip of the knife. It shows her insane level of dexterity and practice with the knife.
I just realized that Jet is actually the only one of the Freedom Fighters that heard Iroh complain about his tea being cold, so it makes sense that he's the only one who puts it together that they're firebenders.
It always weirded me out that Jet didn't even try to mention he complained his tea was cold earlier I feel like his friend's argument of "The man had a hot cup of tea! That doesn't prove anything!" Would've been instantly invalidated if Jet just told them that info 😅
This was such a killer episode both in the show and Overanalyzing Avatar. You noticing the clothing of the abbey women and then the direction of the sun back to back blew my mind, and it's clobberin' time had me cry-laughing. Thanks so much, dude. You're the best.
10:54 I think the reason why the plot convenience made it a stronger moment was because the rocks were originally an obstacle, but AAng worked it for him. From what I noticed in films and shows, even when it's kinda convenient, characters turning a negative into a positive is always more satisfying. It shows the characters' more strategic side I think. In this case, the rocks were falling on AAng and he had to avoid them, but he figured out a way to blow the drill using the rocks that were originally a bother for him. This show has moments like that sometimes. Example, on Kyoshi island, AAng nearly died swimming when he was faced with a Unagi, but in the end of the episode he saved the town by using the same Unagi as a hose for the fire.
"Azula couldn't *reasonably* be angry with him-" In her first speaking appearance, she threatens to murder her ship's captain for telling her that the tides wouldn't let the ship reach their destination before nightfall. The captain was apparently wrong about that, judging by her appearance in Zuko and Iroh's house that evening, but that was a lucky guess. Assuming it wasn't an empty threat, she would have murdered the captain if he hadn't done something that could, as far as she knew, have been impossible. "Reasonably" doesn't always come into it with Azula. As intelligent and capable as she is, she's also a spoiled brat with a very pronounced streak of petty sadism. I think she has enough sense to only take her sadism out on people she considers expendable and not important officials, but War Minister Qing might not know that.
@@deeznoots6241 She can be very patient when she needs to be, but she can't stand being told "no" by her subordinates and that can lead her to throw caution to the wind.
Re: Mai's knives. If you look closely, you can see the knives strike in roughly two waves. Given how thin they are, and how skilled she's shown to be, two between each set of fingers for six in each hand, one hand thrown then the other.
When I first watched ATLA back in the day when it was airing, I thought that this episode was one of if not THE best episode of the show. It had perfect pacing, Aang and Azula's fight was the first time Aang used multiple elements to fight, and the most epic and satisfying climax. Probably the best episode of the show.
also to add to the fact that its the first time Aang used 3 elements in a fight, there are some visual hints that hes moving the boulders with airbending as well, hinting his habit of relying on airbending to move things, as opposed to simply earthbending the boulders
Imagine a more hard-core version of avatar where people could actually get injured and die. It would make for an interesting take on the story especially with Aangs pacifism.
No it would just highlight how much the world sucks by making the entire show grimdark by showing the Southern Water tribe getting ravaged, the Earth Kingdom being enslaved, the Fire Nation being brainwashed under an oppressive regime with LAST hope of the world in the hands of a 12 year old boy.
I was hoping someone else had said this. 2 valve isolation is actually the standard in engineering now, especially in higher energy or "a break will kill you" piping systems 💁♂️
Can’t say I’ve seen double valve redundancy being standard in PVF. What type of valves are they, look like quarter turn butterflies? Don’t look like gates so it’s most likely for throttling which you wouldn’t have two valves in a row for. Too much redundancy can be over redundancy and costly as well.
@@tarot3078 the tiger II is still a fantastic tank. Would have been better if it hadn’t been rushed. I’m pretty sure it’s transmission problems could have been fixed if Germany had the time too. But still it’s an impressive tank despite its failings.
10:32 Actually, this concept is prevalent in bowling. The front of the lane has more oil than the back, so the ball slides before it rolls. Aang and Azula slide until they hit the part of the drill without mud, where they start to lose momentum and friction begins pulling them more one way or the other based on their initial trajectory and curvature of the drill.
Stemming from the "Fire Nation control the west side of the Serpent's Pass and they're working on something secret" referencing the drill being transported by no small means to Ba Sing Se, probably by water. If it was transported by water, it could have come from that factory in The Painted Lady, which apparently sits on one of those islands at the very eastern tip of the Fire Nation.
As an engineer, I was looking for a comment related to the large diameter, relatively short pipe segments. These absolutely do make sense. The shorter pieces are cheaper as far as manufacturing, shipping, and installation logistics. Also, if there was a problem with one, it's easier to replace or repair.
Looks a lot like Victaulic, which was created for quick wartime installations during one of the World Wars. Victaulic is short for Victory through Hydraulics!
Totally agree with you here. As an engineer who spent a few years managing a pre-fab shop for an industrial piping contractor. Especially for larger diameter piping systems, straight runs as short as 10-20 feet are often the best option. Many factors contribute to this, not the least of them is the reduction of field welds, being able to fit on a flat bed truck, and ability to install in a relatively tight space. You nailed it with this comment Dub.
@@xyro3633 I mean, we've seen their omni-directional Panzer IVs and their airships, why wouldn't they have some kind of support vehicle somewhere off screen.
flange systems will be much more expensive to build if it doesent needs constant repair it would be just easier and much much cheaper to do with welding
Fun fact: Grey is one of the few colors that changes drastically according to the color of light to which it is subjected. so the grey rocks becoming that yellow-beige in the orange light of the setting sun shows that the avatar Team were paying attention to the changes in the lighting throughout the episode.
I’m not gonna lie I kinda think their main reason for changing colors could be the same reason azula has blue flames. It was easier to Animate than keeping track of a bunch of boulders that blended into the background for a whole fight scene.
@@TheRealDrClef Its not lightning. Her fire is blue because it's hotter than other firebenders. Think of a lighter where the closer to the fuel the more blue the flame is
To be fair, when Mai pins a person to a wall with a knife by their shirt, she isn't missing; that takes the same amount of precision as hitting them in, say, the throat. She is choosing to take prisoners rather than lives.
I can’t believe you didn’t bring up what I think is the most important moment of this episode, which is when Toph and Katara team up to backup the drill’s exhaust. That blew my mind as a kid because it demonstrates how OP earth benders are. Essentially suggesting that if there’s muddy water, or water with any significant sediment content, earth benders can become pseudo water benders
i would argue air benders could dubble as fire benders if given fine burnable powders also there is like one sceen in season one where they are in the abby and are fighting the shersho and zuco and ang are fighting over a well and the two of there attacks result in an explosion wich makes me think an air bender can increase the burn rate of a fire benders fire pitty we never realy see mixed tandem bending much outside of muddy water i would have loved to see ang and zuco bend there respective eliments to make blue fire like azula which in my mind alway showed that asula understood the idea of stoichiometry and applied it to her fire.
I'm surprised you called out how they start facing more fights in book 2 without pointing out it's because Aang learned earthbending. The key to earthbending is facing problems head on and being grounded. The natural opposite of going with the flow and avoiding things like airbending. The way Aang fights is very different after he learned earthbending. I took a moment to watch your The Chase video to check you haven't already mentioned what I'm about to. In book 1, generally Aang fights always go like this: 1. Aang doesn't fight and tries to leave, blocking attacks with his glider/staff. 2. Aang loses his glider and is forced to evade in different ways. 3. Aang has a close call or something else is endangered. 4. Aang figuratively puts his foot down and ends the fight. We very rarely get to see Aang airbend with a weapon. It's always impressively powerful when he does.
I absolutely LOVE the fact Aang uses his own move as a way to attack rather than avoid. The fact his fighting style have changed over those two seasons is fucking amazing. We have seen his airscooter being able to move around on walls but him using it to scale a wall at least 50 meters and then using his super speed (Something I don't believe we have seen since the episode where Katara and Sokka are sick) as a way to increase the weight of his "punch" is freaking amazing. The techniques he have either used to avoid combat or run away is now being used as a setup for one of if not his most destuctive airbending moves we have ever seen (Outside of him being in the avatar state) is amazing character building. He uses his earth bending lessons while using airbending in an amazing mix and it is freaking awesome!
Air bending is about evading attacks so it made sense for him to always be doing that but earth bending is about standing your ground which you not only see in his fighting but also in the way he communicates with others
OK, so the "Earthbending a rock to lift someone up a couple feet" thing. I think I understand. Earthbenders take a very solid stance when the fight and root themselves in place. So when they are fighting an unknown force, they try to break this stance as a way of probing the enemy. Now, in the cases of The Lee and Aang, this proved to be advantageous for them, but for the other 99% of people who aren't Airbenders or crazy circus acrobats this would probably be a very effective way to totally fuck with somebody's sense of balance. If you've ever been standing on a surface that moved when you didn't expect it to, especially on the vertical plane, it's _extremely_ disorientating and can easily cause you to fall over just from the surprise of it. I imagine most people would probably be knocked flat on their ass if they had the Earth under them fly up 2 or 3 feet suddenly. And we do see this sort of technique work. Toph threw _Azula_ flat on her face just by making the ground under her shift a foot or two. Sure, this was horizontally, but I imagine that the effect would have been about the same vertically as well. And we see other Earthbenders disorient and gain a serious advantage just by making the very ground under their opponents unstable a few times. It would be a great way to keep 99% of your opponents from being able to keep any sense of orientation or stability.
And it was only after Azula spent weeks in the earth kingdom did she manage to catch on to the similar technique that allowed her to avoid Tophs attack on the day of black sun.
