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Avatar - The Last Airbender: The Complete Book 3 Collection |  | Actors: Zach Tyler, Mae Whitman, Jack De Sena, Dante Basco, Jessie Flower Studio: Nickelodeon Category: DVD
List Price: $39.98 Buy New: $27.32 as of 9/5/2010 09:51 CDT details You Save: $12.66 (32%)
New (40) Used (11) Collectible (1) from $27.32
Seller: DVDPhotographs Rating: 158 reviews Sales Rank: 175
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Discs: 5 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Running Time: 519 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.6 x 1
MPN: 097368527249 UPC: 097368527249 EAN: 0097368527249 ASIN: B001AI7766
Release Date: September 16, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Inside Sozin's Comet: Exclusive Four-Part Audio Commentary by Creators | | • | The Women of Avatar: The Last Airbender | | • | Book 3 Finale Pencil Test Animation | | • | Into the Fire Nation at San Diego Comic-Con |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The newly discovered Avatar, twelve year-old Aang, must learn to master the four elements to save his world from the Fire Nation.
Amazon.com Book 3: Fire, Vol. 1 Avatar the Last Airbender: Book 3, Volume 1 is a slightly unusual suite of episodes in the Avatar canon, as the majority of programs are even more comical than usual. Not that the five shows included on this disc lack seriousness: the long-running series now finds young Aang (the once and future avatar destined to reunite the world's four estranged nations) and his traveling companions behind enemy lines in the Fire Nation, disguised as colonists. In "Awakening," Aang arises--with a surprising headful of dark hair--from several weeks of unconsciousness (due to the injuries he sustained during a battle for Ba Sing Se) aboard a captured Fire Nation warship. Though he finds old friends Sokka, Toph, and Katara nearby, all urging him not to take matters in his own hands, Aang ultimately feels compelled to go head-to-head with the Fire Lord before he is ready. The result forces Aang and the others to remain incognito, setting up subsequent episodes in which the heroes are forced to lay low and find something else to do with their time besides fight adversaries. In "The Headband," Aang enrolls in a Fire Nation school, where his eyes are opened to such ordinary experiences as dealing with a campus bully and getting a hard time from strict teachers. In "The Painted Lady," Aang, Sokka, Katara, and Toph visit an impoverished fishing village and have to repress their typical instinct to help lest they be recognized as outsiders. (An alternative is found.) "Sokka's Master," in some ways the most enjoyable episode here, finds Sokka feeling useless because he doesn't possess powers similar to his mates. His solution: talk a master swordsman into taking him on as an apprentice. Finally, the most unexpected story in this collection is "The Beach," in which Prince Zuko, Azula, Mai, and Ty Lee--all of whom are back in the Fire Nation, too--take an awkward holiday but end up learning a lot about one another. Meanwhile, Zuko--following his extended banishment from the Fire Nation--discovers that his father welcoming again, but only because his manipulative sister, Princess Azula, has falsely told everyone that Zuko killed Aang. Fearing that his father will disown him again, Zuko chooses not to tell the truth and works on having Aang quietly assassinated. Where Zuko had been more of a complete human being during his exile, he's back to being a monster again, going so far as to keep his dutiful uncle, Iroh, in a dark, dank prison. --Tom Keogh Book 3: Fire, Vol. 2 Avatar the Last Airbender: Book 3--Fire, Volume 2 finds the series closing in on a long-awaited day of reckoning with the fire nation. The five episodes on this disc continue those chapters on Volume 1 in which Aang--the young avatar--and his companions Katara, Toph, and Sokka live undercover in the fire nation, awaiting the moment when an alliance of warriors from the air, water, and earth nations converge to overtake the conquering firebenders once and for all. On Volume 2, the path to the day of battle, in typical Avatar fashion, is full of misadventures and intrigue, but also sundry revelations that make the pending series climax that much more interesting. "The Avatar and the Firelord" is the backstory of how the fire nation leader came to be a brutal tyrant in the world. Turns out he was the best friend of none other than the previous avatar; the souring of their relationship led to the troubles young Aang is trying to resolve. (While Aang is finding all this out, the fire nation's Prince Zuko discovers his ancestry is more complicated than he'd imagined, and that he has more of a role to play in ending the war waged by his people.) "The Runaway" is a comedy about mischievous