In this Daily Wire article, Drew Berkemeyer writes that the new “Masters of the Universe” film delivers a serviceable but frustratingly average blockbuster by sanding off the eccentric, unapologetic style of the original He-Man franchise in favor of safer, modern superhero tropes.
- The movie transforms Eternia into a generic fantasy kingdom with sci-fi sprinkles instead of embracing the source material’s wild fusion of barbarian heroes, laser rifles, ancient castles, monsters, robots, and cosmic magic.
- It fails to commit stylistically, caught between reverence and embarrassment, resulting in a lack of bold visual identity that made prior adaptations memorable.
- Heroes like He-Man are made more relatable but less aspirational; the film reverses the original dynamic where Prince Adam was already heroic before transforming, turning He-Man into a generic Marvel-esque protagonist.
- Strong performances include Nicholas Galitzine as He-Man and standout work by Idris Elba as a more human Man-At-Arms, but the script undercuts emotional moments with ironic jokes and refuses to let heroes sit in serious, earnest moments.
- Jared Leto’s Skeletor suffers from inconsistent characterization, shifting from the original’s threatening-yet-ridiculous comic relief to a dramatic villain while heroes deliver the jokes.
- Many supporting characters like Beast Man, Trap Jaw, Tri-Klops, and Battle Cat are sidelined or absent, stripping Eternia of its colorful personality and reducing fan favorites to background elements.
- The film shines in bold sequences like Snake Mountain with dramatic lighting and cartoonish action choreography, revealing its potential when it fully embraces the source material’s eccentricity.
- Ultimately, “Masters of the Universe” lacks conviction, competing bold stylistic choices against corporate blockbuster instincts, earning a C+ grade as an enjoyable action flick but a disappointing He-Man adaptation.
Read the full story:
https://www.dailywire.com/news/what-the-new-he-man-movie-gets-wrong-about-heroes


