Talk:Azula/@comment-4171712-20110719233502/@comment-4143490-20110720054025

I very much agree with you. Bryke did a very smart thing for kids show, or any show for that matter. By displaying all the levels and layers that are present in a war-ravaged world, they can provide people with the expected viewpoint of the victims (the other Nations sans the Fire Nation, in this case) and still show how people in the Fire Nation (the 'enemy') suffered to similar extents. And Azula was a refreshingly complex antagonist. The creators allowed us to see her own inner turmoil, which does bring her humanity into view. Villains are villains by their very nature, which often includes the absence of morality and/or humanity. But the fact that Azula had humanity, deep down in her. That's what I believe.