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Vigilante Justice in The Legend of Korra: “The Aftermath”

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Vigilante Justice in The Legend of Korra: “The Aftermath”

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Vigilante Justice in The Legend of Korra: “The Aftermath”

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Published on May 24, 2012

Vigilante Justice in The Legend of Korra:
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Vigilante Justice in The Legend of Korra:

Well ask and ye shall receive: I wanted more Asami from The Legend of Korra and in this week’s episode, “The Aftermath,” we got plenty. That’s not all we got; we got to see Tenzin throw down, we got another chance to see Lin Beifong just tear stuff up and we got to see Korra grow as a person. Oh, and mecha. We get to see crazy deep sea diver-esque mechs. I was starting to speculate that Asami might be the Krew’s Cordelia, a la Buffy the Vampire Slayer — no offense to Cordelia, who is also clearly awesome for her own reasons — but watching her burn rubber and kick butt I’m starting to think that she might be the group’s Han Solo. You know what that means…Tahno, it isn’t too late to get your act together and become the Cordelia!

Hiroshi Sato, Asami’s father, is revealed to be one of the Equalists, and not a “well, he has reasonable political opinions about bender privilege and non-bender oppression” kind, either. More of a “I’m from Buenos Aires Kirachu Island and I say kill ‘em all!” sort of guy. The Agni Kai gang killed his wife Asami’s mother and he wants bloody vengeance against all benders, now. Not only has he been (presumably) funding Amon and the Equalists — we’ve been wondering where the money has been coming from since at least “The Spirit of Competition” — but also inventing and constructing weapons for them. Most notably and manifestly he’s been building platinum exoskeletons, “Big Daddy”-like constructions with grappling hooks and crushing fists. Why platinum?  Because platinum is apparently so “pure” that even the metal benders can’t manipulate it.

We knew one of the Satos were going to be affiliated with the Equalists; it was too dramatically appropriate not to be true. I’m not entirely convinced that this episode exonerates Asami — the possibility of a double agent scenario is sort of plausible — but I am glad they didn’t play that card so soon. I’d prefer to see her step up and lead a faction in opposition to Amon, and it isn’t too late for her to do so. Well, to be quite honest with you, I’d like to see her go full on Miriya Parina, the ace mecha pilot from Robotech. I want to see Asami in a suit of power armor call it a “satomech, perhaps? bringing both her technical background, her self-defense skills and her knack for driving to a fever pitch. That’s just my personal hope for her.

Asami is a much more rounded out as a character now, thanks to this episode. Her playing in the pool with Mako and Bolin, her comments about asking for forgiveness being easier than asking for permission, her satomobile test driving, her choice to zap her father and then beat up some Equalists, all these things build up to add dimension to her. More than that; we get to see Korra compared to her, rather than contrasted, and they both come out the better for it.

Despite comments about prissiness and the gag with Korra powdering her nose, we start to see that Asami and Korra might have complimentary personalities, rather than conflicting ones. And how cute are those bathing suits — much more modest than the style during “The Beach” episode of Avatar: The Last Airbender — that they are wearing at their pool party?  That is another golden cosplay opportunity.

There are a number of call-backs and sight gags in this episode. Most notable of all of them is easily the reference to Cabbage Corp, featuring a statue of Avatar: The Last Airbender’s Cabbage Merchant and the president of Cabbage Corp Lao Gan Lan being dragged away beneath it screaming “Not my Cabbage Corp!” Lao Gan Lan roughly means “Honorable Green Vegetable” in Chinese, as I understand it, making the joke function on multiple levels. And come on — who didn’t sing-shout “Secret Tunnel!” when Korra and the metalbenders got onto the diagonal elevator?  Heck, I’m singing it now!

I’m increasingly curious about Republic City — rather than fade into the background, each successive episode of The Legend of Korra seems to deepen the mystique of the setting. What is with the…scaly pigeon-apes in the street?  Lizard crows, I guess they are called?  Those are…unsettling critters. Besides the fauna of the city, we also get a good look at some new architecture. The gorgeous and shiny pro-bending stadium may have burned, but we get to ogle new stuff in its place, like the Sato mansion, the Future Industries warehouse and the outstanding Silk Road Bridge. I could look at Republic City all day long.

After “And the Winner Is…” I called Lin Beifong “Spider-Lin,” and I wasn’t alone in that. It was as if millions of voices suddenly cried out, you know?  Having seen this episode, though, I’m going to have to add “WolverLine” to her list of epithets. Did you see her metal-bend claws out of her armor, jump on one of those Bioshock-looking mechs and start wailing on it?  How incredible was that?  It was, to repurpose some local sports terminology, “Lincredible.”  We’re just a couple episodes away from Korra throwing her in a ”Fastball Special,“ at this rate. We see incontrovertible earthbending from the metalbender cops, too; there were some theories that they have overspecialized and lost the ability to earthbend, but we see proof that isn’t the case. Beyond that is her final grimacing promise to bring vigilante justice to Amon and the Equalists. As her mother Toph would say: “Yes!  Let’s break some rules!” The awesome Beifong inheritance doesn’t stop there either — unsheathing her bare foot and using seismic senses like her mother?  So she’s Dare DeviLin, too?  So cool.


