![]() ![]() Without losing a bit of her cutting edge, Lyn opens up to Orko. Both of their magic powers are all but drained, and the two are reduced to playing hide and seek in a library. Later, she is trapped with Orko in the land of the dead trying to fight off a giant shadow beast. You can see the new character she is becoming in that moment on the Crystal Sea, and it’s just mesmerizing. It’s not the first time she’s been drawn that way over the years, but it’s definitely the most striking. You see that she is older than you might have first believed, her arms are muscled and strong as she holds her headpiece, and her eyes a piercing blue full of a very violent life. It’s a weird moment that literally makes you look at the character with new eyes because she’s no longer dressed exactly like a half-remembered action figure from your youth. As the team approaches the land of the dead, she doffs her iconic helmet to let her gray hair free in the wind. ![]() Over the course of five episodes, she learns what it’s like to lead and have others trust her leadership. There’s obviously some Cersei Lannister there, the would-be queen always relegated to pawn status by compelling but inferior men. She’s not so much a jaded abuse survivor as she is someone who realizes that she has let her life be in service of someone else’s dreams. Headey’s performance of Lyn is incredibly subtle. Despite their need for his skills, Lyn supports Teela in her desire to have nothing to do with her adopted father, saying that she too knew what it was like to follow a dangerous man. While it’s never really implied that Lyn suffered at Skeletor’s hands the same way Harley did at the Joker’s, there’s still a sense of madness and pain at the center of the relationship.Ībout halfway through the series (I binged all five episodes without really meaning to), Lyn gives a speech to the group as they search for the exiled Man-at-Arms, who Lyn refers to as the most dangerous man in Eternia. It’s impossible not to draw comparisons between Evil-Lyn and DC Comics’ Harley Quinn, and with the casting of Hamill as Skeletor it’s pretty clear that Smith meant us to do so. This starts out with her trademark deception and scheming, but it becomes very clear within the first two episodes that she has changed a lot since the final battle between the show’s perennial main heroes. With Skeletor gone and her magic power waning, she conspires with the forces of Grayskull to save the universe by recovering He-Man’s lost sword. Teela may be the main character, but this is definitely Evil-Lyn’s show. It’s a strange and grim version of a formerly lighthearted place, and yet it’s still silly enough to have villains like Stinkor played by Jason Mewes in it. After the loss of Skeletor (Mark Hamill), his henchmen have started a cyberpunk cult that transforms people into cyborgs. Teela (Sarah Michelle Gellar) is now a jaded anti-magic mercenary who wants nothing to do with her old life. The set up gives producer Kevin Smith a remarkable toy chest to play with, and he uses it to full effect. Instead, the Champion of Grayskull is forced into a noble sacrifice in the first episode, leaving behind a complicated world where magic is dying and some of the universe’s most foundational relationships are shattered. The trailer, set to Bonnie Tyler’s “Holding Out for a Hero” made the show look like it was going to be a shot of straight ‘80s cheese directly into the veins of classic fans, with He-Man as the main character. Masters of the Universe: Revelation has gotten a lot of hate from people who felt that it was deceptively marketed, and that’s not an unfair criticism. Played by Lena Headey, it’s definitely her show and one of the finest portrayals of an action figure cartoon character ever done. The new Netflix Masters of the Universe series surprised me in a lot of ways, but the biggest one was that I started to care a lot about Evil-Lyn. Warning: Spoilers for Masters of the Universe: Revelation
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