It turns out that fire was the hardest element to pull off in the latest live-action adaptation.
Its certainly better than the 2010 live-action film which needed six earthbenders to move one small pebble.
Trying to make it [look] natural…
If you’re inside, you cant have a flame bar.
So you use lighting [while] trying to check that [it looks real].
And people will see where it’s fake and not fake.

So trying to keep it subtle is always the challenge."
And that’s always the hardest thing sometimes.
And then another shot would take whipping into wherever it was landing."

After all, people were consistently being burned alive.
No, nothing that was brought to my attention.
You keep that in mind.

But we were not into the big blood and gore…
There are the big fire explosions and the implications of people burning… We had some set pieces, the stairs, and stuff on rocks and whatnot, on set.
But it was the stunt team that really made this happen."

Then, they’d put a bit of a mini montage of what they envisioned.
And things would get tweaked from there."
So, with LED, changing colors is much easier to do.

I started the process on set.
Basically, when the moon goes red, then all the LEDs went red.
The full interview can be seen below:
Avatar: The Last Airbenderis now streaming on Netflix.

Read more news about Avatar: The Last Airbender:
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