Mordicai Knode thinks that “The Agni Kai” is a pretty tough name for a post-colonial crime syndicate. And he’s still singing “Secret Tunnel.” Is it in your head now, too? You could try to give him another ear worm by tweeting him on Twitter and you can follow his ”Linsanity” on Tumblr if you want to be exposed to other infectious memes.

About the Author

Mordicai Knode

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Mordicai Knode thinks that “The Agni Kai” is a pretty tough name for a post-colonial crime syndicate. And he’s still singing “Secret Tunnel.” Is it in your head now, too? You could try to give him another ear worm by tweeting him on Twitter and you can follow his ”Linsanity” on Tumblr if you want to be exposed to other infectious memes.
Learn More About Mordicai
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12 years ago

I was practically jumping up and down in excitement when I saw Lin remove her shoes. The way this series is deepening and expanding all the previous lore just gets better with each episode. Additionally, my wife did not understand why the Cabbage Corp. thing was so funny.

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12 years ago

I love the female characters on this show sooooo much! And as a woman ‘this close’ to 40, having an older female character out in the middle of everything kicking ass & taking names is just so awesome!!!!!

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Lsana
12 years ago

Just a question: how different is Lin’s desire to go vigilante to get the equalists in revenge for her metalbenders from Hiroshi’s desire to go vigilante to get revenge for his wife? I guess we can’t really answer that until we see exactly where Lin goes after her resignation, but I can’t help feeling that the parallels are…uncomfortable to say the least.

I’m really hoping to see more of Korra/Asami. I want to see them become friends. I’m also thinking that Asami might be a good teacher for Korra. After all, if Korra is going to be fighting people who can take away her bending, even temporarily, it might be a good idea for her to learn how to fight without it.

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Zonglasdf
12 years ago

>Just a question: how different is Lin’s desire to go vigilante to get the equalists in revenge for her metalbenders from Hiroshi’s desire to go vigilante to get revenge for his wife?

I’m hoping the show postulates that they aren’t that different and this isn’t a conflict you can win by beating up a bunch of bad guys.

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realmcovet
12 years ago

You share the same personal hopes that I do for Asami, that’s for sure Mordicai. & Lsana! That’s a great point about Korra having to learn to fight without bending. I’d love to see Korra & Asami’s friendship develop in that way.

I LOVED that scene when Lin busted out her mom’s seismic senses move. I was like “OH HELL YEAH!” So much awesome.

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12 years ago

This episode was made of win.

First, I love that they designed Asami to have the “typical evil anime” look just for the moment at the end of this episode where they could subvert it. Asami on Team Avatar! Speaking of which, I really hope that having everyone on Airbender Island really adds to the drama and team dynamics. Also, Korra going deeper in her training.

Lin’s metalbending the sole of her boot to retract for earthsensing…seriously guys, this show! Lin’s Fullmetal Alchemist blade…ok pretty much everything with Lin just rocks.

Tenzin going badass! Finally we get to see what a mature airbender can do with his skills. Surfing a freaking airwheel! Seriously one of the most awesome moments in an episode full of awesome moments. I also loved his “air cusion” to break Korra’s fall.

Mako and Bolin faking out the guard was brilliant and hilarious. I just love the simple look that the two of them exchange. You could tell that they had done this type of thing before when they were living on the streets.

Bolin deserves his own paragraph here. He is quickly becoming one of my favorite Avatar characters. He never ceases to crack me up. From his using Pabu to talk to Korra, to his routine with the butler drying him and Pabu then immediately jumping back in the pool, to using an unconscious Tenzin to talk to Hiroshi Sato…delightful.

All in all, a wonderful episode and I can’t wait for the next one. On that note, I hear that there might be a hiatus this week. Unfortunately I can’t find a place that will confirm or deny that, just wanted to give everyone a heads up.

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12 years ago

Just caught up with the last three episodes last night. I’m really very intrigued by the Lin/Tenzin thing. I know it began in the last episode, but I was wondering how far it could be taken. Two people with a very long history together, and a more complicated “breaking up” story than Pema let on (… or possibly, more complicated than she knows?). This whole theme is subtle but continuous in the background of “The Aftermath.”