I think the better approach would have been to move the ground below them down rather than up. If the ground suddenly rose beneath you and you were quick enough to crouch and lower your centre of mass, you'd be ok, but if the ground suddenly dropped away there's not much you can really do about it
3:58 It's an interesting detail that Zuko uses a name Lee as a disguise, because that's the name Sokka's sword Master said was a perfect disguise in the fire nation. He said there was like a million Lee's.
It's interesting, the only character we meet actually named Lee is an Earth Kingdom citizen. So that makes me think there are lots of Lees in both the Fire Nation and the Earth Kingdom.
@@13vatra I think there was a fire nation general named Lee. He was only mentioned one time by Ozai if I recall correctly but he was on screen for a few seconds so I think that counts.
@@staszek8098 ooh okay, I didn't remember him. So I googled him, and its captain Li (pronounced the same way) he reports to Zhao and was part of the war meeting about invading the Northern Water Tribe. Props on remembering this dude existed haha! So turns out we have examples from both the Earth Kingdom and the Fire Nation.
I have to wonder if Piandao told Zuko about how there are a million Lees while training him, so that was just the first thing Zuko jumped to when coming up with a name.
The reason Mai seems useless is that they gave her a weapon which can never, ever work in the format. Do you think Nick would okay a shot of her knife thing actually hitting an earthbending soldier? As a result she gets off-screened to focus on the PG-friendly harmless ki jabs of Ty Lee. I think this *is* the fault of the writers though. They shouldn't have given her weapons which are 100% non-threatening because of censorship. Even as a kid I knew her knives would be harmless because it was impossible to imagine someone getting hit with a knife in ATLA. The problem is what do you replace those weapons with? Nets? A bola?
They finally got around it at the Boiling Rock, where Mai would use her knives to ensnare enemies using their clothes rather than actually attack them.
@@ziqi92 it's an okay workaround but her hitting someone's clothing at the wrist so hard that they're propelled into a nearby wall and pinned to it just looks weird.
@@GrapeCheckerBoard oh yeah she's far from useless, but moments like that are dumb. And it just brings more attention to the fact that her knives can't *actually* hit anyone.
I feel like Aang starts to engage in more fights and hit things head on right after he learns Earth Bending, which focuses on coming at your problems head on.
I think the rock plot convenience goes a step deeper. It works especially well because we've already been shown that these rocks are being thrown down at the drill, and it was initially an INconvenience for Aang since he was trying to focus on fighting Azula. But then that fight ends, and we as the viewers see the rock fall and think "yeah that makes sense, the General told his men not to stop thrown those so of course another one would fall down there right as Aang needed it. It's a plot convenience that was properly set up so that it just makes sense and is about as far from arbitrary as you can get. Excellent writing right there.
7:14 this is a nice gesture I think. One of the ways countries get to a place of going to war and killing others is by reducing their enemies into basically less than human. Sokka acknowledging that the fire nation are part of the world, that they're people, shows a great deal of perspective and maturity
Especially since he was the most vocal about his bigotry. Suspecting any outsider of his village as a spy for the Fire Nation (Aang an airbending child), wanting to travel the world to knock some heads, getting mad at a fire nation baby for playing with his club, "those savages make me sick" when witnessing the burned down forest, being against Aang learning firebending, calling it a stupid element, jerkbending etc. I love Sokka for saving the villages in Jet, The Painted Lady, the Puppet Master and choosing not to pursue his mother's killer.
I think the creators of the show ran into a problem with Mai when they realised that for her to do anything effective with her fighting style, she would have to draw blood. Cartoonish violence is easy to pull off with the elements, and yeah fire bending would probably burn people in horrible ways realistically, but if any of Mai's knives or arrows actually connected on screen there would be blood, which would immediately crank up the rating of the show.
It isn't the tounge of a flame that burns your flesh, it's the flesh burning after it's been ignited. Being struck by a blast of superheated air won't set you on fire, even if that air is already burning. The specific heat of air relative to flesh is just too low to cause ignition in a timely manner. That's why flamethrowers spew flaming oil: the oil burns in direct contact with the target, directly delivering sufficient heat to ignite the target. A firebender needs a sustained fireblast at close range to set someone on fire, but Aang and the gang either block, dodge, dissipate or retaliate before they get seriously burned. The firebenders throwing fire punches are basically angry hair dryers.
@@bodaciouschad Let's just be in agreement that if the show was rated higher. the fire would scorch people, and the throwing of giant rocks would make a nice tomato paste.
I love the detail of aang using a little burst of air on the falling rocks in order to stop them, because it shows how he’s both still a novice with earthbending and learning to blend his elements together.
The reason the Gaang start taking on more fights is because aang has just learnt earthbending, which is about facing things head on and being stubborn. During his training, aang struggles because he is used to using airbending, and using tricks to win or escape, but after he learns earthbending he takes on more fights, facing them head on, like an earthbender would.
Honestly Mai doesn’t feel that important or useful because she’s only ever allowed to pin people to the wall. While impressive, is non-lethal and not as effective as straight up killing them.
The firenation would definatly kept going, because there is an inner Wall. Plus the drill is the perfect diversion. On top of all that, you can see the fire nation invasion force behind the drill at 2:35
The reason he pointed it out is because the drill stopped. If they were headed for the inner wall (as makes senses), why did they stop right after breaching?
@@Igneusflama because they likely would have had to pull the drill out and reinsert it. Kinda like an actual drill in real life. Plus, the drill would have been vulnerable to get in without why support prior to getting past the wall.
@@howardbaxter2514 agree on the vulnerable part. That's a good enough reason on its own to stop. Guard duty on this thing would be a huge undertaking considering the length of it, but no guard duty is asking for trouble in enemy territory. Hope they weren't planning on a war while drilling lol. As far as having to reinsert though, that would only be the case if it's still hitting something solid. Since this has broken through, reaching the second wall would essentially be a reinsertion.
+ninjarosias I always thought the holes at the front of the drill were partly so troops inside could disembark and they'd use the drill as a beachhead to get past any archers and rock throwers. Granted, those pipes were being used for the mud, but nobody said the expeditionary force would be clean. Once the drill was messed up, the pipes were probably in pretty bad shape and many had probably collapsed, which is why they didn't do that.
The serpents pass and the drill are combined as one 47 minute episode on netflix right now, never would’ve made that connection that i’ve seen them separately
To answer the 2 valves question: redundancy is often done as a security measure. You never want to have a single point of failure, two valves means both have to fail in order to cause a problem.
All the bad engineering is intentional, their engineer is designing this stuff against his will, while he would be killed for providing schematics that did nothing he can still confuse them and waste their time and resources by having them make tones of spare parts and creating non-obvious weak points.
Man, the avatar series hits me in a place no other series, movie, game or song can hit. It's like there's an unique set of emotions thats reserved just for this show
The Avatar theme is so cool dude. I loved every time they used it. I must have watched that Aang going up the wall and then dropping down scene like a 100 times as a kid. It's so perfect, perfect build up, perfect timing, perfect score. Just hype as hell man!
Azula holding Aang to the collar and trying to shoot fire at him point-blank already hints that Azula would exploit every opportunity she got to kill Aang. This already foreshadows her almost successful attempt to kill Aang during his completion of the avatar state at the end of Book 2.
This episode is really emblematic of one of my favorite aspects of this show: The sheer creativity present with the threats it poses to these characters is _overwhelming._ It's actually one thing I think seasons 1 and 2 do a lot better than 3, actually. Seriously, how do you even come up with a setup this inspired? It's genuinely a sight to behold.
I just realized that since we only ever see seal script used in this universe and not the Latin alphabet, it actually makes no sense that the passport lady mispronounced the name "Mushi"
I think it is interesting you point out how Aang changes throughout the series and goes from running away, evading fights, to taking them head on. It shows he's developed as a character and actually took the lessons from Bitter Work to heart. Remember that Air Nomads avoid and evade, while Earthbenders are more head on and aggressive. Aang changing around the same point he learns Earthbending is a really cool mirror of this
About the colour inversion on Momo's tail: That was propably a key frame with the right colour and the rest are inbetweens, outsourced to a different animation studio
This randomly came out of recommendations, I’ve watched this cartoon at least five times over, so a random dude breaking down random parts of random episodes is literally perfect for me, gonna binge watch this all now thanks
I'm here for the algorithm. Can't imagine why you'd be getting hit for copyright. I feel like your work absolutely falls within the bounds of transformative and educational. Could probably accurately call it critique as well, honestly.
Because the copyright strike system RUclips uses has all the precision of a sledgehammer. I get it that they had to step up their moderation game to avoid getting sued into oblivion -- I remember a time when people would routinely post entire episodes of shows or whole movies, which is obviously copyright violation. But it's impractical to have people moderate every video on the site, and bots aren't good at telling what's fair use or not. Unfortunately, when it comes to striking fair use content vs letting copyright violators slip through, RUclips leans towards the former, because they judge that avoiding lawsuits from big companies is more important than avoiding false strikes. I get their reasoning. Still annoying though.
The "hellish torture" hypothetical when Ty-Lee was stuck in the water sphere is why I'd love to see a more brutal avatar series that explores blood/bodily fluid bending and other dark aspects of bending more frequently
Problems would be resolved too easily. For example air benders snatching the air out of people's lungs or earth benders shooting unsuspecting people with earth bullets.
something I love about this episode is that it took Iroh over a year, thousands of lives, and even his own son to get past the walls of ba sing se but with one compliment, he passed through in only a few minutes
I mean, the let's take fights head-on attitude could also be seen as starting at the episode bitter work, an episode centered on Aang needing to take things head-on to be a good earth bender
one of the best written shows of all time. I liked how they didn't have one character overwhelm every episode. Sometimes it was Toph, sometimes Katara, every now and then Sokka, etc
@Lolopopolo To be fair the Fire Nation is working with the resources of most of the world so it would make sense why the home island wasn't that affected by the drill's existence.
