Lord Shyamalan

Lord Shyamalan is the main antagonist of The Nostalgia Critic's review of the panned film adaptation The Last Airbender.

Role
Shayamalan was a hooded figure who made it his goal to ruin the Avatar: The Last Airbender franchise. Katara (Rachel Tietz)  and Sokka (Malcom Ray) find the Critic and tell him that he's the Avajerk who's the only one who could bring peace to the franchise. While reviewing the film, Shayamalan appears on the television telling of his intent on ruing the franchise and making it even more awful by making a film adaptation of the spinoff of the show The Legend of Korra, even though it's a fairly new successor to the original show. In order to prove that he wasn't making feeble threats, he revealed that he took away Mark Wahlberg's acting ability making him awful. Near the climax of the review, Shyamalan makes an unexpected appearance in the Critic's house and attacks them. Katara demanded that the Critic finish the review while she held him off, and he complies. Lord Shyamalan defeats Katara, and starts to take the Critic's  acting ability reverting him into a Tom Wisseau-like clone. Katara tells Critic to meditate and find his spirit animal which he does. When he sees his spirit animal, he's surprised to see that it is a platypus bunny (the one that appeared in the Les Miserables review during one of the songs), who had the voice of Doug Walker. With the platypus bunny, the Critic discovers that the film isn't hurting the franchise at all, and better yet it caused people to appreciate the original more and stated that the film director couldn't remake what was already perfect. However, Lord Shyalaman was still going to try to defeat them, leaving the Critic to ponder what the show would do in these kinds of situations. He gets an idea and calls upon a deus ex machina and Aang appears. Aang murders Shyamalan, maing Katara confused since she thought it was against his code to kill people whereas Aang was noncholant about it. Lord Shyamalan was an obvious parody of M. Night Shyamalan and was based on Amon.