The whole reason for their breaking up is the fact they were “growing apart” — and all of a sudden, they’re very much forced together, and in a sort of “parental” context of their own over Korra, which continued through this episode. Every time we see Lin, she’s with Tenzin, day and night, standing butt-to-butt. In some scenes you might expect them to be, oh I don’t know, standing apart, investigating different things, but that’s not the narrative we’re given. Constant one-on-one proximity and conversation. Completing each other’s thoughts, moving in unison, frequent meaningful silent glances exchanged.

When they’re both standing together in the observation deck of the blimp, and Lin says, “Protecting Republic City is all I care about” and Tenzin turns his head away from her, and his gaze goes down… It need not be read in this context, it could be taken just as him thoughtfully accepting Lin’s words, but then again….

Wonder what Pema thinks of these developments. Must be tough for a pregnant non-bender saddled with three rambunctious airbender kids to sit by the sidelines while her husband spends all his time with a former lover. I don’t see Bryke as letting this one go as-is. Think she might get caught up in the Equalists at some point…?

Also, on a “subverting the trope” note — I really appreciate that after Korra’s “listening at the keyhole to a sinister phonecall” incident that Tenzin and Lin didn’t appear to buy what was going on. I always hate when people so easily buy the spun plausible lie in that trope. Lin’s slight shift in her stare, a quick glance shared between her and Tenzin, a neutral response from Tenzin to buy time; a familiar trope that tends to be about creating friction within a group used to actually forward the story! Huzzah!

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SPC
12 years ago

If nothing else, Asami gets extra credit for taking out electric-stick-guy so efficiently! He’s wiped the floor with everybody else at least once, so it was lovely watching him get just smacked down like that.

Oh, it’s going to be fun seeing how Tenzin’s kids react to all their new neighbors!

Yet another thing (of many) to give these shows credit for: they never fall into the trap of demonizing adults that so many cartoons do. The grownups, like the kids, are just people. Some good, some not, some trustworthy, some not. Some pure awesome. I am totally loving Tenzin and Lin too.

Ashe Armstrong
12 years ago

I’m waiting on Tenzin to have a “Dumbledore moment.” Like in Half-Blood Prince, where the big D uses that redonkulous fire spell. That, just…after episode 5’s love triangle frustration and shiptasticness, I am STOKED about the show again. I was kind of hoping that Sato being the sympathizer was a fake-out, just because it seemed too easy but it makes sense. Though, it could’ve been Cabbage Man. All those cabbages, suffered, lost…always because of benders. “MY CABBAGES,” he would cry out after some careless bender destroyed them. Truly, if anyone had a reason to strike out, it is Cabbage Man. But he’s better than that! (Or, is it his son? I’m not sure…)

But for cereals, everything was so good and Lin with the foot and Pabu and the poofy hair and poor butler and DON’T DO IT, KORRA, THE POWDER IS A TRICK! and Asami whoopin butt…yes.

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phodyr
12 years ago

The only thing that bothers me about this episode is a reminder of the speedy advancement of technology from A:TLA to LOK. It’s been 60 some years since the end of A:TLA and we have skyscrapers, zeppelins, cars, and mecha? Not klunky tech envisioned by turn of the century sci fi writers, but powerful things like Big Daddy. Crikey. Historical minded me thinks it’s a lot to have happen. It makes me think that A:TLA was set on the advent of industrialization, which means it was the last hurrah of the pre-industrialized world, which makes me sad for some reason.

Ashe Armstrong
12 years ago

@phodyr:
Well, remember though that the fire nation already had some pretty high tech stuff (remember the tanks that could climb mountains?) so it’s more an extrapolation of that via the nations coming together to prosper instead of warring.

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12 years ago

Just wanted to give kudos for the Miriya reference.

Easily the best episode of the series so far.

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Kingtcoon
12 years ago

So I like Tenzin – he’s got no hair on his head, so you know immediately that he’s a good guy. But I thought, during his fight sequences – Remember how bloodbending and plantbending were strong? How bloodbending was kind of bad and also really useful? Do you think that it’ll be Nickelodeon friendly enough to have Tenzin Airbending-choke people? Not recklessly and cruelly, but in the same way that Kitara bloodbent? I was kind of waiting for him to shut down Henry Ford’s platinum mecha that way.

Also – have you noticed that the pacing is a movie’s pacing? Usually TV would give you a low key episode to digest, but they’re striking hot irons with this- breakneck pace on this one plot- it’s interesting because it’s a movie – maybe this is a change owed to the Blu-ray series-binge age.

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12 years ago

*sigh*
I really want to like this series. I mean, I want to be as gaga over it as I was by its predecessor.
Alas, that isn’t happening.
The flow of episodes continues to feel clunky to me, the characters don’t feel fully fleshed out and now we have Lin Beifong refuting her entire stance on vigilante justice when that stance is no longer useful to her.
With each new episode, I grow more disappointed with this series.