@Lolopopolo I'll give you the gravity thing, but I would like to point out that the Fire Nation is a fascist dictatorship. Subservience to the state would've been heavily emphasized for the past 100 (I think) years. More to the point, do you really think the Fire Nation government is gonna be telling its citizens about virtually any of its defeats?
So many people forget that the Fire Nation is already in the middle of an Industrial Revolution. They have war balloons, zeppelins, tanks, factories, jet skis, ironclad warships..if not for Fantasy Gun Control they would have firearms and cannons too!
I still remember the day this episode aired. Had went to a buddy’s birthday part at this huge indoor soccer field. On the way home, we were all pleading for his dad to go faster as we were minutes from it airing. We all got home in time, ran to our tvs, and watched it. It was the talk of our grade school.
8:08 That water is evacuating the drilled parts from the drill head of the drill drilling into the wall, so the drill can drill further. It's used in modern drills, too. Industrial diamonds embedded into metal are used to scrape away at the stone, and water is evacuating the scrapped stuff so the drills can drill new parts of the wall instead of trying to drill the dislodged parts of the wall and progress slower and get the drill bits consumed for less progress. And the water also helps cool down the drill head, allowing the drill to operate for longer periods without rest. So it's a water-cooled drill train/truck. Also, export your content to Odysee, please!
So odd for them to use a solid tool though when they could machine much faster and longer, for much cheaper by using modular cutting edges because nobody is asking for crazy precise tolerances.
That final fight is so good...it’s such a great culmination of all of Aang’s efforts to learn so far. Also the dichotomy you pointed out is so cool, I would’ve never noticed that!
You said it yourself this technology is a huge leap for them, manufacturing those high pressure pipes is quite difficult, boring them might not be possible in longer than those lengths, they probably just don't have the tooling or large enough machines so they need multiple short ones to make a long run, I know this is a stretch because they have ships but the drill needs an order of magnitude more steam pressure and they can probably generate it with a lot of fire benders, they still need the pressure system and turbines to be sound though.
I really appreciate your combination of not shying from pointing out inconsistencies/critiques while expressing the genuine abundant appreciation and love you have for the series!
Just realized that Aang used airbending to hover up the wall then run straight down (also airbending to speed him up) to use earthbending on the drill. I like how he used the opposites in a combo
If you assume Avatar's world is smaller than ours, thus it has a lower gravity, that would explain a lot. Like giant flying bison, Ty Lee's crazy acrobatics, Aang's insane core strength, Azula's ability to survive 50 feet falls, and Zuko's crazy jumps.
Water: Flowing, Learning to Change form, taking low ground Earth: Holding firm, defending themselves, building strength Fire: Destruction, Energy, bringing rebirth like a Phoenix from the ashes My view on the seasons/chapters.
2nd rewatch of this series now. Crazy it being 2 years already since this video blew up and made this channel huge and made me start watching. Glad I found this
@@MemeMarine Tank crews often survive their tank getting destroyed. For one historical example, despite myths about Sherman tanks being death traps, on average 4 out of the 5 crew members survived when a Sherman was destroyed. Oftentimes all 5 did, and occasionally the ammo storage was hit directly and everyone died in a massive explosion. Destroy more than a handful though, and it's almost certain you've killed someone.
Terra Team (and Toph, when she fought Aang) uses the "jut some earth up" move to displace a grounded opponent. The movement is meant to shift balance and put a groundedopponent on the defensive, but against airbenders and acrobats (which military/police earthbenders typically don't encounter) it has lessened utility.
Jet’s expression when he sees iroh’s hot tea always gives me such ghibli vibes. Just feels like his hair should be puffing up in shock and outrage lmao
6:40 No, you probably would have all those flanges on the straight pipe. Manufacturing is hard, and making things in smaller, uniform pieces is easier. And assembling things that weight less is easier too. Look at pipeline photos, you will see that they have flanges at regular distances. And they are usually not comically oversized. The flanges are quite close in the Avatar, but that totally depends of their production process, how heavy loads they can lift, how they use those pieces and many more.
I had the same thought, but then figured since they have the capacity to manufacture this massive steam powered catapiller thing it may be a moot point.
That and it makes it easier to replace or repair a section of pipe, they had an engineering and repair crew and they probably had some redundant systems so they could repair the drill while it's still in operation.
One detail i really like is that when they show the braces breaking, all of them snap and slide a bit exept for one that completly breaks which is the first one that the gaang cut clean all the way thru.
At first I thought you were going to analyze the litterall drill as a machine, but than I realized that I just stumbled across one of the best series on youtube. Thank you for putting in the Workl to provide us with this series
7:30 I think you missed it, he is worried because it actually is his fault. Because earlier ty lee spotted the sand cloud toph made to get in unseen he said not to worry about it even though azula said or looked like she was worried, I can’t completely recall.
The grand scheme of things? Without Mai, there's no way Zuko, Sokka, Suki, Hakoda, Chit Sang and the Warden would've died at the Boiling Rock. And Azula would never have gone emotionally unbalanced for Zuko to beat her in the finale. Give Mai more credit than that good Sir.
I think a huge thing he's utterly leaving out is that Azula herself seems to enjoy employing psychological warfare as well as physical- I can see no better guards for a psychological play than Mai and Ty Lee. It's been shown that both characters are underestimated multiple times due to their stature- But even taking this as a positive for both of them- Most people would focus on Mai- After all, she is a much bigger seeming threat with her mid range knives- Especially with how she's shown to be an expert at wielding them. This makes her the perfect distraction to take attention away from the real weapon since Ty Lee is often perceived as a less obvious threat- Allowing her to quickly move into range and immobilize benders with her Chi blocking. The drill is the perfect example of this- As we see all the Earth Benders focusing largely on fending off Mai's daggers- which are at a near constant barrage allowing Ty Lee to utterly decimate their attack force before they realize what's happening
I've been rewatching some of the videos and it's so cool how you make me appreciate how great this show is so much more. You point out so much about what makes it truly amazing.
Ok so Mai is pretty much a trained assassin, which is why she seems useless in the grand scheme of things, due to target audience reasons she can't be used as an actual assassin, and she wasn't actually useless as Book 3 showed. Book 2 just needed her to have some sort of skill to have a trio of girls, and Mai got the Assassin that can't assassinate anything short stick.
The thing I love most about avatar is that when aang is solving a problem that isn’t related to hurting a person or animal, we get to see aangs incredible power, showing how much of a pacifist is and that he pulls his punches and that he probably would destroy azula if he wasn’t a pacifist.
Why is Aang so insanely overrated for no good reason? The guy got his ass kicked every single time he fought Azula, and he literally even failed to catch a bendingless Azula due to her superior physical speed(for which he needs his airbending), but him being a pacifist while still using potentially lethal moves over and over again in a kids show that gave the heroes thick plot armor and prevented firebenders the most from really showing how terryfying their powers would be, somehow means he could just destroy the villain whose whole theme it was to show that play time is over without even activating his god-mode cheatcode?
Aang and the gang taking things head on makes a massive amount of narrittive sense for the midpoint in book 2 because of Aang learning earth bending, along with the Earthbender mentality of directness, which is unlike the focus of evasion and control of airbending and waterbending. Such a well written show.
5:40 I would assume those are steam pipes. It's best practice to valve off elbows. Steam is corrosive and the elbows always go first. The fire nation's engineers were thinking about maintenance.
Complementary algorithm comment~ I love that you notice things like the sun placement, the Abbey women, the family continuity. I love this show and its so interesting how much I never noticed, keep up the great work!
I'm entirely convinced that the gravity on the planet of Avatar is less than half that on earth. Physics of falling and jumping seems to support this theory.
I completely agree the serpents pass and the drill are such a good pairing of episode stories. Definitely some highlights of the series. That music when aangs running up the wall for the final blow on the drill has always stuck with me. So emotional and spot on. What a show
I'm watching the entire series again on Netflix (how original) and I can confirm that these 2 episodes - Serpent's Pass and The Drill - are still together, as a 40 minute long episode.
It was never clear to me why this was always a two-parter with The Serpent's Pass. If it wasn't for your overanalyzing, I would have never figured it out! That's some gooood overanalyzing.
This show was a huge part of my childhood, it’s a weird mix of nostalgia and sadness when I rewatch clips like this, I wish I could go back to that time when I’d rush home from the bus stop after school and wait In anticipation to watch the two back to back episodes every afternoon. Things were different back then.
Hey guys, give me a hand and leave a like and comment on this video! RUclips has really been on my with copyright stuff, so posting less often has really made me take a hit on algorithm side of things. You can help by liking and commenting though! Also go watch The Serpent's Pass, and do the same over there, since RUclips royally fucked me on that one the hardest, and that one can't even be monetized. (If that video is even still up at the time you're reading this.) Thanks for the help guys!
Yes sir
Imagine not automatically liking before watching, the comments I owe you most time, but asking for a like is almost an insult, OF COURSE I already did way before I hit play.
Serpent's Pass Link:
ruclips.net/video/023Tt-4PIrw/видео.html
Another great video!
I love it. Would you like me to spam a couple of comments to help?
The Fire Nation should have said this to the Earth Kingdom guards: "Attention, Earth Kingdom! Please remain calm. This is only a drill."
