<p>I personally think a story where the Avatar has a dark opposite like an Anti Avatar would be good or a story where there are two Avatars like twin brothers born and both possessing the powers of an Avatar but in constant conflict with each other.
</p><p>The reason I think this could work with Twins is because the Avatar is always reincarnated but what would happen if the Avatar had a twin? I mean would that mean that the Avatar split into two and what impact would that have? Would they both be good or be destined to be enemies and if the reincarnation bit still applies would that mean the two avatars would be destined to always fight each other throughout their new lives?
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<p>Honestly, I would hesitate to call Studio Ghibli's work "anime", at least in the typical sense. There's much more movement in the animation, and things tend to feel less "cartoony" than they might in stuff like Full Metal Alchemist or Naruto. Hard to explain without just saying "go see his stuff". Its kind of like the difference between The Lion King and Looney Toons: both are American animation, but one is just more cinematic and grand.
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<p>Miyazaki himself is reluctant to use the term "anime' to describe his films to westerners. Considering the stigma that is usually associated with most Anime (Lots of blood and violence and "adult" content which is significantly lacking in most of miyazakis work). . . . with one major exception.
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<p>to everybody who criticized my Romeo and Juliet fanon idea I probably hate Romeo and Juliet much more considering my English teacher decided that's the next play were reading in class f*** miss Mazza-Shaw one of the reasons I want this is so I can survive Romeo and Juliet with my mental stability and I think it would be interesting in the avatar world but most importantly I love it when hero's and villains are couples
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<p>@ANC
</p><p>Yup. Although admittedly by todays standards, it's actually quite tame. If you can handle the amount of violence in Empire Strikes Back, or Revenge Of The Sith, I think a 12 year old kid will be okay.
</p><p>Maybe not Miyazaki, maybe his son Goro or one of his disciples would be open to it. I greatly enjoyed Up On Poppy Hill. (You should watch it, it's a very uplifting film.)
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<p>Avatar thoyrn wrote:
to everybody who criticized my Romeo and Juliet fanon idea I probably hate Romeo and Juliet much more considering my English teacher decided that's the next play were reading in class f*** miss Mazza-Shaw one of the reasons I want this is so I can survive Romeo and Juliet with my mental stability and I think it would be interesting in the avatar world but most importantly I love it when hero's and villains are couples
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<p>I personally enjoyed reading Macbeth the most out of the Shakespeare works. I think could make a good Avatar adaption as well.
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<p>@ Intelligence4
</p><p>I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss "Avatar Roku Rock's" idea of interaction between avatars. It is made clear that past avatars dwell in the spirit world (based on when Aang goes into the spirit world to find Koh and sees Avatar Roku there). The story wouldn't have to be based in the Human World.
</p><p>Also i would like to examine your point that all the Avatars are the same person. While I think this is partly true, it is also partly false. The Avatar is not a person per se, it is the combination of Raava and a human. The only "constant" in the chain of Avatars is Raava. She is in all of the Avatars. However the human who is the Avatar is different every time (sometimes drastically since it is made known that Aang strongly disagrees with the views of some past Avatars, Kyoshi to be specific). It is true that all the Avatars are good people and many of them have lots in common, but I don't think that they are actually the same person. After all it is the AVATAR that is being reincarnated, not the person.
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<p>SoxFan92 wrote:
@ Intelligence4
</p><p>I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss "Avatar Roku Rock's" idea of interaction between avatars. It is made clear that past avatars dwell in the spirit world (based on when Aang goes into the spirit world to find Koh and sees Avatar Roku there). The story wouldn't have to be based in the Human World.
</p><p>Also i would like to examine your point that all the Avatars are the same person. While I think this is partly true, it is also partly false. The Avatar is not a person per se, it is the combination of Raava and a human. The only "constant" in the chain of Avatars is Raava. She is in all of the Avatars. However the human who is the Avatar is different every time (sometimes drastically since it is made known that Aang strongly disagrees with the views of some past Avatars, Kyoshi to be specific). It is true that all the Avatars are good people and many of them have lots in common, but I don't think that they are actually the same person. After all it is the AVATAR that is being reincarnated, not the person.
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<p>Kuruk: FO SHIZZLE!
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<p>I would love to see an Avatar series that takes place probably several centuries after the Hundred Years War in which benders were almost purged into extinction. Probably the protagonist is just a simple bender (Firebender I would like to see) who is conflicted by himself and must decide his destiny and save the world from futher decadence (Decandence in which we are slowly suffering now in Real Life).
</p><p>Actually, I once wrote a fanmade story of this on MircrosoftWord which was poorly titled as Avatar: The Final Legacy, which I use the concept that the Creators originally were thinking about for ATLA, a story that takes place in a Futuristic World.
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