After experiencing traumatic nightmares of a time now past, the Sorceress summons Prince Adam and Cringer to Castle Grayskull to give Adam a precious, jeweled sword and send the pair to the planet Etheria to investigate its secrets.
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People are voting emotionally.
everything you have heard about this movie is true.
A Masterpiece!
The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.
He-Man is an older cartoon from before the 90s that was during the golden age of "Saturday Morning Cartoons". Children from around the United States would tune in ever Saturday to watch cartoons and share something awesome from the television. Granted, many of the shows were just to sell toys, but that didn't stop from helping to shape the childhood of children everywhere. Las I checked it was something like 20-30 million children that would tune in. How many do you suppose that watched He-Man?Anyway, He-Man gets his own movie tie in. This movie is a bit on the special side as it introduces He-Man's girl counterpart – She-Ra. She has most of the same goods that He-Man does, a mystical sword, enchantment phrase, costume, princess identity, as well as a talking mascot. She-Ra, unlike He-Man is from a world that is under war at all times; there is a great rebellion and She-Ra is part of it. Only, this movie is the predecessor to She-Ra and introduces her to her own series.In this movie, a portal has opened within the keep of Castle Greyskull. The Sorceress has summoned Prince Adam (He-Man) to check out this gateway to another realm. Adam reluctantly goes with his faithful companion Cringer. He takes with him a sword that has a special destiny for a woman. On the other side he makes friends and enemies fairly quickly. He is soon caught up in the rebellion against "The Hoard". Turns out one of the generals is the woman he is looking for and the sword he is carrying soon breaks the Hoard's mind control on her. The general does some soul searching, but is soon borough back under the influence of the Hoard. The movie spends a great deal of time behind this general's history, but I will not spoil it.There is quite a bit of cross over in this movie; different characters get screen time, and for the most part they make it a very memorable cartoon movie, unlike another 80s cartoon (Transformers – the Movie) which has one memorable fight and death and that is it. This movie also explains the origins of the villains, the relation between He-Man and the general, as well as why current events in Asteria exist the way that they do.I've heard that He-Man's animation team used the same models throughout the series and even in this movie, many of them look similar with only minor changes to differentiate characters. I do know He-Man transforms at least twice, his walk animation has been used in other sequences outside of the movie, but as well his punch is the same animation reused twice in the movie. His punch animation is also used in the introduction of the television series if I am not mistaken. Character models themselves are also a bit weird – big shouldered women with small waists and big hips, while the men have muscular legs that look real, their shoulder width is unbelievable – especially He-Man and Prince Adam.The music for the series is good – but many 80's movies had music play throughout – even if it was electronic music via a keyboard, it was a sign of the times. Voice acting definitely strived for differences in the characters and did it quite well, but at times the different renditions of the character's voices (played by the same actors no less) sounds bad at certain points and otherwise sounds out of place.This movie also combines technology with fantasy as magic is used right alongside science fiction elements. The fight sequences are also interesting and I enjoyed some of them. The overall plot for the movie is also good, but I will not spoil it. I recommend this movie to those that enjoy animated films or are looking for 80's nostalgia. Those that prefer live action may want to look elsewhere – as this movie has a bit of a goofy feel to it at times.Originally posted to Orion Age ().
I liked this movie, I thought it was entertaining , and I love the 80s values it has. It has good, loving 80s themes. A time I wish I was born into with full consciousness and could of stayed in for my entire life. A time of love and morals, ethics on the TV. As a Heman movie, yeah, it's accurate, it's truthful to Heman . It's a good family film, I enjoyed watching it. But , it's really long. It just drags on and on lol. I think it's one of the longest existing cartoon movies I've ever seen. Good old, 80s cheese, love. I love it for that, such a cherished, loving children's film. It was a nice , little film . Enjoyable for sure. Why Orko isn't in it? I don't know, I guess he just takes too much screen presence, I don't know. And watching it , Heman's voice changes towards the end? ANYWAYS who cares.Good 80s love classic .
A hundred million years ago, I thought He-Man was cool, but She-Ra was even cooler. I don't even know why I thought so.. maybe because I also dug Wonder Woman, The Bionic Woman, and Batgirl.. but I digress. When the movie came out, pre-multiplex, kids of all ages rejoiced when Adora 'held aloft her magic sword and said, "For The Honor of Greyskull!" Yeah, that was cool. She-Ra had a more upbeat theme than her brother, He-Man, and quite honestly, her special effects were better too. I coulda done with Cowl, the owl, and "Swift Wind", the lame-ass talking horse, but the rest of it was decent. Bo had a rockin' bod, Castaspella (don't you just love the name?!) could kick Shadow Weaver's butt, and Queen Angella, with her wannabe English accent, defended Castle Bright Moon till the cows came home. Mixing the original He-Man series with She-Ra was done effectively, meaning it was a buyable story-line... and when all was said and done, and Adora, nay She-Ra, realized her true identity, she decided to stay and "defend Etheria against the evil forces of Hordak." Pure cheese, but when you're a kid, who cares?!
While surfing through the IMDB, I stumbled upon the page for The Secret of the Sword. I hadn't seen it in years, and, based on the glowing comments posted on the page, I had to see it for myself. And, in all honesty, this movie is awful. The plot was paper-thin, the characterization non-existent, and the direction was muddled. The animation was truly horrible, even by TV standards (and to think this was released theatrically!). Sure the characters look good, but they move badly. Plus the same stock footage gets used over and over and over. The voice characterization was terrible, and the evil was pretty cartoony. This movie is a sad reminder of just how far animation had fallen in the 80's.