While I do appreciate a shit-tier pun, that’s more Marvel’s style of humor than Nickelodeon’s.
It’s a fire drill
@@avian972 ok now im just mad that sokka didn't make this joke
@@rhyderrek6155 True
Not the fire nation's style.
Whoa it’s interesting how he suddenly Aang starts to face his problems head on right after learning Earth bending. The essence of earth bending is to stand your ground and face your issues.
Just how air-bending is basically avoiding your issues
@@danieljensen6154 I like how different culture element deals with situations differently
@@jirehemanuel exactly different cultures offer different things to learn
Had the same thought when he mentioned it
I also understand as to why Jeong Jeong said he wasn't ready. As you mentioned, just Aang learning Earthbending has made him think more Earthbender and adding it to a problem he might have not been able to solve. That is what Jeong Jeong needed in Aang, control and steadiness.
9:40 Azula's spinning wheel kick might be my favorite attack in the whole show, just so powerful and flashy. Not just the attack either, but the fact she has to deflect the first couple rocks from Aang's wall/punch, recognizes him overusing the same move, instantly and brutally punishes it. Genius villain
Korra goes to use this style of fighting later and its really cool. i wish they would implement kicking motion more on the bendings tecniques.
It's worth noting that Sokka is Toph's seeing eye on places she can't "see": in the desert, on Appa, on ice. Toph, on the other hand, is Sokka's seeing eye on dark places: the invasion and entering the drill.
Also ontop of the airships Sokka was there for Toph
@@WCWEstopmotion By that point, she could metalbend, so she could probably see to some extent. He does protect her from falling debris, though, so your point stands.
@@panther-nk2hn think they mistook the fact of Sokka pointing prior to getting on the airships, as he had to point at the nearest one and be launched by Toph.
Yeah Sokka and Toph is probably my favorite pairing in the show, equal to Sokka and Aang lol
Love their relationship I love all the relationships in this show. All of them can be explained so well.
"Azula couldn't reasonably be angry with him, right?"
Yes, but she sure could be unreasonably angry!
Her very first scene is her being unreasonably angry! She expects a captain to fight against the tides and put his ship at risk just because she said so. She's very intelligent, but when she power-trips, she power-trips like _WHOA._
Azula: you're fired!
War minister: but i didn't do anything
Azula: exactly, the avatar was inside the drill and you nothing
War minister: but-
Alzula: I SAID YOU'RE FIRED!
He did say that dust cloud was nothing to worry about, that's something to be unreasonably pissed about.
First mistake was assuming Azula is a reasonable person
My favorite subtle detail in the entire show is when the general says the Dragon of the West was quickly "expunged" (which in this context means "erased from the records"), instead of "expelled". Subtle early hint at the Dai Li's influence, showing that the Earth Kingdom leadership cared more about removing any record of war within the walls than about actually driving out the Fire Nation.
Interesting detail!
Interesting
Mai's problem, I feel, is that throwing knives are too gruesome a weapon for a kids show. Other weapons can feasibly be animated to be non-lethal and not cause any major injuries, but you can't have a throwing knife actually hit a person without there also being blood at the very least, and a corpse in the worst case scenario. I feel if she had a different weapon or fighting style, she'd have gotten to be less useless.
Throwing clubs? Rocks maybe just knock em out!
It's really sad that Mai has to pin people to surroundings intead of hitting them just for the sole purpose of keeping it a kids show. We need a 16+ version where she shoots everyone down with knifes and arrows!
Also this comment is three weeks old, wtf RUclips???
Patrons get videos early.
@@overanalyzingavatar Oh I see...
She needs some bolas or something.
I'd like to think given the length of the drill, the plan was to park it halfway through, then march troops *through* the steel-protected body of the drill after it breached the other side. That way the Earthbenders couldn't just chuck rocks at any troops moving through the breach. Heck, once the slurry tunnel was cleaned out, it'd be the perfect tunnel to march the troops through.
Also as an Engineer, I can tell you EXACTLY why that one pipe had 2 valves on either side of a 90 degree turn. That's what happens when somebody screws up and you find out one of the pipes you ordered was 6 inches too short halfway through the assembly process. But you're on a timetable and you don't REALLY need all the valve-pieces in that box yet, so you stick a spare valve between the short pipe and its intended socket and put in a work order for another valve later. We call this phenomenon "F**k it, I'm not delaying this critical job over a bad manifest"
On the first note, I agree. If they pulled the drill out, the earth benders could just earthbend the wall closed like any other doorway, no door required. Any hole blown through the wall can be quickly repaired by a team of earthbenders as long as there's nothing non-earth in the way. I'm sure the plan was to have a metal shell penetrate the wall and stay there to have constant passage, plus shelter from falling rocks since that seems to be their primary form of defense. I'd like to see some sand/mud traps used, but those wouldn't have done much to the drill anyway.
And as for the second point, LMAO! Too real xD
Engineering question
Would a massive presumably steam powered machine like the drill sound like a vacuum cleaner
Yeah but would it really be a good idea to bottle neck the troops like that?
@@Rocketsnail1000 Not much of a choice. Walls kinda do that. Especially this wall. Only ever been broken through once. The bottleneck probably did them in, tbh (RIP LT). But there's not really many other options...until they get those war balloons in the sky.
@@DogsRNice it would not sound like a
vacuum cleaner, at least not like mine.
As an engineer, I was looking for a comment related to the large diameter, relatively short pipe segments. These absolutely do make sense. The shorter pieces are cheaper as far as manufacturing, shipping, and installation logistics. Also, if there was a problem with one, it's easier to replace or repair.
I think after "Bitter WorK" Aang and the crew take more fights, because Aang now has the "Stand your ground" Mentality that he needs to be an Earth Bender, he knows these issues and fights aren't going to go away. in Book One and early Book Two he still has the Air/Water Bender mentality of avoid conflict and look for a way to use the enemy's momentum against him. By the halfway point of Book Two he learns that running away or looking for new angles won't work on their own anymore.
It's also because in season 2 is the first time when they have more than one confident fighter other than aang, kataras water bending is non-existent sokka is honestly pretty pathetic and toph isn't their yet
I feel like Mai is so useless because her style using knives and arrows has the same problem with those dang archers. They can't kill on screen with bladed weapons which just leaves them having to have their attacks blocked or dodged a bunch of the time. It sucks cause Mai's weapon of choice is lethal whereas Ty Lee can just... hit pressure points and win.
Yep. Sokka has the same problem when he gets space sword. It's like making a show about Wolverine and being afraid to have him stab stuff. Pointless.
@@Windjammer19 completely so. It's entirely for show. At leadt Sokka gets to use his sword in some interesting ways and actually shows a good mind for tactics later but I can't think of anything like that for Mai unfortunately...
yeah that's kind of the problem with having any kind of "weapon user" character in a kid's show, standards and practice won't let you show anyone (or at least any HUMAN character) actually being cut or stabbed or anything that might cause bleeding, so they never get to do anything cool. they could have given mai or sokka some kind of blunt weapon like those "jitte" swords feudal japanese police used
@@Beem0b0t Her using her knifes as a means to stop the gears and hold back people in the prison episode is pretty badass.
He obviously doesn't hurt anyone (Would have been cooler with her having say...throw a dagger into someones hand and have it hold it in place..but obviously that would be WAY too much) but she does have some awesome moves when she is fighting those guards.
It was a problem I had in how to train your dragon. All the characters had swords but nobody gets stabbed, they all just get bonked or tossed or tackled. Made all the fight scenes seem so soulless
I like that Iroh being dismayed by the tea’s quality in Ba Sing Se is the first step in his arc toward opening the Jasmine Dragon 🐉🫖
And don’t forget his reaction from his nephew Zuko for the “all tea taste like hot leaf juice” line. That drew the line to innovate a tea shops menu of hot tea and of course getting attention from a businessman in letting him open up his own tea shop.
@@CevicheGato In the comics he comes up with the idea of bubble tea of which he gave some to the ganng of which they commented how they've never had a tea that was chewy before, just goes to show how he can revolutionize tea as a whole. I also believe that he turned the anniversary of the 100 year war into a tea appreciation holiday for the fire nation
The poor engineering is probably due to the fact that it was probably one of the first large, complicated machines they have built, along with the fact that it was probably rushed, because the origional attempt at breaking through the wall was not very long before, and a (good) build of that size would take a lot more time than it did.
Indeed, nothing else in the entire series comes close to the drill's scale in terms of vehicles or machines. I would guess that brainstorming for such devices started not long after Iroh's defeat at Ba Sing Se.
@@copterinx0468 must had been hella costy for the fire nation too, makes you wonder how much state money got burned (no pun intended) to build that thing and how much they lost when it failed. might be why we only see the blimps WAY later, they had to delay the production because they spent all the budget for it on the drill.
@unkindled6410 i refuse to believe that the firenation industrial power didn't win the war for so long but was able to build and transport this monster of a drill. It's not like they copied a smaller drill design, they simply made it from scratch and it worked very well. If only they could fill it with more guards inside to avoid sabotage
@@divoulos5758 they might have had outposts and rransportations routes to build the drill not so far away but near enough the wall and then start moving it instead of just going through the whole earthkingdom landmass with the thing already assembled. maybe they repourposed a bunch of battleships hurls and other stuff that was already around.
@@divoulos5758 They SHOULD have copied a smaller drill design, because this one wouldn't function.
There's no cutting edge on the face of it, it couldn't bite into the wall, grind or extract material the way a drill needs to.
A note on May: she is the one who causes the Terrateam to go on the defensive, making it much easier for Ty Lee to close the distance, at least that's how it seems they synergize. It's also how they take Azula unawares at the Boiling Rock, likely coincidentally.
it's spelled Mai
Good point!
That's exactly true because with their wide guard and numbers, she wouldn't have been able to close that distance without a bit of luck or a distraction
Not sure if they were also hesitant to show people getting stabbed and shot with arrows from Mai, too
@@cheetaflameWhich would explain a few things. Like, it's still a kids show. So she can't go full assassin
"Azula couldn't reasonably be mad at him right?"
That's part of her characterization. She gets mad at her subordinates when they give her news she doesn't like. Its classic "This character is a controlfreak" traits.
Calling her control freak is really undersealing her character, she's a fascist nasaistic princes of a fascist regime.
She doesn't care what is possible or not, failure is weakness, and weakness needs to die.
In her logic things going wrong means somone should have done a better job, and there exist no such thing as "not my fault"
Controlfreak makes me think of people that seek to control others out of there own fear, but Azula is not seaking control out of personal fear, not even sure if she has any fear. For her control is is her blood born right, she the princes of the fire nation and her word is final.
@@MouseGoat Azula would be a control freak whether or not she was a fascist with power, so I think that is more fundamental to what she is. And yes, she does fear people. She's afraid that people see her as something she doesn't want to be. She was afraid of her mother labeling her a monster, so she reacted by trying to "own" being a monster. Azula's entire personal arch revolves around how her fear of how others will think of her causes her to alienate herself, harm her friends and become a worse person generally. Its the entire reason her best friends go against her in the end.
Hello, congratulations you have found; the joke!
4:20 i object to the part where the clerk stamps their passports being "bad animation" - i LOVE this shot specifically for that reason! the way she effortlessly stamps both passports without looking and then slides them forward with barely a thought or a wasted movement shows not just how experienced she is at her job, but also looks really smooth and almost flirtatious in itself. i love that the animators of this show can imbue such a mundane action with so much character and intent, especially when it's conveyed through purposeful LACK of motion!
I think it’s cuz it’s only like 4 frames long and doesn’t look too smooth
"Purposeful"
Yeah sure it is lmao.
This is such a delusional take. This is the animators cutting budget in scenes where animations are not crucial, no more no less
@@giulioceresini1435 Welcome to the Avatar fanbase
This… what? How do you even…
This comment deserves the Olympic medal for mental gymnastics.
on aang’s core strength: makes perfect sense to me he’d be able to lift katara and sokka honestly. given the core strength it would take for him to stay in position on his glider where he’s basically planking for up to hours at a time, it doesn’t surprise me he can lift them
You know that is a very good point!
Ez answer: he airbends hem up
The thought of aang planking for hours to fly, and having a ripped build makes me laugh.
@@chunkychan2478 I mean, we do see that he absolutely has a "ripped kid" body.
@Farabi Seiilbek gravity exists in the air too...Aang isn't gliding in space.
Comics Azula was disappointing because she didn't have her *ding* sound cue
amazing how i hear that ding instead of reading the word...
She was just badly written and her character wasn't as fleshed out as it could be. I think in order to make a proper Azula redemption arc, you gotta take a little of Azulas evil and dump it on other characters. I wished they would have gone into detail about Ozais manipulation and abuse and Ursas neglect of her in the comics, so we could better understand why she is the way she is. A fanfic that does this excellently with what we know from the show is called "Dominion", in which we not only see what happens to her after the finale, but also flashbacks of key moments of her childhood.
@@1999yasin Imma read that fanfic. Have you heard what her redemption was supposed to be? Apparently she becomes over-apologetic for a while and that sounds hilarious
@@1999yasin Could you tell me in where this fic can be found?
@@1999yasin If you actually look more into her psychologically, she can be seen as well written character
Regarding the spinning the knife, I'm pretty sure the intent was she was spinning it via the handle hole.
I think she was spinning it at the balance point of the knife. She has to spin it at just the right speed so the knife falls a bit with each half rotation. If the knife didn't fall a bit, her finger would move towards the tip of the knife. It shows her insane level of dexterity and practice with the knife.
I just realized that Jet is actually the only one of the Freedom Fighters that heard Iroh complain about his tea being cold, so it makes sense that he's the only one who puts it together that they're firebenders.
that was the entire point
Good catch
It always weirded me out that Jet didn't even try to mention he complained his tea was cold earlier
I feel like his friend's argument of "The man had a hot cup of tea! That doesn't prove anything!" Would've been instantly invalidated if Jet just told them that info 😅
@@slaybutton1692 He did tell them that tho lol, he said that he heated it himself. For some reason they still don’t believe him tho
@@BunnyFlowers That or they don’t want him to believe it.
This was such a killer episode both in the show and Overanalyzing Avatar. You noticing the clothing of the abbey women and then the direction of the sun back to back blew my mind, and it's clobberin' time had me cry-laughing. Thanks so much, dude. You're the best.
The sun, which is setting at the end of the episode, signaling that the fire nation is retreating
This was the part of the show where i was like holy shit this is good that and the panda spirit episode such a good show
Bobo
The sun has better continuity than the moon.
@@fiddleriddlediddlediddle That's rough, buddy.
10:54 I think the reason why the plot convenience made it a stronger moment was because the rocks were originally an obstacle, but AAng worked it for him. From what I noticed in films and shows, even when it's kinda convenient, characters turning a negative into a positive is always more satisfying. It shows the characters' more strategic side I think.
In this case, the rocks were falling on AAng and he had to avoid them, but he figured out a way to blow the drill using the rocks that were originally a bother for him.
This show has moments like that sometimes. Example, on Kyoshi island, AAng nearly died swimming when he was faced with a Unagi, but in the end of the episode he saved the town by using the same Unagi as a hose for the fire.
Chekov’s rock
"Azula couldn't *reasonably* be angry with him-"
In her first speaking appearance, she threatens to murder her ship's captain for telling her that the tides wouldn't let the ship reach their destination before nightfall. The captain was apparently wrong about that, judging by her appearance in Zuko and Iroh's house that evening, but that was a lucky guess. Assuming it wasn't an empty threat, she would have murdered the captain if he hadn't done something that could, as far as she knew, have been impossible. "Reasonably" doesn't always come into it with Azula. As intelligent and capable as she is, she's also a spoiled brat with a very pronounced streak of petty sadism. I think she has enough sense to only take her sadism out on people she considers expendable and not important officials, but War Minister Qing might not know that.
probably less totally impossible and more really dangerous with whatever they had to do to make it possible
Presumably that meant they had to risk grounding the ship in a low tide, in other words she risked damaging her ship just because of impatience
@@deeznoots6241 She can be very patient when she needs to be, but she can't stand being told "no" by her subordinates and that can lead her to throw caution to the wind.
@@Talisguy Azula has a god complex.
@@valtersplume3726
Facts
Re: Mai's knives. If you look closely, you can see the knives strike in roughly two waves. Given how thin they are, and how skilled she's shown to be, two between each set of fingers for six in each hand, one hand thrown then the other.
youre a genius
When I first watched ATLA back in the day when it was airing, I thought that this episode was one of if not THE best episode of the show. It had perfect pacing, Aang and Azula's fight was the first time Aang used multiple elements to fight, and the most epic and satisfying climax. Probably the best episode of the show.
also to add to the fact that its the first time Aang used 3 elements in a fight, there are some visual hints that hes moving the boulders with airbending as well, hinting his habit of relying on airbending to move things, as opposed to simply earthbending the boulders
Imagine a more hard-core version of avatar where people could actually get injured and die. It would make for an interesting take on the story especially with Aangs pacifism.
No it would just highlight how much the world sucks by making the entire show grimdark by showing the Southern Water tribe getting ravaged, the Earth Kingdom being enslaved, the Fire Nation being brainwashed under an oppressive regime with LAST hope of the world in the hands of a 12 year old boy.
We've got Netflix to hope for..
@@patrickmcglonejr8163 is that version supposed to be more mature?
thats the kyoshi books
@@rodjjt7742 let’s just hope they don’t give it the riverdale treatment …
redundancy in engineering is actually a good thing, if it's a vital system, the more redundancy is expected in case of failures.
I was hoping someone else had said this. 2 valve isolation is actually the standard in engineering now, especially in higher energy or "a break will kill you" piping systems 💁♂️
@@g.l7219 50 German tank's transmissions broke while writing that comment.
Can’t say I’ve seen double valve redundancy being standard in PVF. What type of valves are they, look like quarter turn butterflies? Don’t look like gates so it’s most likely for throttling which you wouldn’t have two valves in a row for. Too much redundancy can be over redundancy and costly as well.
@@g.l7219 Yeah they were so great, that's why they won the war... oh wait
@@tarot3078 the tiger II is still a fantastic tank.
Would have been better if it hadn’t been rushed. I’m pretty sure it’s transmission problems could have been fixed if Germany had the time too.
But still it’s an impressive tank despite its failings.
10:32 Actually, this concept is prevalent in bowling. The front of the lane has more oil than the back, so the ball slides before it rolls. Aang and Azula slide until they hit the part of the drill without mud, where they start to lose momentum and friction begins pulling them more one way or the other based on their initial trajectory and curvature of the drill.
But that’s a “sphere”, surface area matters. (Of contact)
I loved your point about the sun setting in the west and the Fire Nation being in the west. I had never noticed that before.
Stemming from the "Fire Nation control the west side of the Serpent's Pass and they're working on something secret" referencing the drill being transported by no small means to Ba Sing Se, probably by water. If it was transported by water, it could have come from that factory in The Painted Lady, which apparently sits on one of those islands at the very eastern tip of the Fire Nation.
