Season: | 2 |
Episode: | 20 |
Production: | 220 |
Guests: |
|
Season Article: | Avatar: The Last Airbender season 2 |
Episode List: | List of Avatar: The Last Airbender episodes |
Prev: | The Guru |
Next: | The Awakening |
"The Crossroads of Destiny" is the twentieth and final episode of the second season of the American animated television series , and the 40th episode overall. The show follows Aang (Zach Tyler Eisen), the last airbender and the “Avatar”, on his journey to bring balance to a war-torn world by mastering all four elements: air, water, earth, and fire. On his quest, he is joined by companions Katara (Mae Whitman), Sokka (Jack DeSena), and Toph Beifong (Jessie Flower), and hunted down by Fire Nation prince Zuko (Dante Basco) and princess Azula (Grey DeLisle). The episode was written by head writer Aaron Ehasz and directed by co-creator Michael Dante DiMartino.
The episode, written by Aaron Ehasz and directed by series co-creator Michael Dante DiMartino, follows Aang returning to the city of Ba Sing Se, which Azula has now taken over, to rescue Katara. It also follows Zuko having to make the choice between joining Azula or turning away from the Fire Nation. The episode premiered on Nickelodeon on December 1, 2006, immediately after the previous episode, "The Guru". It received universal acclaim with praise for its visuals, fight choreography, emotional moments, pacing, storytelling, and dark tone when compared to the remainder of the series. It is named by many as one of the best episodes of the show, and is considered "the Empire Strikes Back of the series" in regards to its cliffhanger ending.[1]
Sokka and Aang hurry back to Ba Sing Se on Appa to rescue Katara who has been captured by Azula, Mai, and Ty Lee. They pick up Toph along the way who is also travelling to the city. While riding on Appa, Aang lies to Sokka and Toph claiming he has mastered the Avatar State, when in actuality he was told by Guru Pathik that until he opens his final chakra he will not be able to enter the Avatar State at all. In the city, Zuko and Iroh, under the belief they have been invited to serve the Earth King tea, are approached by Azula who aims to capture them. Iroh manages to hold them off for them to escape, but Zuko turns back looking to fight Azula himself. Instead, he is captured and thrown underground into an underground cave called the Crystal Catacombs where he meets Katara.
Aang, Sokka, and Toph return to their apartment to find it is empty and Katara is nowhere to be found. Iroh arrives asking for help with finding Zuko, and Aang agrees. After Toph interrogates a Dai Li agent, he gives up the location of Zuko and Katara and the group begin to plan a rescue effort. Sokka and Toph go to rescue the Earth King, but Azula holds him hostage after the two find out Mai and Ty Lee are not Kyoshi Warriors. After Sokka and Toph are arrested, Long Feng, who has been freed from prison, arrives and orders to arrest Azula. However, Azula explains that the Dai Li serve her now as they recognize the "divine right to rule", something you are born with and cannot achieve through conniving and trickery like Long Feng did. Long Feng surrenders and bows to Azula as she takes the Earth King's throne.
Aang and Iroh walk through the underground tunnels to find Katara and Zuko. Aang lets him know about how he turned down cosmic energy over his love for Katara, to which Iroh gives him the advice that "sometimes life is like this dark tunnel... but if you just come moving forward, you will come to a better place" just as the two enter the Crystal Catacombs. Katara expresses her hatred towards Zuko, claiming that when she thinks of the Fire Nation his face appears and that he doesn't know what the war cost her, telling him she lost her mother. Zuko shares that his mother was lost to the Fire Nation too and the two bond. Katara tells Zuko she could heal his scar using the water she got from the Spirit Oasis, which has special healing properties. However, Aang and Iroh arrive before she can do so. While Aang and Katara escape, Iroh tries convincing Zuko to look inwards and choose good, claiming this is his "Crossroads of Destiny." Azula arrives and tempts Zuko into helping her, claiming if he does so he can reclaim his honor and their father, Ozai will accept him back in the Fire Nation, before going after Aang and Katara leaving him to choose.
