Avatar Series Pilot
Comments78this wiki
| | I am a 400 foot tall purple platypus bear with pink horns and silver wings.
The following information is not considered canon. |
| "Pilot" | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Information | |||
|
|||
|
|||
|
|||
|
|||
|
|||
|
|||
The pilot episode never aired on public television and instead appears as an extra feature on Avatar DVDs with commentary from Mike and Bryan; it is also available for purchase with and without the commentary on iTunes. Many elements of the pilot are dissimilar to what eventually developed into the televised series.
Contents |
Background
Edit



Added by Lady LostrisSince January 2002, Mike DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko had been given the blessing of Nickelodeon's then-head of development Eric Colemen to begin crafting a series that contained "action and adventure" and "legends and lore". Konietzko eventually fell in love with the drawing of a "balding human man in his forties wearing a futuristic outfit" and later adding an arrow design to his head as well (an early prototype for Aang) along with sketches of a "robot cyclops monkey holding a staff" (an early concept of Momo[2]) and "a bipedal polar bear-dog hybrid" (an early concept of Appa that was later recycled as Naga[3]).[4]
As other characters were created,[5] and concepts such as the bending arts' reliance on martial artistry came to be,[6] the show's focus shifted slowly from sci-fi heavy to more Asian-influenced. These modifications were the ones presented to Nickelodeon, the same ones which persuaded the corporation to "greenlight" Konietzko and DiMartino's plans and produce their pilot.[1] The characters were the earliest forms of Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra.
Synopsis
Edit
The pilot begins with Kya explaining the war between the nations and the absence and later discovery of the Avatar, Aang. Aang, Sokka, and Kya are flying on Aang's sky bison, Appa, fleeing from Prince Zuko of the Fire Nation, who is pursuing them on his ship. Zuko launches fireballs in an attempt to bring them down, but Appa manages to avoid the attack. Moments later, a serpent rises out of the water in front of Appa, who manages to evade it. Deprived of its prey, the serpent searches for another victim to attack, and begins to attack Zuko's ship upon spotting it. This buys Aang and his friends enough time to get away safely. Zuko, defending his ship, starts attacking the massive serpent with firebending.
The group lands on an island to relax. Kya tries to practice her waterbending, but she cannot control it well. Seeing her frustration, Aang proceeds to give her some pointers by demonstrating the correct leg stance. Sokka, agitated that the two of them are playing around, demands they help him look for food. Kya is reluctant to let Aang go off by himself since he is the world's last hope, so Sokka goes out to look for food alone. He finds some wild berries and eats them, but they taste bad. Suddenly, Fire Nation soldiers arrive, and they ambush and capture him.
Alarmed that Sokka has not returned yet, Aang asks Kya to fly with him on his glider around the island to search for him. They manage to spot the soldiers taking Sokka into a Fire Nation base. Reasoning that since Aang is the Avatar and too important to risk being captured, Kya tells him to wait outside the base while she sneaks in to save Sokka. Irritated, Aang plays with Momo, but later decides he should be helping people, and flies into the base anyway.



Added by RuenSokka is brought forth to Prince Zuko, who has just returned to the base with the serpent's decapitated head. Sokka insults him, calling Zuko "scar boy". Right then, two guards arrive with Kya captured. Kya and Sokka are both questioned by Zuko about the whereabouts of the Avatar, but they deny everything. Zuko prepares to have the soldiers scour the island for the Avatar, but at that moment, Aang suddenly flies in on his glider, shocking everyone.
Aang flies around the base, gathering everyone's attention by performing stunts and lands, but is quickly surrounded by soldiers armed with spears. Zuko orders the soldiers to throw Kya and Sokka down into a pit. Determined to save them, Aang uses airbending to escape and taunts Zuko to take him on alone. Momo and Zuko's pet hawk fight, while Zuko pursues Aang and attacks with firebending.



