Tag Archives: shyamalan

The 9 Most Scathing Critical Responses to LeBron James: The Decision

Scathing critiques aren’t just for M. Night Shyamalan anymore ! Regardless of whether or not you follow, like or frankly detest sports, ESPN’ s Thursday night special LeBron James: The Decision made for some pretty audacious television. Which is to say, audaciously terrible . If you always thought watching The Bachelor amounted to a bankruptcy of taste, at least that process has some trashy entertainment value going for it. The ritualistic, commodified probing of James — who announced his free-agency agreement with the Miami Heat — couldn’t have been more cynical or depressing if it tried. But don’t take my word for it. Let’s hear it from the rest of the diverse, aggrieved class that still can’t believe they just saw that.

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The 9 Most Scathing Critical Responses to LeBron James: The Decision

‘The Last Airbender’: Worlds In Collision, By Kurt Loder

M. Night Shyamalan goes for a blockbuster. Noah Ringer in “The Last Airbender” Photo: Paramount Early reviews in the theatre-full of little kids I saw “The Last Airbender” with were enthusiastic: whoops and wows scattered throughout and a chorus of cheers at the end. The movie is filled with heroic feats, high-kicking martial arts, and elaborate digital imagery, and this is the audience it’s aimed at (along with — the filmmakers hope — an elder demographic that will be drawn in, too). Those unfamiliar with “Avatar: The Last Airbender,” the animated series that ran on Nickelodeon from 2005 to 2008, may find themselves straining to track the movie version’s live action. The fantasy world of the film is divided into four tribal nations, each devoted to one of the four elements: Earth, Air, Fire and Water. In each of these tribes there are specialized citizens called “benders,” who can manipulate the national element at will. And somewhere there’s an Avatar — a spiritual figure, reborn throughout time — who can control all four elements and generally keep the peace among the nations. But the last Avatar disappeared a hundred years ago, allowing the Fire Nation, led by the glowering Lord Ozai (Cliff Curtis), to embark on a campaign of world conquest. Ozai’s black-armored troops have already exterminated the benders of the Air Nation — all but one. Now the Fire Lord has dispatched his son, Prince Zuko (Dev Patel), to find that elusive individual: the last airbender. This turns out to be a 12-year-old boy in a purple cloak and a dusting of runic tattoos. His name is Aang (Noah Ringer), and he’s discovered on an ice floe one day by a waterbender named Katara (Nicola Peltz) and her brother Sokka (Jackson Rathbone). We soon learn that Aang is not only the last airbender, he’s also the long-sought Avatar. Where has he been for the last century? “I ran away from home,” he says. Aang and his new protectors spend the rest of the movie dodging Prince Zuko and a scheming Fire Nation commander named Zhao (Aasif Mandvi) amid great fire lashings and water whips and much taekwondo posing. There are massed digital ships, rampaging battle rhinos, a wise cave dragon, a six-legged sky beastie and a friendly flying fruit bat who goes by the name Momo. Among many, many other things. That’s a lot of story. And the movie is so packed (cast of 6000) and rushed and choppily edited that you soon give up trying to figure out what’s happening and just let it drag you along. The picture is crammed with big-budget CGI — it seems determined to command our interest through sheer technological will. But while some of the digital constructions are amazingly inventive, at the end we’re left feeling wrung-out, and wearily unamazed. Possible the most curious thing about this film is that it was written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan, a man once capable of such twisty delights as “The Sixth Sense” and “Unbreakable.” In the six years since the last of his movies with Disney, Shyamalan has become a wandering supplicant, touching down at Warner Bros. to make the very silly “Lady in the Water,” and then at Fox for the much-unloved “The Happening.” Now he has landed at Paramount, where he acknowledges that he’s taking a crack at launching a blockbuster franchise. “The Last Airbender” ends with the iron vow of a sequel. Will Shyamalan’s technoid determination be sufficient to keep that promise? Or will the search for a welcoming studio home have to continue? (“The Last Airbender” is a Paramount Pictures release. Paramount and MTV are both subsidiaries of Viacom.) Check out everything we’ve got on “The Last Airbender.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Last Airbender’ ‘The Last Airbender’ Clips Related Photos ‘The Last Airbender’

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‘The Last Airbender’: Worlds In Collision, By Kurt Loder