David_Goldfarb
12 years ago

I found myself wondering whether platinum is much more common in the Avatar world (does it have a name?) than in ours, or whether the creators didn’t realize just how rare it actually is. From what I’ve read, that movable wall alone would require nearly all the platinum that’s ever been mined on this planet, let alone the mecha.

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Kingtycoon
12 years ago

Well – I didn’t mean to bring dragonball Z into this! That’s on you sir! You did that.

I mean only that – after an intense and very action-packed episode you’d maybe expect to see a lighter or more sedate episode- like the romantic storyline that preceded it ending with a nod toward the future excitement- just to modulate the audience’s tension. Comic relief etc… Not that I need that! Or really want it – it’s very cinematic, and I thought I’d mention it.

So you know what? I’m a little dissatisfied that the marriage patterns of the Air Nomads and the Water Tribes and the Earth Kingdom are all monogomous MF matches. You mentioned Tenzin and Lin and I’m thinking – shoot, how come he’s got just the one wife? I tend to think this is an area where worldbuilding will fall to contemporary values – one of those points where a creator has to compromise- but it’s interesting how marriage patterns throuhout the elemental nations are all the same.

The obvious next step for Airbending is flying. Aang sometimes flirted with flying – great leaps, single bounds, all that – but explaining this show to my kid from season 1 episode 2 I said- “Really, the airbender is the most dangerous and the firebender is probably the least.” Cause when it comes down to it – everyone needs air. I guess it’s Avatar physics and they never do snuff out fires by oxygen starvation – but I mean… We’ve all looked at the Gas-Destruction Sorcerer Base list – we know!

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Kingtycoon
12 years ago

No exactly – I’m not all pro-murder – I’m just thinking about what happens when the Airbending gets weaponized. Maybe it just looks like telekenesis. I mean – I can imagine scenarios where the airbenders can mess with the weak and strong nuclear forces you know? Blow apart matter.

But I guess the power that could come up and have a nice life in Avatarworld and not step on anyone else’s toes would be sound manipulation – I can see Tenzin doing Muad’dib type shouts. That’d be pretty cool actually – maybe some echolocation or silence auras – that kind of thing.

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phodyr
12 years ago

Kingtycoon: I agree about sound bending although I would have Air benders creating shock waves, sonic booms, super pressurized waves of air.

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AudreyG
12 years ago

27. Kingtycoon

If I remember correctly, there’s a blink-or-you’ll-miss-it line in season two where it’s mentioned that the Earth King has multiple wives.

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12 years ago

27. Kingtycoon

In fact, at least as far as we’ve seen in Republic City, there seem to be a lot more similarities than differences between the different nations’ cultures. I’m still kind of waiting for tension to appear between what I’ve come to think of as ethnic groups (since it’s not clear whether the differen nations still exist politically, but there clearly are distinctions among the citizens of Republic City). In particular: Bolin and Mako’s parents’ “mixed marriage” seems like a bit of relevant backstory that’s just waiting to pop up and make itself heard. I don’t think the cultural and political separations between the nations as of A:tLA can possibly have disappeared by this time. It seems as though they’re just not being brought to the fore now that everyone is nominally united.

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12 years ago

37. mordicai

I also really wish we knew whether the Fire Nation, Earth Kingdom, and Southern and Northern Water Tribes still exist as political entities. Sometimes it seems as though Republic City is the capital of a politically united world, sometimes it seems like the nations still exist and Republic City is outside all of them. I have a pet theory that there are five representatives on the council because one of them is a Northern and the other a Southern Water Tribesmember, but I’m not sure if this is because they’re two distinct but related ethnic groups (think Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews) or because those are two different countries. Or possibly I’m wrong and it’s just a five-member council, not a council of national/ethnic representatives. Is it weird that I’m eagerly awaiting each episode for news about the world’s political structure? :)

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sTicK SH33P
12 years ago

Has anyone else noticed that it’s always a firebender who kills people. For example, Asami’s mother, Mako and Bolin’s parents, and Amon said his family was as well, I believe. Is it just impossible for any other type of bender to kill someone or what?

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12 years ago

I could watch Tenzin and Lin kick ass all day long. LOVE IT!!

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Chris F
12 years ago

Mordicai, I like your response to #39, as one reason the finale to the original show underwhelmed me a bit was that it seemed to tie things up too neatly, i.e., by replacing one ruler with another, all the nasty mindsets and scars caused by jingoistic expansion just go away. I like that there’s potential to see that fallout explored in more depth here.

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Chris F
12 years ago

Separate issue: apparently Lin did not learn from Toph the skill of being a human lie detector. I can’t recall whether that ability stemmed from Toph’s earthbending, her blindness, or the unique combination of the two, though. Seems like it would have been a pretty relevant skill to teach, so I’m assuming it had to be unique to Toph.