Avatar The Last Airbender – The Complete Book 2 Collection

Buy Avatar The Last Airbender – The Complete Book 2 Collection from Suaraku.

  • All 20 chapters from Book 2: Earth on 5 discs
  • Interview with Creators and M. Night Shyamalan
  • “The Essence of Bending” with Bryan Konietzko and Sifu Kisu
  • Avatar Super Deformed Shorts
  • “Escape From the Spirit World” Animated Graphic Novel

Check Price: Avatar The Last Airbender – The Complete Book 2 Collection


Description
Avatar: The Complete Book 2 DVD Collection includes 20 action packed episodes from Book 2: Earth, plus an exclusive never-before-seen bonus disc! This 5 disc set centers around Avatar Aang and his continious quest to master the four elements. Together with Katara, Sokka, Momo and Appa, he journeys across the Earth Kingdom in search of an Earthbending mentor while staying one step ahead of Prince Zuko and fighting off the treachorous, Princess Azula, of the Fire Nation, who will stop at nothing to defeat the Avatar!Amazon.com
Book 2: Earth, Vol. 1 Avatar the Last Airbender: Book 2 Earth, Volume 1 finds Aang, the Avatar and potential reconciler of a world divided into air, earth, water, and fire kingdoms, now a master Waterbender. That means he and companions Katara and Sokka can now leave the Northern Water Tribe and concentrate on mastering earth. New adventures and dangers await the heroic trio in the five episodes included on this DVD, which finds Aang experiencing nightmares about the power of the Avatar State. He also meets an earth kingdom general with plans for attacking the warrior tribes of the fire nation, gets trapped with possible love interest Katara in the Cave of Two Lovers, and gets pulled into a supernatural swamp by a tornado. As always, Avatar is above average as an engaging anime tale, with a wonderfully original storyline and striking artistry. –Tom Keogh

Book 2: Earth, Vol. 2 The five chapters in Avatar the Last Airbender: Book 2 Earth, Volume 2 continue the story of young avatar Aang’s adventures deep within the Earth Kingdom. As usual, each episode is a seamless blend of grave drama and comic relief, but the stakes seem higher than ever with the addition of a new member to Aang’s team. Joining Katara and Sokka is Toph, a blind but powerful earthbending girl trying to obscure her aristocratic origins by defeating large, scary men in the ring. Aang recognizes Toph from his vision of an earthbending teacher, whom he needs to help him master control over the earth element. Toph also adds a kind of sardonic, tart tone to Aang’s journey, ultimately leaving her world to join the series’ trio of young heroes. “The Blind Bandit” finds Aang, Katara, and Sokka working hard at convincing Toph to help their mission. “Zuko Alone” carries on the tale of the firebending prince who now travels alone and anonymously, but comes close to befriending a boy in an Earth Kingdom town. (The episode is full of interesting flashbacks from Zuko’s youth.) “The Chase” also concerns Zuko’s past, but is primarily about Aang, Katara, and Sokka adjusting to Toph’s somewhat self-centered presence on the team at the same time Princess Azula is relentlessly hunting them all down in a kind of speeding tank. “Bitter Work” finds Toph having difficulties training Aang, while “The Library” is an exotic episode about a professor who leads the crew to a library containing information useful against the Fire Nation. When they get there, they find the place guarded by the owl-like Wan Shi Tong, who begins sinking the library in defense against the perceived invaders. –Tom Keogh