Toph getting into trouble for using her earthbending powers to win bets and make a lot of money. "The Puppetmaster" is a scary story featuring a waterbending old woman who initially enchants Katara, but then later is revealed to be a vengeful monster with terrifying abilities to control people's bodies. "Nightmares and Daydreams" concerns an anxious Aang unable to sleep and stop hallucinating prior to the coming battle, while part one of "The Day of Black Sun" sees the beginning of the allies' invasion of the fire nation. Lots of surprises in this last episode, with a cliffhanger ending that makes the next volume of Avatar most desirable. --Tom Keogh Book 3: Fire, Vol. 3 At the beginning of Avatar the Last Airbender: Book 3 Fire, Vol. 3, things don't go quite the way one would have hoped at the end of Vol. 2. Aang--the young avatar--and his companions Katara, Toph, and Sokka were part of a major assault on the tyrannical fire nation, and hopes of victory were high. In "The Day of Black Sun, Part 2: The Eclipse," however, circumstances reverse the heroes' fortunes, forcing Aang, his friends and the very youngest warriors to flee the battle. As they regroup at the Western Air Temple, mourning the expected imprisonment of the adults left behind, Aang comes face to face with an unexpected, would-be ally: Zuko, prince of the fire nation. Sokka and Katara refuse to accept Zuko's guarantee that he is truly on their side (they've been through this before), but Toph and Aang are a little more receptive to the idea. Good thing. In "The Firebending Masters," Aang accepts that Zuko could be the firebending mentor he needs to show him how to conquer the most elusive of the four elements. But it isn't easy: Zuko loses his power and must retreat to a fire nation temple, where he can learn the origins of his native gift. The set of five stories on this disc concludes with the two-part "The Boiling Rock," in which Sokka and Zuko infiltrate a fire nation maximum security prison in hopes of freeing Sokka's father. Trying hard to stay clandestine, Zuko's identity is revealed anyway, jeopardizing not only the mission but Zuko and Sokka's very freedom. The excitement is endless in the long-running Avatar series, and developments (especially Zuko's acceptance by Aang and the others) are as heartening as they are surprising. --Tom Keogh Book 3: Fire, Vol. 4 The long-running series Avatar the Last Airbender comes to a dazzling conclusion in Book 3 Fire, Volume 4. Poised for quite a number of episodes (seen in previous volumes) to go to war against the tyrannical Fire Nation, Aang the young Avatar and his cohorts must now bring down the Fire Lord and his army, or watch them ramp up their destructive powers during an imminent solar eclipse. But there's a lingering question only Aang can answer: can the Avatar, who has never killed anyone, bring himself to take the Fire Lord's life? That is what he must do, according to Zuko, the Fire Prince who has thrown in his lot with Aang and the latter's friends. While Aang is sorting that out--receiving various wisdoms from past Avatars and advice from a giant turtle-lion creature--Zuko and Katara take another leg of the battle by confronting Zuko's crazed sister. Meanwhile, Sokka re-asserts his latent talent for commanding dangerous missions as he and earth-bender Toph attempt to sabotage Fire Nation airships. The final episodes on this disc are thrilling, in no small part because they have been so long in arriving. Before those, however, there are a couple of interesting chapters to get through, including "The Southern Raiders," in which Katara attempts to exact revenge for the disappearance of her mother. As always, there's some comic relief, in this case "The Ember Island Players," in which our heroes experience the ignominy of watching some of their previous adventures become a ridiculous, staged play. --Tom Keogh
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 158
Must have for all Avatar lovers! September 5, 2010 Ladyhawk Wright (Ten Mile, Tennessee) In this one a lot of focus was placed on why Prince Zuko acted the way that he did from his father not giving him enough love or respect which drove him farther and farther off of the deep end until finally he realized that he could do something to help fight his father's legacy of terror. Compelling and action packed with a touch of love thrown in to the mix between Kitara and Ang. A must have treasure for our family!
Love the show! September 3, 2010 lorealove If you're a fan of Avatar, why would you not want to buy this?! And if you're wanting to see what all the hype is about then I suggest buying all three seasons all at once, because once you finish one -- you'll go crazy until you find out what happens next. Seriously, it's that good. The story is incredible, the characters are lovable, and the animation is beautiful!
