Due to the details that missed my article below, I recommend reading MotU: Revelation after watching the first season.
The first season of Revelation, aimed at older people than Netflix’s attempt to bring back Masters of the Universe, was, as you know, split in two. I thought this was just a season of splitting in half. The second part cleans up most of the troubled parts of the first party as if it were a different series, but this place is happening so fast that you get stunned.
He-Man? If you don’t count the color, there’s the Incredible Hulk, he’s got a partnership with the enemy, he’s got a cat, he’s got heroism. Lover? There’s that, too. Teela? Her hair, which I can’t love, is getting better, that’s enough. Joking aside, the second part shows that the audience that watched MotU in the 80s and 90s was targeted. Violence, blood, death, new designs and even a strange sexual insinuation that comes when you least expect it.
“What If” Skeletor.
The second part officially begins with the childhood fantasy of “What if Skeletor had won, if he had all the power”. I was happy with the inspiration for DC’s comic book. Interspersed details such as Queen Marlena being earthly, Teela’s development, Lyn’s complete derailment, seeing the animal inside Adam, Avengers: Endgame-heiress scenes. These are the movements we’d like to see in Eternia.
Some of the highlights of the second part better not spoil the surprise with the trailer, but it still retains its excitement. Dynamic action scenes give us what we’re looking for; Sometimes even an anime-heiac air that’s overrated.
Music legend: Bear McCreary (Battlestar Galactica, Walking Dead) was also a shed-genre performer in the first episode. If I watched stickmen with the music he added to my second part, I’d be pumped. The voiceovers are awesome again. Although I hear a little Joker in mark hamill’s skeletor every time he speaks, this guy deserves what he’s getting into. Okay, no one can be an Oppenheimer, but if it’s Skeletor, it’s a fact that Hamill adds identity to the character. Both Evil-Lyn and Lena Heady (Cercei Lannister), who voices her, are making her shed. This woman is amazing.
“Evil” questions in my head
In the first episodes, those who are sick of Teela will feel a click better here. Because the character is finally getting on the path he needs to go. Oh, the shape-shifting haste, but it’s happening anyway. God-Lyn and White Orko, on the other hand, make such tempting presentations in those short periods of time that I found myself wanting to watch them more on screen than He-Man.
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What bothers me the most about the sum of the first season is that it tries to keep everything alive in short periods of time. They leave before they can say, “Anaaa Fisto, Panthor is here.” There’s no time or space to catch up with them for 10 minutes. You say, “Anaaaam Ram-Ma.Hay is yours.” When did you come, where did you go? I don’t want to be Andra. When did Evil-Lyn experience so much contradiction? How could he do worse in a short time than Skeletor had done over the years, but how could he continue to hang out free on his return?
Should it be watched?
If I’m done saying it, let me get to the point: it’s hard for an older MotU-Sever not to find at least a few things in Revelation that would make him happy. That’s right, if you get too caught up in inconsistencies, it’s a little out of your mind. Come and listen to me: Embrace the old heroes, enjoy the moment and the action, get on the gas, have fun. Remember your childhood, smile.
Note: The Horde logo shown in the finale salutes Hordak and the latest version of Skeletor salutes “The New Adventures of He-Man” Skeletor. Well, let’s see.
Note 2: Whatever you want to watch now, watch seasons of the Voltron remake, The Legendary Guardian, which are on Netflix and not. Very good too!
Editor’s Note: 4/5
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