‘The Last Airbender’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

A fan-friendly primer on how the hugely popular cartoon made it to the big screen. By Kara Warner “The Last Airbender” Photo: Paramount Pictures Based on Nickelodeon’s hit animated series, “Avatar: The Last Airbender,” many thought the film adaptation would never happen. The story revolves around Aang, the last living member of an air-manipulating nomadic tribe, also on his quest to unite the other elemental tribes against the tyranny of the Fire nation. In January 2007, “Sixth Sense” and “Unbreakable” director M. Night Shyamalan was tapped to write, direct and produce the live-action version of the series. Shortly thereafter, MTV News caught up with Shyamalan to find out what inspired him to sign on to the project. He cited the animated series’ “cool fighting scenes” and its supernatural elements. With all systems go and excitement building toward the film’s inevitable casting announcement, when the news finally arrived in late 2008, it created a stir of controversy alleging racist casting choices — mainly for the four main roles of Aang, played by newcomer and taekwondo black belt Noah Ringer; Nicola Peltz as Katara; “Twilight” actor Jackson Rathbone as Sokka; and pop singer Jesse McCartney as Prince Zuko. McCartney eventually had to drop out of filming due to scheduling conflicts and was soon replaced with “Slumdog Millionaire” star Dev Patel . Shyamalan later responded to the criticism in a lengthy interview with Indie Movies Online : “I’m always surprised at the level of misunderstanding, the sensitivities that exist. As an Asian-American, it bothers me when people take all of their passion and rightful indignation about the subject and then misplace it.” Controversy aside, filming was well under way in May 2009, when we got our first look at Dev Patel as the evil and angsty Prince Zuko and newbie Noah Ringer as Aang. The following month, MTV News was invited to visit the Philadelphia set (the largest ever assembled on the East Coast) for an inside look at the production, where we wandered the fantastical lands of the Northern Water Tribe, stood on Commander Zhao’s battleship and chatted with Shyamalan and his castmembers. Patel told us he felt like he’d “been thrown into the deep end. … It’s a real stretch for me. At the start going into it, I was a bit naive, and I thought, ‘This is just going to be a big laugh. I’m playing a cartoon character.’ Then I got on set with everyone and read the script, and M. Night’s in front of me, and there’s a lot of soul-searching to be done.” The first teaser trailer arrived just after our set visit and nearly a year ahead of the film’s release. The footage offered fans a glimpse of Aang in action, practicing his airbending in a circular room surrounded by candlelight. All was quiet on the “Airbender” front until January of this year, when Paramount released two teaser posters , one of Aang and the other of Prince Zuko. The following month, we got a sneak preview of the “Last Airbender” toy line , which was followed closely by a second trailer that aired during the Super Bowl . When our MTV Movie Awards rolled around last month, the trailers started to reveal more detailed action, and we got our hands on and analyzed an exclusive clip that premiered during the live broadcast. And just last week, fans got their first glimpse of Momo, Aang’s flying lemur friend, in one of several TV spots that rolled out around World Cup coverage. Shortly thereafter, MTV added 30 images to our “Last Airbender” gallery . Fans commented that they would buy tickets just to see Appa the Sky Bison. Finally, just days before the film’s release, we caught up with Shyamalan to find out what inspired the film’s impressive fight choreography (hint: Bruce Lee) and “Twilight” and “Airbender” star Jackson Rathbone answered the age-old “who would win in a fight” question: Jasper Hale or Sokka ? Check out everything we’ve got on “The Last Airbender.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos ‘The Last Airbender’ Clips MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Last Airbender’ Related Photos The Powers & Creatures Of ‘The Last Airbender’ ‘The Last Airbender’

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‘The Last Airbender’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

So What Went Wrong with The Last Airbender?

M. Night Shyamalan just can’t please you people! For once, he does a movie without all his usual trademarks — the surprise ending, the Philadelphia setting, the vainglorious directorial cameo — and still, he can’t catch a critical break. What went wrong with his latest effort, The Last Airbender ? Here are four of the biggest problems:

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So What Went Wrong with The Last Airbender?

Future R.Pattz Costar: Unbound Captives Filming "Soon"

Nicola Peltz must have a thing for vampires—and Robert Pattinson must be way into movies about olden times. Up-and-comer Peltz stars in M. Night Shyamalan’s new movie, The Last…

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Future R.Pattz Costar: Unbound Captives Filming "Soon"

Hollywood Ink: Last Airbender to Receive Fake 3-D Treatment