Heating things up August 30, 2010 Donovan M. Grimwood The third and final book in Aang's story as the Avatar and the Last Airbender is so far (5 chapters in) a great continuation and certainly seems to be building up to the climax of the series. Was especially great to see Sokka being given a chance to shine as he is often overshadowed by the benders (a strong point made in that chapter). And certainly looking forward to the conflict between Uncle Ihro and Zuko!
Avatar August 28, 2010 Nichole R. Parker (La Place, La usa) So pleased with the purchase of this set. My children and I LOVE this series. We watch it all the time, and it's good to have the dvds because we can watch it over and over, and always see something we miss. Well worth the price and we received it when Amazon said we would. Amazon is the only place we could find all the seasons in a set and, as always, they had the lowest prices.
Worth every penny and every minute! August 22, 2010 Curst Saden *(minor) SPOILER ALERT!*
Avatar: The Last Airbender comes to an explosive conclusion in Book 3: Fire. (I seriously suggest you watch Books One and Two if you haven't yet, this is NOT a season to watch without seeing other episodes. I kindly recommend you stop reading now and look up book one). The series gets darker and more action packed than ever as Aang and his friends struggle to defeat Firelord Ozai before the powerful Sozin's Comet returns.
Compared to the other two seasons, book three is much more intense. It's still kid friendly with good morals and fun laughs, but the action keeps coming and coming. But it's not just a bunch of people riding flying bisons and flinging fireballs. The show gets really deep at times, now more than ever. Issues within as well as external are explored as characters search through their feelings, tragic backstories are revealed and terrifying enemies are encountered. Feelings of love and romance are also flying around in the shadow of battles. At first it was just Zuko trying to capture Aang to regain his honor. Then it was Azula trying to capture Aang, who is a little more intense with her firebending. Now they've got a crazy, nameless bald guy who can firebend with his mind and he's shooting to kill.
The characters have developed considerably and they deal with a good bit of drama in this season. Three years of airtime (one year by the show's timeline) has matured the characters. Everyone is a little more serious, a little wiser (or crazier). Zuko's anger is now directed at himself rather than others as he tries to find his purpose. Aang is struggling with feeling guilty over times he messed up big and tries to have the mindset to stop (as in kill) Ozai by ANY means necessary. Katara gets a lesson in revenge and forgiveness. Sokka still keeps the corny jokes coming, but he's become a good leader. On and on. The lessons that appear in daily episodes haven't stopped coming, they just come in more dramatic and serious situations in this season.
This description is probably making it sound like a soap opera with bending powers, so I will point out that comedy is still widely employed in this show. There are plenty of silly moments and kid jokes and happy endings. There's just a lot of danger and drama thrown into the mix....
The twists and turns and fireworks continue to the inevitable battle between Aang and Ozai that has built up for three seasons (who didn't see it coming?) and the ending is pretty surprising.
There is one episode in this season which is slightly scary. I hate to ruin the surprise, but in the episode the group encounters a woman who discovered how to bend blood and she bends it maliciously. While no actual blood is seen, the concept is probably the most intense thing covered on the show. This is still a show suitable for kids, but this shows just how mature it's gotten. Parents that are reading this for their kids, don't let this scare you away. This is as bad as it gets and it's not that bad, but it is slightly scary.
This show is very suspenseful and explores issues in a way that it can be enjoyable by any age and don't let the fact that it's a kid's show tell you otherwise! I'm a 20-year-old college student and I think it's brilliant. I think the show matured season-by-season to appeal to the target audience (kids and teens) as they grew up. This can be for kids as young as, say, seven or eight, (any younger is ok but all they'll see are fireballs and martial arts) and for adults as old as they come. The voice acting is very good, the story is exciting and the animation is really colorful and, well, animated. I will note that of the three seasons Book Three imitates japanese-anime styles the most, usually in a silly moment like when Aang has nightmares about facing Ozai and discovers he forgot to wear his pants.
This cartoon series is one for the ages. Book Three is by far the best of the three seasons in what I think is one of the best adventure stories ever written. It really is like a book; I tried to watch one or two episodes at a time but like a good book I couldn't put it down, or rather I couldn't stop watching. I had to know what happened next. The story of The Last Airbender is a very good show and I don't say that lightly. Action, romance, suspense, philosophy, comedy and drama all enjoyable by adults and suitable for kids. It's worth the thirty dollars. Trust me, you will love it and your kids or parents or friends or whoever else you know will love it. Everyone can appreciate it.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 158
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