I've recently rewatched The Secret of the Sword, in which He-Man discovers his sister Adora was kidnapped as a baby and raised by Hordak as a member of the Evil Horde. Upon being informed by He-Man that the Evil Horde is --- gasp! --- evil, and that He-Man is her brother, Adora breaks the Horde's brainwashing and becomes one of the good guys --- She-Ra, Pincess of Power.
When I was a kid, I just accepted that. However, re-watching it as an adult --- admittedly, no longer as a member of the target audience --- this seems like both a completely over-the-top embracing of nature over nuture (Shadow Weaver even says to Hordak, when Adora starts doubting the Horde, "Remember who she really is." I guess despite being raised by Hordak since she was a baby, she had those damned good guy genes.), and a missed character opportunity. I can accept that Adora would defect --- finding out that you were kidnapped by the folks who raised you and lied to your whole life has got to be a kick in the gut. However, she should be the most badass good guy around. That Horde training should be rearing it's ugly head on a regular basis, and I'd expect the other characters to have to talk She-Ra out of taking ruthless actions for the "greater good." That may be hard to do on a show for children, but I would think it should be doable, and prove educational. There is some precedent for such an approch in the Filmation continuity: in "Prince Adam No More", Adam tries to save the day as himself and fails, learning that it's more important to get the job done than to look good doing it.
That said, I think I could make the same criticism of Xena. Xena was way too good a good guy for a former bad guy. She should have been a lot quicker to kill the hell out of people.
What do you folks think?
When I was a kid, I just accepted that. However, re-watching it as an adult --- admittedly, no longer as a member of the target audience --- this seems like both a completely over-the-top embracing of nature over nuture (Shadow Weaver even says to Hordak, when Adora starts doubting the Horde, "Remember who she really is." I guess despite being raised by Hordak since she was a baby, she had those damned good guy genes.), and a missed character opportunity. I can accept that Adora would defect --- finding out that you were kidnapped by the folks who raised you and lied to your whole life has got to be a kick in the gut. However, she should be the most badass good guy around. That Horde training should be rearing it's ugly head on a regular basis, and I'd expect the other characters to have to talk She-Ra out of taking ruthless actions for the "greater good." That may be hard to do on a show for children, but I would think it should be doable, and prove educational. There is some precedent for such an approch in the Filmation continuity: in "Prince Adam No More", Adam tries to save the day as himself and fails, learning that it's more important to get the job done than to look good doing it.
That said, I think I could make the same criticism of Xena. Xena was way too good a good guy for a former bad guy. She should have been a lot quicker to kill the hell out of people.
What do you folks think?
- Could a hero that has to learn to be a good guy every episode work in a children's show? Or would this be too complex for young children?
- Would making the morally questionable hero female have negative consequences for the psychology of young girls, or raise the ire of femininsts?
- Did the Filmation She-Ra series teach children that nature trumps nuture? And if so, is this harmful?
- Most importantly, as an adult, would seeing a badass ends-justify-the-means She-Ra be totally awesome?