
The tail end of the Harry Potter series had ventured far from its initial childish whimsy and veered into gritty, gut-wrenching despondence. The name of the franchise game in the early 2010s was "darker". The Last Airbender 2 Would Have Been Darker Still, prior to all this, Shyamalan's plans for a Last Airbender sequel (and trilogy) were quite intriguing. The Netflix acquisition and remake briefly rekindled hope, only to come crashing down when writers Brian Konietzko and Michael Dante DiMartino left the new live-action Avatar project due to creative differences, reanimating fears of the previous live-action adaptation.

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Related: What Went Wrong With The Last Airbender MovieĪvatar fans' desires to see the full extent of the vibrant four nations realized in live-action, if any remained after the 2010 film, were doused like water tossed on a fire. The miserable first installment killed its siblings in the cradle, arguably taking its director's career and credibility with it - for a time. What happened next was, in short, a disaster. In 2010, plans for an Avatar: The Last Airbender film trilogy were well underway: Shyamalan, having fallen in love with the show while watching it with his children, began mobilizing an effort to bring each of the three seasons to the big screen. But, as audiences know, a different fate befell the trilogy-that-never-was, and although it takes nothing away from the brilliance of the show, it forever rendered Avatar forays into live action fraught with danger. Though it ultimately proved a failure, there was a time when a live-action adaptation of Avatar helmed by acclaimed The Sixth Sense director truly excited fans and appeared to portend a new entry into the upper echelons of media franchise success stories, right beside the likes of Harry Potter and Star Wars.

Night Shyamalan's plans a sequel - which would've dove deeper into Avatar: The Last Airbender's lore - ultimately didn't come to fruition. The Last Airbender movie received universal backlash, which meant M.