As an engineer, I was looking for a comment related to the large diameter, relatively short pipe segments. These absolutely do make sense. The shorter pieces are cheaper as far as manufacturing, shipping, and installation logistics. Also, if there was a problem with one, it's easier to replace or repair.
Looks a lot like Victaulic, which was created for quick wartime installations during one of the World Wars. Victaulic is short for Victory through Hydraulics!
Totally agree with you here. As an engineer who spent a few years managing a pre-fab shop for an industrial piping contractor. Especially for larger diameter piping systems, straight runs as short as 10-20 feet are often the best option. Many factors contribute to this, not the least of them is the reduction of field welds, being able to fit on a flat bed truck, and ability to install in a relatively tight space. You nailed it with this comment Dub.
@@tanner4027 The Fire Nation has trucks?
@@xyro3633 I mean, we've seen their omni-directional Panzer IVs and their airships, why wouldn't they have some kind of support vehicle somewhere off screen.
flange systems will be much more expensive to build if it doesent needs constant repair it would be just easier and much much cheaper to do with welding
7:35 bold of you to assume azula is reasonable
Right?
Fun fact: Grey is one of the few colors that changes drastically according to the color of light to which it is subjected. so the grey rocks becoming that yellow-beige in the orange light of the setting sun shows that the avatar Team were paying attention to the changes in the lighting throughout the episode.
I’m not gonna lie I kinda think their main reason for changing colors could be the same reason azula has blue flames. It was easier to Animate than keeping track of a bunch of boulders that blended into the background for a whole fight scene.
@@badluckbastard I always thought Azula's fire was blue because her fire bending form was better.
@@_invencible_ Same. I thought that it was because she had used ideas from the destructive power of lightning bending to make her fire better.
@@TheRealDrClef Its not lightning. Her fire is blue because it's hotter than other firebenders. Think of a lighter where the closer to the fuel the more blue the flame is
@@badluckbastard I thought it was blue because she had to be special and cool. Orange fire is lame or something.
To be fair, when Mai pins a person to a wall with a knife by their shirt, she isn't missing; that takes the same amount of precision as hitting them in, say, the throat. She is choosing to take prisoners rather than lives.
The archers can hit an archer wing from a thousand flies away.
@@willtheprodigy3819 The flies can hit a wing from thousand archers away.
@@voidnoodle8911 The tree can fly without killing a Yuyan.
@@swanletsecondchannel8533 Yuyan is a tree
@@lockdownhamza tree
I can’t believe you didn’t bring up what I think is the most important moment of this episode, which is when Toph and Katara team up to backup the drill’s exhaust. That blew my mind as a kid because it demonstrates how OP earth benders are. Essentially suggesting that if there’s muddy water, or water with any significant sediment content, earth benders can become pseudo water benders
i would argue air benders could dubble as fire benders if given fine burnable powders also there is like one sceen in season one where they are in the abby and are fighting the shersho and zuco and ang are fighting over a well and the two of there attacks result in an explosion wich makes me think an air bender can increase the burn rate of a fire benders fire pitty we never realy see mixed tandem bending much outside of muddy water i would have loved to see ang and zuco bend there respective eliments to make blue fire like azula which in my mind alway showed that asula understood the idea of stoichiometry and applied it to her fire.
I'm surprised you called out how they start facing more fights in book 2 without pointing out it's because Aang learned earthbending. The key to earthbending is facing problems head on and being grounded. The natural opposite of going with the flow and avoiding things like airbending.
The way Aang fights is very different after he learned earthbending.
I took a moment to watch your The Chase video to check you haven't already mentioned what I'm about to.
In book 1, generally Aang fights always go like this:
1. Aang doesn't fight and tries to leave, blocking attacks with his glider/staff.
2. Aang loses his glider and is forced to evade in different ways.
3. Aang has a close call or something else is endangered.
4. Aang figuratively puts his foot down and ends the fight.
We very rarely get to see Aang airbend with a weapon. It's always impressively powerful when he does.
for example: The Desert
Honestly azule slaming into aang is still hilarious because is just so goofy with azula being so perfect
I have been rewinding and replaying and pissing myself laughing at "Yeah, the worst part is what she did to his foot tho" for five minutes
....and "...iiiit's fucken, clobbering time I'd say"
I absolutely LOVE the fact Aang uses his own move as a way to attack rather than avoid.
The fact his fighting style have changed over those two seasons is fucking amazing. We have seen his airscooter being able to move around on walls but him using it to scale a wall at least 50 meters and then using his super speed (Something I don't believe we have seen since the episode where Katara and Sokka are sick) as a way to increase the weight of his "punch" is freaking amazing.
The techniques he have either used to avoid combat or run away is now being used as a setup for one of if not his most destuctive airbending moves we have ever seen (Outside of him being in the avatar state) is amazing character building.
He uses his earth bending lessons while using airbending in an amazing mix and it is freaking awesome!
Hey your using my screen saver
Air bending is about evading attacks so it made sense for him to always be doing that but earth bending is about standing your ground which you not only see in his fighting but also in the way he communicates with others
OK, so the "Earthbending a rock to lift someone up a couple feet" thing. I think I understand. Earthbenders take a very solid stance when the fight and root themselves in place. So when they are fighting an unknown force, they try to break this stance as a way of probing the enemy. Now, in the cases of The Lee and Aang, this proved to be advantageous for them, but for the other 99% of people who aren't Airbenders or crazy circus acrobats this would probably be a very effective way to totally fuck with somebody's sense of balance. If you've ever been standing on a surface that moved when you didn't expect it to, especially on the vertical plane, it's _extremely_ disorientating and can easily cause you to fall over just from the surprise of it. I imagine most people would probably be knocked flat on their ass if they had the Earth under them fly up 2 or 3 feet suddenly.
And we do see this sort of technique work. Toph threw _Azula_ flat on her face just by making the ground under her shift a foot or two. Sure, this was horizontally, but I imagine that the effect would have been about the same vertically as well. And we see other Earthbenders disorient and gain a serious advantage just by making the very ground under their opponents unstable a few times. It would be a great way to keep 99% of your opponents from being able to keep any sense of orientation or stability.
And it was only after Azula spent weeks in the earth kingdom did she manage to catch on to the similar technique that allowed her to avoid Tophs attack on the day of black sun.
I think the better approach would have been to move the ground below them down rather than up. If the ground suddenly rose beneath you and you were quick enough to crouch and lower your centre of mass, you'd be ok, but if the ground suddenly dropped away there's not much you can really do about it
Creating a platform for them to stand on and just raising it is hardly doing anything. Unless they're a massive klutz, most people would be fine
3:58
It's an interesting detail that Zuko uses a name Lee as a disguise, because that's the name Sokka's sword Master said was a perfect disguise in the fire nation. He said there was like a million Lee's.
It's interesting, the only character we meet actually named Lee is an Earth Kingdom citizen. So that makes me think there are lots of Lees in both the Fire Nation and the Earth Kingdom.
@@13vatra I think there was a fire nation general named Lee. He was only mentioned one time by Ozai if I recall correctly but he was on screen for a few seconds so I think that counts.
@@staszek8098 ooh okay, I didn't remember him. So I googled him, and its captain Li (pronounced the same way) he reports to Zhao and was part of the war meeting about invading the Northern Water Tribe. Props on remembering this dude existed haha! So turns out we have examples from both the Earth Kingdom and the Fire Nation.
I have to wonder if Piandao told Zuko about how there are a million Lees while training him, so that was just the first thing Zuko jumped to when coming up with a name.
The reason Mai seems useless is that they gave her a weapon which can never, ever work in the format. Do you think Nick would okay a shot of her knife thing actually hitting an earthbending soldier? As a result she gets off-screened to focus on the PG-friendly harmless ki jabs of Ty Lee.
I think this *is* the fault of the writers though. They shouldn't have given her weapons which are 100% non-threatening because of censorship. Even as a kid I knew her knives would be harmless because it was impossible to imagine someone getting hit with a knife in ATLA.
The problem is what do you replace those weapons with? Nets? A bola?
They finally got around it at the Boiling Rock, where Mai would use her knives to ensnare enemies using their clothes rather than actually attack them.
A boomerang
Mai hit Katara’s wristbands and pinned Katara’s arms to a tree during “The Chase”.
@@ziqi92 it's an okay workaround but her hitting someone's clothing at the wrist so hard that they're propelled into a nearby wall and pinned to it just looks weird.
@@GrapeCheckerBoard oh yeah she's far from useless, but moments like that are dumb. And it just brings more attention to the fact that her knives can't *actually* hit anyone.
I feel like Aang starts to engage in more fights and hit things head on right after he learns Earth Bending, which focuses on coming at your problems head on.
I think the rock plot convenience goes a step deeper. It works especially well because we've already been shown that these rocks are being thrown down at the drill, and it was initially an INconvenience for Aang since he was trying to focus on fighting Azula. But then that fight ends, and we as the viewers see the rock fall and think "yeah that makes sense, the General told his men not to stop thrown those so of course another one would fall down there right as Aang needed it. It's a plot convenience that was properly set up so that it just makes sense and is about as far from arbitrary as you can get. Excellent writing right there.
7:14 this is a nice gesture I think. One of the ways countries get to a place of going to war and killing others is by reducing their enemies into basically less than human. Sokka acknowledging that the fire nation are part of the world, that they're people, shows a great deal of perspective and maturity
Especially since he was the most vocal about his bigotry. Suspecting any outsider of his village as a spy for the Fire Nation (Aang an airbending child), wanting to travel the world to knock some heads, getting mad at a fire nation baby for playing with his club, "those savages make me sick" when witnessing the burned down forest, being against Aang learning firebending, calling it a stupid element, jerkbending etc.
