Netflix's license to "She-Ra and the Princesses of Power" has expired, which finally spurred me to finish it. I'm not going to write a post for each of the five seasons, but I wanted to single out the first one, just to put down some introductory remarks and talk about why this reboot of the old 1980s "She-Ra" series stands out from the crowd. Created by ND Stevenson, with Dreamworks Animation and NE4U, the new "She-Ra" is one of those rare animated programs that tells a complete, serialized story over the course of 52 episodes, split up into multiple seasons. The original "She-Ra," was created to be a distaff counterpart to the popular "He-Man and the Masters of the Universe." I don't remember much about that version, except that it featured a cast of female characters who all had the exact same Barbie-esque body type.
The new "She-Ra" is working off of the same basic premise and includes an impressive number of the old characters. In the magical world of Etheria, the evil conquering Horde of the villain Hordak (Keston John) is at war with the Rebellion, led by Angella (Reshma Shetty), the Queen of the Kingdom of Bright Moon. Hordak's sorceress Shadow Weaver (Lorraine Toussant) promotes a promising cadet, Adora (Aimee Carrero), to the position of Force Captain, over her best friend Catra (AJ Michalka). However, Adora has a couple of encounters that prompt her to rethink life with the Horde. First, she finds a magical sword that can turn her into a formidable warrior woman, She-Ra. Then, she meets a few members of the Rebellion - Angella's daughter Glimmer (Karen Fukuhara) and her bestie Bow (Marcus Scribner). Unfortunately, Adora changing sides doesn't sit well with Catra, who takes this as abandonment, and decides to become She-Ra's mortal enemy.
"She-Ra and the Princesses of Power" is a massive upgrade over the 80s series by every conceivable metric. The softer, anime-inspired designs and more fluid animation are such a pleasure to look at, with Adora and the princesses being of all shapes and sizes and skin tones. There's a lot of "My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic" influence here, with Adora and friends being a disparate group of personalities who have to learn to get along and work together to defeat the Horde. They're much more obviously teenagers and young adults in this version, dealing with common interpersonal issues and anxieties, like Glimmer not wanting to disappoint her mother, and Adora trying to win over new allies. Catra is very redeemable, but at the end of the first season she's heading further and further down the path of villainy as Adora embraces heroism. However, a major throughline of the whole series is that Adora won't give up on her.
A lot of the buzz around the show at the time of release was that the new "She-Ra" was LGBT friendly and very diverse, but the more important thing is that it's an action show that is for girls that takes the tastes and interests of girls into account to a degree that you don't see very often. There are pastel colors and sparkles and magic everywhere. There's a mermaid princess character, Mermista (Vella Lovell), and another princess, Perfuma (Genesis Rodriguez), who can magically weaponize flowers and plants. She-Ra also has a rainbow pegasus named Swiftwind (Adam Ray), like the original version, but now Swiftwind is a committed revolutionary, and can drop a one-liner like nobody's business. The ensemble features a few male good guys, Bow and the pirate Sea Hawk (Jordan Fisher), who are portrayed as steadfast, supportive friends, and good examples of positive masculinity. And this is never remarked upon or treated as anything novel.
There's plenty of action, as you'd expect from a show about warring forces, though the robots take most of the damage. She-Ra and her friends get plenty of chances to demonstrate bravery and fortitude and use cool weapons. Because the show is for children, the fighting is never very intense, but I was surprised at how often "She-Ra" didn't pull its emotional punches. There's quite a bit of material about childhood trauma, toxic relationships, and unhealthy coping mechanisms that get pretty dark by the later seasons. However, we'll talk about that next time.
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