Azula engages Aang and Katara in a fight in the Crystal Catacombs, while Sokka and Toph escape from their cell with the Earth King and they later liberate Bosco, the Earth King's pet bear, from Mai and Ty Lee. Zuko joins Azula in the fight in the Catacombs, betraying Katara. As the fight becomes too intense due to the Dai Li agents joining to fight against Aang and Katara, Aang creates a hut out of the crystals and unlocks his final chakra, letting go out of Katara. He enters the Avatar State, emerging into the air, but is struck down by Azula's lightning, killing him. Katara manages to catch him before he hits the ground and Iroh fends off the Dai Li agents while Katara escapes with Aang's corpse. Iroh is taken into custody while Katara uses the water from the Spirit Oasis to bring back Aang to life. As Azula reassures Zuko that he has gained his own honor by helping her and betraying his uncle, Katara, Sokka, Toph, and the Earth King look on Ba Sing Se as the latter states that "the Earth Kingdom has fallen."
Main cast members Zach Tyler Eisen, Mae Whitman, Jack DeSena, Jessie Flower, Dante Basco and Dee Bradley Baker appear as the voices of Aang, Katara, Sokka, Toph Beifong, Zuko, and Appa respectively. Appearing as guests are Mako as Zuko's uncle Iroh, Phil LaMarr as the Earth King, Clancy Brown as the villainous Long Feng, Grey DeLisle as Fire Nation princess and Zuko's sister Azula, Cricket Leigh as Azula's knife-throwing friend Mai, Olivia Hack as Azula's acrobatic friend Ty Lee, and Brian George as Guru Pathik, who only appears through archive recordings from the previous episode.[2] The episode marks the final episode where Iroh is voiced by Mako due to his death in July 2006.[3] He is replaced in the third season by Greg Baldwin, who also voiced the character for brief pieces of dialogue throughout episodes of the second season, including this episode.[4]
The episode was directed by co-creator Michael Dante DiMartino and written by head writer Aaron Ehasz.
The animation for the episode was done by JM Animation.
The episode, as the season finale, looked to tie up many plot points established earlier in the season. The biggest one was Zuko's choice between joining Azula or doing good with Iroh, with the title of the episode being taken from Iroh's quote about how Zuko has reached his "Crossroads of Destiny". According to head writer Aaron Ehasz, Zuko was originally supposed to join Team Avatar in this episode but Ehasz decided against it, claiming "he wasn't ready."[5] The episode draws many parallels between the death of Aang and the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ in Christianity. One of these parallels is seen when Katara holds Aang's lifeless body, as it bears a resemblance to the Pietà, a subject in Christian art depicting Mary holding Jesus's dead body.
The episode received universal acclaim from fans and critics and is considered one of the best episodes of the show. It was watched by 4.4 million viewers alongside the previous episode "The Guru".[6]
Hayden Childs of The A.V. Club praised the episode, commenting:
Max Nicholson of IGN gave the episode a rating of 9.5 out of 10, writing that the episode was "equal parts action-packed and emotional, from the Crystal Catacombs showdown to Zuko's inner conflict" and that it "delivered on almost every single level, ending on a suitably dark note."[7] Garrett Alden and Kenneth Hedges of WatchMojo listed the episode at the 15th best episode of all time, stating that "Choosing just one episode from this acclaimed animated series is tough, but the season 2 finale is arguably the crux on which much of it hinges," and "while the ending may be a downer, the high stakes, impressive action, and timely humor represent a level of peak excellence for any show, animated or otherwise."[8]
The episode has been often compared to the 1980 film The Empire Strikes Back in how it presents an ending to the second part of a trilogy where the heroes lose. Jeremy from The Avocado writes: Ian Cardona of Screen Rant made multiple comparisons between the two, stating that: