Apparently you disagree, so why do you suppose it was? Now, in the real world, lie detectors are actually really inaccurate, relatively easy to fool, & prone to a whole lot of false positives, but this clearly is not the direction they went in for the show. Wrong about Zuko and Todoroki, Zuko was obsessed and haunted by the question of where his mother was so he definitely had mommy issues.Also this may be an assumption on my part but you have purposely narrowed your list down for the sake of proving some sort of point in apparent sexism.Examples for daddy issues getting worse, Ramsay Bolton from A song of ice and fire, even Shigaraki from my hero academia, Talia from the dark knight rises, Hela from Thor Ragnorock, Voldemort, The bully from It, Joker from the dark knight ( not shown but implied).Examples of Mommy issues getting better, Nagisa from assassination classroom, Arima Kousei from Your lie in April, Lola and her sister from One piece, Kovu from the lion king 2, Repunzal from Tangled, Cinderella from you know Cinderella, Bojack Horsemen, Robin from One piece, Eddie Kaspbrak from It, Senjogahara from Monogatari.I wasn't trying to be sexist when pointing out the Mommy and Daddy issuesThat is an interesting observation, especially when you look at Azula and Zuko from Avatar.
The scientist was arguably the cause of his issues, so he definitely has daddy issues. He avoids killing & wants to create a world where nobody has an unfair advantage due to bending, suggesting strong ethical principles. She had waited for this moment with excitement and anticipation for weeks, but now anxiety was coursing through her body, although it didn’t show on her rather stoic face. They were both influenced by the same events and, if anything, Zuko was more influenced by missing his mother while Azula was more influenced by wanting to impress her father.And it's kind of unfair to point out a series of Marvel characters with daddy issues who got redemption when you didn't point out any counter characters with mommy issues nor any characters who didn't get redemption. Fictional characters don't tend to have as many Ironically, James Gunn shone light on a seldom-told story, that of a grown man reconciling his own feelings of guilt with the memory of his mother, or, a man-child with Mommy Issues, in Guardians Vol. I don't feel that Azula had mommy issues to be exact.
Those are really good points, Neo. He started off jolly and by the end he had PTSD and some abandonment issues, but he managed to pull through sort of. Not really obsolete. He choose never to visit his mother when she was in a mental health facility partially because he felt his appearance was reminiscent of his father and his father was the cause of her pain along with him.To say that Azula to have just mommy issues is misrepresenting his character, her main objective for most of her evil actions was to please her father if that isnt a sign of daddy issues I dont know what is.Idk, Archer has MAJOR Mommy issues (and some Daddy issues but his issues with his Mom eclipse that) and throughout the series, he's growing, maturing and stops being the sociopathic scumfuck he was earlier onCome here to talk about fictional characters, events, concepts, objects, etc. Because Azula was more skilled? She still wants Sozin and Ozai's ideals of terror and superiority to happen... And she clearly doesn't care how the parents of the kidnapped kids in Smoke and Shadow felt. We see that with Zuko, his younger self is a very different person from the angry jerk we meet in Book 1. In short, any change in her would stem from a rational change in her priorities or beliefs, not out of genuine feelings of remorse or compassion. So personally, unless there was drastic improvement both in terms of her mental state and the underlying problems with her personality, I find it highly unlikely that she ever got married. The 9 year gap could be used to argue virtually any position on why Azula ended up the way she did, because by definition various things "could have" happened. Also, if she has a highly genetic personality trait (like psychopathy), well it would manifest from a young age? You could say this is just a product of Ozai's brainwashing, but there's a certain preponderance of evidence at work here. (Calling her "soulless" would be another. 1. Also, 1 additional note not related to the other things that's really telling is Azula's ability to fool lie detectors.
However, despite wanting people to be loyal to her, she never quite learned that trust and kindness is a better way to inspire devotion. That's how "redemption" is 'supposed' to work. Fuck, even the Fire Lord liked burning shit. Everything after "violent" is a buzzword. Since most of the main characters in ATLA got married and had kids (we don't know about Sokka) I assume Azula found a guy who can put up with her craziness. Like if you have too high of a temperature, you have a fever. Finally, if you're hallucinating regularly, you have a mental disorder. Do the heroes know in this scenario that Azula is off somewhere living in peace? I was thinking, and compared to his Daddy Issues, his Mommy Issues are incredibly overshadowed, although it is a major part of his story. No, because she's unstable and can you name one guy that would really put up with her?