Added by ThailogThey battle atop scaffolding, eventually fighting on the head of a huge, defaced Avatar statue within the base. Zuko eventually disarms Aang and thinks he has cornered the Avatar, but Aang jumps off the statue. His purposeful endangerment of himself causes him to enter the Avatar State, and he subsequently throws Zuko off with a powerful gust of air. However, before Zuko hits the ground, Aang leaves the Avatar State and saves him from a fatal fall. Sokka, trapped in the pit with his sister, finds the situation hopeless. However, Kya waterbends a large container of water to fill the pit, freeing them, though they find themselves surrounded by soldiers. Aang flies by as Sokka throws his boomerang with rope attached to it, and it wraps itself around Aang's glider. They all escape, along with Momo and a basket of food.
That night, they leave the island flying on Appa. Aang falls asleep and then comically falls off Appa's head, later remarking he had meant to do so.
Credits
Edit
- Written by:
- Michael Dante DiMartino
- Bryan Konietzko
- Scott Sonneborn (additional writing)
- Sib Ventress (additional writing)
- Directed by:
- Starring:
- Mitchel Musso - Aang
- Mae Whitman - Kya
- Jack DeSena - Sokka
- Dante Basco:
- Prince Zuko
- Soldier #1
- Dee Bradley Baker:
Production notes
Edit



Added by Lady Lostris Transcript
Edit
- Main article: Transcript:Avatar Series Pilot
Trivia
Edit
- The concept of the Avatar State as a defense mechanism was similar to its concept in the main series, but different in that Aang would purposely put himself into danger by jumping off the statue to enter it. The creators later felt that the concept of the Avatar State needed to be more complex, and in the series gave Aang no control over it at first, as he would have to be in genuine danger to go into it.
- Many aspects of the original pilot were later incorporated into the actual series but in different fashions:
- The serpent that attacked Team Avatar and then Zuko's ship was recycled in "The Serpent's Pass" and "The Awakening".
- The Fire Nation soldier armor design is significantly different from the original series' primary design but an earlier Fire Nation armor seen in "The Southern Air Temple" and "The Siege of the North, Part 1" share similarities to the original design.
- Zuko and Aang's scaffolding battle was re-used in "Return to Omashu" during Aang's fight with Azula.
- Zuko's messenger hawk chasing Momo was recycled in "The Waterbending Scroll" where the pirate captain's iguana parrot chased Momo and in "The Runaway" where Momo and Hawky do not get along.
- Aang saving Zuko at the last last minute was recycled in "The Blue Spirit" and "The Siege of the North, Part 2".
- Sokka saving himself and Kya by tossing his boomerang attached to a rope to Aang as he flew over on his glider was re-used in "The Northern Air Temple" though there Sokka saved himself and the mechanist.
- Although Kya is renamed Katara, her "original" name is recycled as the names for both her mother and daughter.
- As Aang airbends in the opening sequence, a statue of a lion turtle can be seen.
- While the early concept of Pakku waterbends in the opening sequence, the Northern Water Tribe in the background looks more like a castle than how it is depicted in the final version.
- The prototype of Toph seen the opening sequence is later recycled as The Boulder, Sud and Bolin.
References
Edit
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Avatar: The Last Airbender — The Art of the Animated Series, page 30.
- ↑ Avatar: The Last Airbender — The Art of the Animated Series, page 22.
- ↑ "Welcome to Republic City". Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko (writers) & Joaquim Dos Santos, Ki Hyun Ryu (directors). The Legend of Korra. Nickelodeon. April 14, 2012. No. 1, Book One: Air
- ↑ Avatar: The Last Airbender — The Art of the Animated Series, pages 10 and 11.
- ↑ Avatar: The Last Airbender — The Art of the Animated Series, pages 14-25.
- ↑ Avatar: The Last Airbender — The Art of the Animated Series, pages 26 and 27.
External links
Edit
- Avatar: The Last Airbender, Season 1: Essentials Collection on iTunes, as "selected by the show creators," includes the pilot with and without commentary. These two versions of the episode are of a set, available only when the rest of the ten-episode album (nine when the pilot is discounted from being two separate episodes) is purchased.