I love Sokka for saving the villages in Jet, The Painted Lady, the Puppet Master and choosing not to pursue his mother's killer.
I think the creators of the show ran into a problem with Mai when they realised that for her to do anything effective with her fighting style, she would have to draw blood. Cartoonish violence is easy to pull off with the elements, and yeah fire bending would probably burn people in horrible ways realistically, but if any of Mai's knives or arrows actually connected on screen there would be blood, which would immediately crank up the rating of the show.
It isn't the tounge of a flame that burns your flesh, it's the flesh burning after it's been ignited. Being struck by a blast of superheated air won't set you on fire, even if that air is already burning. The specific heat of air relative to flesh is just too low to cause ignition in a timely manner. That's why flamethrowers spew flaming oil: the oil burns in direct contact with the target, directly delivering sufficient heat to ignite the target. A firebender needs a sustained fireblast at close range to set someone on fire, but Aang and the gang either block, dodge, dissipate or retaliate before they get seriously burned. The firebenders throwing fire punches are basically angry hair dryers.
@@bodaciouschad it's not Aang and the gang. It's the Gaang!
@@bodaciouschad Let's just be in agreement that if the show was rated higher. the fire would scorch people, and the throwing of giant rocks would make a nice tomato paste.
Let's hope Netflix goes for at least the PG13 rating ^_^
@@orhblin mmmm tomato pulp...
This is actually the second time Aang says the exact line “what i’d give to be a metal bender”
What's the first?
no it isn't.
That was clever editing on OA's part in The Blue Spirit video.
go watch the episode again.
I love the detail of aang using a little burst of air on the falling rocks in order to stop them, because it shows how he’s both still a novice with earthbending and learning to blend his elements together.
The reason the Gaang start taking on more fights is because aang has just learnt earthbending, which is about facing things head on and being stubborn. During his training, aang struggles because he is used to using airbending, and using tricks to win or escape, but after he learns earthbending he takes on more fights, facing them head on, like an earthbender would.
Honestly Mai doesn’t feel that important or useful because she’s only ever allowed to pin people to the wall. While impressive, is non-lethal and not as effective as straight up killing them.
The firenation would definatly kept going, because there is an inner Wall. Plus the drill is the perfect diversion. On top of all that, you can see the fire nation invasion force behind the drill at 2:35
Yeah, it would only take like a year for the drill to reach the inner wall at its current pace.
The reason he pointed it out is because the drill stopped. If they were headed for the inner wall (as makes senses), why did they stop right after breaching?
@@Igneusflama because they likely would have had to pull the drill out and reinsert it. Kinda like an actual drill in real life. Plus, the drill would have been vulnerable to get in without why support prior to getting past the wall.
@@howardbaxter2514 agree on the vulnerable part. That's a good enough reason on its own to stop. Guard duty on this thing would be a huge undertaking considering the length of it, but no guard duty is asking for trouble in enemy territory. Hope they weren't planning on a war while drilling lol.
As far as having to reinsert though, that would only be the case if it's still hitting something solid. Since this has broken through, reaching the second wall would essentially be a reinsertion.
+ninjarosias I always thought the holes at the front of the drill were partly so troops inside could disembark and they'd use the drill as a beachhead to get past any archers and rock throwers. Granted, those pipes were being used for the mud, but nobody said the expeditionary force would be clean.
Once the drill was messed up, the pipes were probably in pretty bad shape and many had probably collapsed, which is why they didn't do that.
The serpents pass and the drill are combined as one 47 minute episode on netflix right now, never would’ve made that connection that i’ve seen them separately
To answer the 2 valves question: redundancy is often done as a security measure. You never want to have a single point of failure, two valves means both have to fail in order to cause a problem.
... and makes everything twice as costly to build.
@@o00nemesis00o no it doesn't... you build an entire pipeline, adding 1 more valve might add like 1% cost to that, and even 1% is rounding up a lot.
About an extra $300 real world economy price. Or if it's government procured $1000 lol
All the bad engineering is intentional, their engineer is designing this stuff against his will, while he would be killed for providing schematics that did nothing he can still confuse them and waste their time and resources by having them make tones of spare parts and creating non-obvious weak points.
@@o00nemesis00o yea almost as costly as another Chernobyl lmaoooo. Redundancy my guy, it saves lives
Man, the avatar series hits me in a place no other series, movie, game or song can hit. It's like there's an unique set of emotions thats reserved just for this show
I feel the same way
Yeah that's called nostalgia
@@DanielSilva-gc4xz You guys have butchered that word so badly.
@@kachosuffer7 who is "you guys"? Op is basically describing nostalgia.
The Avatar theme is so cool dude. I loved every time they used it. I must have watched that Aang going up the wall and then dropping down scene like a 100 times as a kid. It's so perfect, perfect build up, perfect timing, perfect score. Just hype as hell man!
Azula holding Aang to the collar and trying to shoot fire at him point-blank already hints that Azula would exploit every opportunity she got to kill Aang. This already foreshadows her almost successful attempt to kill Aang during his completion of the avatar state at the end of Book 2.
This episode is really emblematic of one of my favorite aspects of this show: The sheer creativity present with the threats it poses to these characters is _overwhelming._ It's actually one thing I think seasons 1 and 2 do a lot better than 3, actually. Seriously, how do you even come up with a setup this inspired? It's genuinely a sight to behold.
I just realized that since we only ever see seal script used in this universe and not the Latin alphabet, it actually makes no sense that the passport lady mispronounced the name "Mushi"
I think it is interesting you point out how Aang changes throughout the series and goes from running away, evading fights, to taking them head on. It shows he's developed as a character and actually took the lessons from Bitter Work to heart. Remember that Air Nomads avoid and evade, while Earthbenders are more head on and aggressive. Aang changing around the same point he learns Earthbending is a really cool mirror of this
About the colour inversion on Momo's tail: That was propably a key frame with the right colour and the rest are inbetweens, outsourced to a different animation studio
This randomly came out of recommendations, I’ve watched this cartoon at least five times over, so a random dude breaking down random parts of random episodes is literally perfect for me, gonna binge watch this all now thanks
I'm here for the algorithm. Can't imagine why you'd be getting hit for copyright. I feel like your work absolutely falls within the bounds of transformative and educational. Could probably accurately call it critique as well, honestly.
it's so annoying how youtube deals with this stuff
There is no fair use in Ba Sing Se
Because the copyright strike system RUclips uses has all the precision of a sledgehammer. I get it that they had to step up their moderation game to avoid getting sued into oblivion -- I remember a time when people would routinely post entire episodes of shows or whole movies, which is obviously copyright violation. But it's impractical to have people moderate every video on the site, and bots aren't good at telling what's fair use or not. Unfortunately, when it comes to striking fair use content vs letting copyright violators slip through, RUclips leans towards the former, because they judge that avoiding lawsuits from big companies is more important than avoiding false strikes. I get their reasoning. Still annoying though.
This isn't even the worst I've heard of. itsagundam got hit with a copyright strike for his own music, that he wrote and owns the rights to.
@@Shnarfbird but that would mean that there is fair use in Ba Sing Se, which isn’t true.
The "hellish torture" hypothetical when Ty-Lee was stuck in the water sphere is why I'd love to see a more brutal avatar series that explores blood/bodily fluid bending and other dark aspects of bending more frequently
Problems would be resolved too easily. For example air benders snatching the air out of people's lungs or earth benders shooting unsuspecting people with earth bullets.
*C U M B E N D I N G*
@@gabreshaa8234 if they decide to go the "Games of Thrones" route with a new show xD
Peebending
@Labiche then you would have enjoyed Avatar kyoshi....there's one earth bender who literally buried people alive.....
something I love about this episode is that it took Iroh over a year, thousands of lives, and even his own son to get past the walls of ba sing se
but with one compliment, he passed through in only a few minutes
I mean, the let's take fights head-on attitude could also be seen as starting at the episode bitter work, an episode centered on Aang needing to take things head-on to be a good earth bender
"She doesn't look dangerous, but she knows rhe human body"
"Yeah, but the worst part is what she did to his foot though"
I literally came upon this comment, when that was on screen. 😅
one of the best written shows of all time. I liked how they didn't have one character overwhelm every episode. Sometimes it was Toph, sometimes Katara, every now and then Sokka, etc
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Thank you
Who tf is you
yeah yeah what about another cod cinematic
Why are you here scope
Hey scope! I love you vids bro!!!
Wait why are you here?
"The technology in Legend of Korra makes no sense"
70 years ago, this giant Drill puts all technology in LoK to shame.
Yeah if the fire nation could make that thing, something that even with are technology we couldn't pull off then yeah the tech in Korra makes sense
@@lmul1441 We probably could make something like the drill, there just hasn't been a reason for us to.
@Lolopopolo To be fair the Fire Nation is working with the resources of most of the world so it would make sense why the home island wasn't that affected by the drill's existence.
@Lolopopolo
I'll give you the gravity thing, but I would like to point out that the Fire Nation is a fascist dictatorship. Subservience to the state would've been heavily emphasized for the past 100 (I think) years.
More to the point, do you really think the Fire Nation government is gonna be telling its citizens about virtually any of its defeats?
So many people forget that the Fire Nation is already in the middle of an Industrial Revolution. They have war balloons, zeppelins, tanks, factories, jet skis, ironclad warships..if not for Fantasy Gun Control they would have firearms and cannons too!
