And he might just succeed.
As we've seen in MOTU Revelation, he is very vulnerable as Adam.
That's probably episode #06. Off to the palace to murder Randor and Marlena.
And he might just succeed.
As we've seen in MOTU Revelation, he is very vulnerable as Adam.
That's probably episode #06. Off to the palace to murder Randor and Marlena.
I can buy that.It's about the power Sword.
Take the Sword, get the power.
Adam is hiding the sword, not hiding his secret identity.
Watching Kevin Smith's Fatman Beyond podcast with Griffin Newman (the voice of Orko).
"You're gonna get more He-Man than you thought you wanted."
He-Man full frontal nudity confirmed.
I think that's the intended implication that's been eating at her, but she hasn't said it aloud yet because she's either afraid to admit it to herself, afraid of the answer, or because she thinks she already knows. Or all of those knotted into one ball of rage and insecurity.
Somewhere deep down, she feels like she's unworthy somehow. The orphan girl, the one made into a playmate an minder for the soft, lazy prince, the one they all pity.
She's wrong, and will likely find out exactly how wrong before the second part is complete, but we're not there yet.
Well, the 99% of Eternia appears to be on a medieval technological level. Except the Royals, who have tanks, robots and flying machines. Things that in their infinite wisdom they have decided not to share with anyone else.I don't think Eternia has the internet. Hell, it doesn't even seem to have roads, or infrastructure of any kind! Most places seem like they're lucky if they can swing running water.
I'm surprised nobody has made a connection to the idea of a Superhero being doxxed when their secret comes out. Plus the
fact that the entire internet runs on the idea that people don't know who says what. Someone can accuse you of bad things but since you don't know who it is that gives people power. So you got good reasons to want to keep your identity secret but also people have a good reason to maybe fear a hero with scary powers if they have no idea who they are.
Eternia is more of a post apocalyptic hellscape; "Mad Max with Magic and Lasers", one might say. A once great civilization torn apart and fallen into decay and barbarism. The few city states and scattered villages that remain are but shadows living in ruins of technology they can barely understand. Everything else in vast open wastelands ruled by marauding tribes, despots and infested with mutated beasts.
I admit that I'm not so well versed in MOTU lore, but in the Filmation versione Eternia seemed relatively at peace except for the occasional Skeletor's shenanigans and Man-At-Arms seemed more than capable to repair and build new machines. I mean, he created a sentient robot!Eternia is more of a post apocalyptic hellscape; "Mad Max with Magic and Lasers", one might say. A once great civilization torn apart and fallen into decay and barbarism. The few city states and scattered villages that remain are but shadows living in ruins of technology they can barely understand. Everything else in vast open wastelands ruled by marauding tribes, despots and infested with mutated beasts.
You all got it Wrong.
It's not about protecting Adams' Family.
It's about the power Sword.
Take the Sword, get the power.
Adam is hiding the sword, not hiding his secret identity.
Consider, if you knew that a neighbour kept 4 million dollars in a pillow, and their security was shit.
Hardly locked the door, and was always out of the house at work and play.
Maybe you won't take it, but a lot of low lifes' will try.
If Skeletor can activate the sword's power, then anyone can.
Yes I think think fans of the 80s cartoon may not have spotted some of the nuggets from the action figures, including inserting the combined sword into a slot to gain the secrets of Greyskull.Maybe we see the end of Adam in the next episodes. Maybe the next transformation into He-Man can somehow not be reversed?
I like that they included pieces of all iterations of He-Man. E.g. the two halves voncept of the power sword from the first mini-comic (That's what I have started with, when the toys came out. I never liked that Adam = He-Man thing), they included many things from the 2002 series, and even from the Motu movie from 1987. The flying discs now used on Preternia.
I was sceptical of the new series, because of the rumours about Teela being the main character. But in relation to the story, it absolutely makes sense.
I'm talking more about the implications of what's depicted rather than the text, since it's all filtered through a very sanitised lens of Saturday morning toy adverts. You wouldn't get a hundred plus episodes on a peaceful planet with no conflict, and you certainly wouldn't get the Eternian army. There'd be no need. There's more than just Skeletor causing trouble, there's all kinds of rogue despots, sorcerers and the like. Read between the lines and you'll see it.I admit that I'm not so well versed in MOTU lore, but in the Filmation versione Eternia seemed relatively at peace except for the occasional Skeletor's shenanigans and Man-At-Arms seemed more than capable to repair and build new machines. I mean, he created a sentient robot!
Still the Royals seemed more interested in organizing jousts and similars than actually helping the poor people of Eternia.
Well, Adam, I hope you are enjoying your little hobbies. I'm sure the farmers who break their backs cultivating the land all day long using only hoes and animals are having a lot of fun too!
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So He-Man is not really like Superman, but Shazam?
It's the other way around, Hordak (and the Evil Horde) was created as toys for the He-Man toyline, but the He-Man cartoon was ending so they ended up in the She-Ra cartoon instead.
Edit to be more accurate: The Evil Horde was developed by Mattel and Filmation in conjunction for the MOTU toyline and the She-Ra cartoon. Catra appears in the Princess of Power-toyline while the other horde characters (Hordak, Leech, Grizzlor, Mantenna) are in the MOTU toyline.
And if this was the case, why Duncan and Orko were exempt?
Political? In what way?I want to repost a comment I wrote on Tor.com in response to a couple of haters who complained about the new show being "too political" and "feminist":
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