Book 2: Earth, Vol. 3 Avatar the Last Airbender: Book 2 Earth, Volume 3 covers chapters 11 through 15 in the ongoing saga of Aang, the 12-year-old reincarnation of an avatar destined to reunite the warring nations of fire, earth, water, and air. Still traveling with his friends Katara, Sokka, and newcomer Toph, Aang gets into some of the strangest and most compelling situations yet seen on his journey to master control over all four elements. The first story, “The Desert,” finds Aang so upset over the abduction and criminal sale of his flying bison, Appa, that the powerful boy shows a streak of rage, demonstrating to himself that he could easily use his emerging skills to harm enemies if he wished. Still, Appa remains missing through this volume, leading the gang on a mission to survive a desert sojourn and survive during a perilous flight (with a young family in tow) over a pass through mountains and ocean in “The Serpent’s Pass.” They also get involved in a bizarre fight (in “The Drill”) against the Fire Nation army and its gigantic drill, which is aimed at the outer wall of Ba Sing Se, a city occupied by earth people. Once inside Ba Sing Se, however, things get really weird: smiling officials (in “City of Walls and Secrets”) outlaw any discussion of the war outside in order to keep the population placid and the economy rolling. Finally, “Tales of Ba Sing Se” is an original piece made up of individual vignettes focusing on each of the major characters. If there is anything surprising about Book 2 Earth, Volume 3, it’s the amount of romance (kissing, even!) in the air. These Avatar boys and girls are growing up. –Tom Keogh

Book 2: Earth, Vol. 4 The long journey of young Avatar Aang and his friends Katara, Sokka, and Toph continues in this dramatic installment in the Avatar the Last Airbender series. Picking up from Volume 3, the first chapter on this disc, “Appa’s Lost Days,” traces the hard times of Aang’s winged bison, Appa, after the latter is stolen in order to blackmail Aang into not going to the Earth King with information about a pending coup. The clever Aang manages to find Appa anyway and complete his crucial mission, though he learns, in “The Earth King,” that the sheltered monarch doesn’t buy the notion that his own counsel, the power-grasping Long Feng, could be behind such a conspiracy. Complicating matters is the arrival of Princess Azula to take control over forces loyal to Long Feng, while Zuko, the reformed Fire Nation prince now acting as a humble but happier servant to his wise, tea-drinking uncle, is powerless to stop her. (On the other hand, Zuko forms an unexpected bond with one of Aang’s allies.) Everything comes to a head in “The Crossroads of Destiny,” in which Aang, suddenly confused by the sage advice of a guru who tells him he must free himself of a crucial emotional attachment, joins the others in an uphill effort to stop Azula from overtaking the Earth King. As engaging and frequently funny as every other volume in the Avatar series, Volume Four is a great ride through a climactic time in the long-running story. –Tom Keogh

Check Rank: Avatar The Last Airbender – The Complete Book 2 Collection


Avatar The Last Airbender – The Complete Book 2 Collection

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5 Responses to “Avatar The Last Airbender – The Complete Book 2 Collection”

  1. something something something avatar

    something something something complete

    something something something bender

    something something something rokuu

    something something something fire nation

    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. Oded Arbel says:

    I love this show and I was hooked on the 1st season when it was broadcast on a local channel. I missed the 2nd season showing and decided to support the creators by getting the DVD set. Until the DVD was delivered, I decided to download some illegal copies and watch them (its not like I haven’t payed for a copy to watch).

    I really enjoyed watching the show – until I got the DVD box set: The video quality in the DVD set is simply HORRIBLE! the image is highly pixelated and looks like a bad computer screen. Both the broadcast quality and the TV rips I downloaded were much better quality. The encoding is so bad that it is painful to watch!

    Goal 1: support to creators – Achieved!

    Goal 2: enjoy high quality legal video – Failed!!
    Rating: 2 / 5

  3. auroragb says:

    The legend of Avatar continues in Season 2. However, the features on DVD are poorly thought out. Half the episodes had commentaries, BUT, it has no subtitles!

    WHY? when you listen to the commentary, you can’t follow the dialog at all! You lose half the context of the story.
    Rating: 3 / 5

  4. A. Hahn says:

    My 14 year old son really likes this. I can’t get into it, but its not geared at the 30s crowd.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  5. E. Strobel says:

    I really like this series. I see it as an attempt to move the Western anime mindset towards some of the Eastern philosophies. And I’m not talking about karate. For too long have production companies removed B stories from Japanese anime because they deal with basic human emotions of lust and death and the personal effects of them. While this series is still pretty tame compared with some of the anime that Chinese and Japanese children watch, it’s still a step up from the confusing series that are migrated from Japan.
    Rating: 4 / 5

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