I still remember the day this episode aired. Had went to a buddy’s birthday part at this huge indoor soccer field. On the way home, we were all pleading for his dad to go faster as we were minutes from it airing. We all got home in time, ran to our tvs, and watched it. It was the talk of our grade school.
8:08 That water is evacuating the drilled parts from the drill head of the drill drilling into the wall, so the drill can drill further. It's used in modern drills, too. Industrial diamonds embedded into metal are used to scrape away at the stone, and water is evacuating the scrapped stuff so the drills can drill new parts of the wall instead of trying to drill the dislodged parts of the wall and progress slower and get the drill bits consumed for less progress. And the water also helps cool down the drill head, allowing the drill to operate for longer periods without rest. So it's a water-cooled drill train/truck. Also, export your content to Odysee, please!
I think he’s referring more to the fact that they animated rocks floating on water
@@Rocketsnail1000 It's probably to make it clearer that it's parts of the wall being flushed away, instead of just brown water.
So odd for them to use a solid tool though when they could machine much faster and longer, for much cheaper by using modular cutting edges because nobody is asking for crazy precise tolerances.
The amount of times you said “drill” or “drilling” in this comment scares me
Wtf is Odysee
That final fight is so good...it’s such a great culmination of all of Aang’s efforts to learn so far.
Also the dichotomy you pointed out is so cool, I would’ve never noticed that!
You said it yourself this technology is a huge leap for them, manufacturing those high pressure pipes is quite difficult, boring them might not be possible in longer than those lengths, they probably just don't have the tooling or large enough machines so they need multiple short ones to make a long run, I know this is a stretch because they have ships but the drill needs an order of magnitude more steam pressure and they can probably generate it with a lot of fire benders, they still need the pressure system and turbines to be sound though.
I really appreciate your combination of not shying from pointing out inconsistencies/critiques while expressing the genuine abundant appreciation and love you have for the series!
Just realized that Aang used airbending to hover up the wall then run straight down (also airbending to speed him up) to use earthbending on the drill. I like how he used the opposites in a combo
If you assume Avatar's world is smaller than ours, thus it has a lower gravity, that would explain a lot. Like giant flying bison, Ty Lee's crazy acrobatics, Aang's insane core strength, Azula's ability to survive 50 feet falls, and Zuko's crazy jumps.
That moment where he cuts the rock and then delivers the final blow... Oh man what a fucking epic scene!!
Water: Flowing, Learning to Change form, taking low ground
Earth: Holding firm, defending themselves, building strength
Fire: Destruction, Energy, bringing rebirth like a Phoenix from the ashes
My view on the seasons/chapters.
Good point
The series ends on Autumn. The season of Air, the element of freedom.
2nd rewatch of this series now. Crazy it being 2 years already since this video blew up and made this channel huge and made me start watching. Glad I found this
Mfw Aang refuses to kill people but completely crushes everyone inside this machine like it’s nothing
It's Metal Gear Solid non lethal logic. Destroying tanks and helicopters doesn't count as killing people because you didn't see them die.
@@MemeMarine it's the same logic as the following anecdote: "if a tree fell down in a forest, but no one was there to see, did it really fall?"
@@MemeMarine Tank crews often survive their tank getting destroyed. For one historical example, despite myths about Sherman tanks being death traps, on average 4 out of the 5 crew members survived when a Sherman was destroyed. Oftentimes all 5 did, and occasionally the ammo storage was hit directly and everyone died in a massive explosion. Destroy more than a handful though, and it's almost certain you've killed someone.
@@felonyx5123 if you destroy it by throwing a hand grenade into the hatch, like Snake did, the crew are not going to survive.
@@MemeMarine unless they throw it back out
Terra Team (and Toph, when she fought Aang) uses the "jut some earth up" move to displace a grounded opponent. The movement is meant to shift balance and put a groundedopponent on the defensive, but against airbenders and acrobats (which military/police earthbenders typically don't encounter) it has lessened utility.
Jet’s expression when he sees iroh’s hot tea always gives me such ghibli vibes. Just feels like his hair should be puffing up in shock and outrage lmao
6:40 No, you probably would have all those flanges on the straight pipe. Manufacturing is hard, and making things in smaller, uniform pieces is easier. And assembling things that weight less is easier too. Look at pipeline photos, you will see that they have flanges at regular distances. And they are usually not comically oversized. The flanges are quite close in the Avatar, but that totally depends of their production process, how heavy loads they can lift, how they use those pieces and many more.
I don't think he has a background as an industrial engineer, to be fair.
I had the same thought, but then figured since they have the capacity to manufacture this massive steam powered catapiller thing it may be a moot point.
That and it makes it easier to replace or repair a section of pipe, they had an engineering and repair crew and they probably had some redundant systems so they could repair the drill while it's still in operation.
That and in most industrial machines you have backups FOR the Backups FOR..... get ready... THE BACKUPS! Called the contingency system
One detail i really like is that when they show the braces breaking, all of them snap and slide a bit exept for one that completly breaks which is the first one that the gaang cut clean all the way thru.
At first I thought you were going to analyze the litterall drill as a machine, but than I realized that I just stumbled across one of the best series on youtube. Thank you for putting in the Workl to provide us with this series
7:30 I think you missed it, he is worried because it actually is his fault. Because earlier ty lee spotted the sand cloud toph made to get in unseen he said not to worry about it even though azula said or looked like she was worried, I can’t completely recall.
He also said the drill was impertinent. Looks pretty bad when two waterbenders cut through one of them.
Not to mention that he said Azula couldn't "reasonably" get mad at him; when has Azula ever NOT done that?
@@HaydrogenBombright! Since when is Azula reasonable? Lol
The grand scheme of things? Without Mai, there's no way Zuko, Sokka, Suki, Hakoda, Chit Sang and the Warden would've died at the Boiling Rock. And Azula would never have gone emotionally unbalanced for Zuko to beat her in the finale. Give Mai more credit than that good Sir.
I think a huge thing he's utterly leaving out is that Azula herself seems to enjoy employing psychological warfare as well as physical- I can see no better guards for a psychological play than Mai and Ty Lee.
It's been shown that both characters are underestimated multiple times due to their stature- But even taking this as a positive for both of them- Most people would focus on Mai- After all, she is a much bigger seeming threat with her mid range knives- Especially with how she's shown to be an expert at wielding them.
This makes her the perfect distraction to take attention away from the real weapon since Ty Lee is often perceived as a less obvious threat- Allowing her to quickly move into range and immobilize benders with her Chi blocking.
The drill is the perfect example of this- As we see all the Earth Benders focusing largely on fending off Mai's daggers- which are at a near constant barrage allowing Ty Lee to utterly decimate their attack force before they realize what's happening
I've been rewatching some of the videos and it's so cool how you make me appreciate how great this show is so much more. You point out so much about what makes it truly amazing.
Ok so Mai is pretty much a trained assassin, which is why she seems useless in the grand scheme of things, due to target audience reasons she can't be used as an actual assassin, and she wasn't actually useless as Book 3 showed. Book 2 just needed her to have some sort of skill to have a trio of girls, and Mai got the Assassin that can't assassinate anything short stick.
The thing I love most about avatar is that when aang is solving a problem that isn’t related to hurting a person or animal, we get to see aangs incredible power, showing how much of a pacifist is and that he pulls his punches and that he probably would destroy azula if he wasn’t a pacifist.
Why is Aang so insanely overrated for no good reason? The guy got his ass kicked every single time he fought Azula, and he literally even failed to catch a bendingless Azula due to her superior physical speed(for which he needs his airbending), but him being a pacifist while still using potentially lethal moves over and over again in a kids show that gave the heroes thick plot armor and prevented firebenders the most from really showing how terryfying their powers would be, somehow means he could just destroy the villain whose whole theme it was to show that play time is over without even activating his god-mode cheatcode?
Just to make the point at 8:40 worse: technically Katara would be simulating a thing called a "drowning machine"
Surely your joking there's no such thi- *looks it up*
..............oh.
Aang and the gang taking things head on makes a massive amount of narrittive sense for the midpoint in book 2 because of Aang learning earth bending, along with the Earthbender mentality of directness, which is unlike the focus of evasion and control of airbending and waterbending.
Such a well written show.
5:40 I would assume those are steam pipes. It's best practice to valve off elbows. Steam is corrosive and the elbows always go first. The fire nation's engineers were thinking about maintenance.
Complementary algorithm comment~ I love that you notice things like the sun placement, the Abbey women, the family continuity. I love this show and its so interesting how much I never noticed, keep up the great work!
I'm entirely convinced that the gravity on the planet of Avatar is less than half that on earth. Physics of falling and jumping seems to support this theory.
Yeah, and it’s also been proven to be smaller
The attention to detail, all the recalls, its very impressive. Even if you are not aware i think you still grasp the familiarity
I completely agree the serpents pass and the drill are such a good pairing of episode stories. Definitely some highlights of the series. That music when aangs running up the wall for the final blow on the drill has always stuck with me. So emotional and spot on. What a show
I'm watching the entire series again on Netflix (how original) and I can confirm that these 2 episodes - Serpent's Pass and The Drill - are still together, as a 40 minute long episode.
wow, never have i realized the sun setting from behind the drill part. props to you!!
It was never clear to me why this was always a two-parter with The Serpent's Pass. If it wasn't for your overanalyzing, I would have never figured it out! That's some gooood overanalyzing.
This show was a huge part of my childhood, it’s a weird mix of nostalgia and sadness when I rewatch clips like this, I wish I could go back to that time when I’d rush home from the bus stop after school and wait In anticipation to watch the two back to back episodes every afternoon. Things were different back then.