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39 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure Fun For Fans Of The Series, Or Fans Of Fantasy!
While I was reading the other customer reviews of "Masters of the Universe" on this page, I was shocked at how many negative reviews there were. I absolutely love this movie! It is one the most fun movies you could ever see, and has been one of my favorites ever since I was a kid. When I was little, I had all of the toys, and watched the cartoon series...
Published on June 17, 2004 by Adam J. Wishman

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Oh, what might have been....
This was the premise of a classic toy line and the classic cartoon that emerged from it: When the planet Eternia-think a futuristic Camelot-comes under attack by the demon sorcerer Skeletor in an attempt to abscond with the mythical Castle Grayskull and thus conquer the universe, Prince Adam, teenage son of Eternia's King Randor and Queen Marlena, discovers that he has...
Published on April 9, 2002 by James Mason


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39 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure Fun For Fans Of The Series, Or Fans Of Fantasy!, June 17, 2004
This review is from: Masters of the Universe (DVD)
While I was reading the other customer reviews of "Masters of the Universe" on this page, I was shocked at how many negative reviews there were. I absolutely love this movie! It is one the most fun movies you could ever see, and has been one of my favorites ever since I was a kid. When I was little, I had all of the toys, and watched the cartoon series religiously. Now I know that the movie doesn't stay true to the cartoon series, but you have to think of it as a seperate entity of a central idea. The makers of this film were trying to appeal to hardcore fans of the series, and also to attract new viewers to the series. In one review by Access Hollywood in the 80's this movie was hailed as "The Star Wars of the 80's" I believe that this movie is as good as Star Wars when you compare them as fantasy films. The special effects are great in this movie, when you consider the time that this movie was made. And they make a stunning transfer to DVD! This movie looks as gorgeous as it did when I first saw it in the theatre as a kid. I also love the acting in this movie. Frank Langella as Skeletor is simply fantastic. He gives a very theatrical quality to the character, and has just the right amount of sinister evil, and operatic intensity that he captures the character perfectly, without going over the top. In my opinion Langella deserved an Oscar nomination for his role, he was brilliant. As far as casting He-Man, the film makers had a quite a task on their hands, because He-Man is the ultimate super hero. Dolph Lundgren was a great choice. He had the ripped, muscular body, but could also do the fight scenes, and act as well. Other great casting was Courtney Cox, now Courtney Cox-Arquette from "Friends" where her character Monica Gellar is my favorite! Cox plays the Earth girl Julie, who becomes entangled in this battle of the cosmos. Also Meg Foster was brilliant as the evil warrior goddess Evil-Lyn. She was absolutely spellbinding. She captured the icy wickedness, and also sultry, seductive, evil beauty of the character. If I were a member of the Academy, I would have also given Cox and Foster nominations for Best Supporting Actress. Unfortunately until the recent 11 Oscar wins for the most deserving "Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" the Academy did not honor fantasy films. "Masters of the Universe" was just a little ahead of its time. Don't pay attention to the negative reviews on this sight, this is truly one of the greatest fantasy films of our time!
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32 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dolph Lundrin Has the Power?, December 3, 2004
By 
Leo "Katphish" (Norwich, NY, United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: Masters of the Universe (DVD)
Masters of the Universe is a sort of "lost classic" of the 80's. Almost anyone who lived through the 80's heard something about "He-Man" and "Skeletor"... and likely heard the phrase "I have the powwwweeeer!". That's Masters of the Universe for those not in the know.

This is the motion picture version of the franchise that brought us a hot selling line of toys, a hit cartoon series, and practically invented the modern notion of using a series franchise to sell toys and other offshot products. "Masters of the Universe has a simple enough plot. The Evil Skeletor has used a device called the cosmic key to teleport his forces into, and subsequenlty capture Castle Greyskull - and the vast cosmic powers which it somehow holds (why it has this sort of significance is unexplained). his arch enemy, the heroic He-man, has been teleported with his friends to the far off world of earth during the fighting and Skeletors forces now pursue them to capture the key and seal once and for all, skeletors place as supreme ruler of the land of Eternia.

But this is not a movie you will watch for the story of course. Even those who were fans of He-man may be dismayed to know that the movie doesnt hold firm AT ALL to the sorce material. Heman's famous tiger is missing. And his powerful sword is just a sword in the movie. Much of it indeed was thrown together and altered. You'll see bits and pieces of everything that was sucessful in 80's cinema throughout this movie. Many times it feels like you're watching a really bad version of Star Wars. Skeletor is made to resebmle the emperor from that more sucsessful franchise, and anyone who doesnt think gwildor looks like yoda is kidding themselves. The end scene of the movie practically mirrors the end of Return of the Jedi! Skeletor shooting lighting from his fingers telling heman to kneel, and finally being tossed down some sort of shaft to a firey demise... Im surprised the dont get sued! Not to mention the hover boards are certainly inspired from back to the future 2!

No you wont be intellectually or emotionally involved. What you WILL watch this movie for, is 1) Nastalgia, and 2) fun. The movie is full of fairly effective comedy and decent action. As far as cheesy 80's movies I loved as a kid go, this one doesnt make me ask myself how stupid I must have been to enjoyed it. The acting is also quite decent, although lundrin is no oscar winner. The character of Skeletor is given a very powerful voice and performance for a movie of this type (which was obviously aimed at young teen boys).

of course the problem is you cant take this movie serious... any movie with charcters named "he-man" and "man-at-arms" and has bad costumed man-creatures running around wearing plastic looking armor and fake looking weapons is bound to have problems keeping an adult audience from chuckling. This is compounded by the fact that Lundrin, while he at times puts forth a noble effort, cant deliver a very effective presence in a lead role. Not to mention everything seems a lot sillier when seen in the context of a subburban USA battleground.

But if you can let go of that and just watch this movie with a light heart for fun and for nostalgia, you'll probably enjoy it and find it to be a lot of fun and find a basic tale of good and evil, action, comedy and a half-way-decent attempt to make it a sort of "almost epic".

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35 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars By the power of grayskull!, July 5, 2001
By 
J. Kallis "filmation" (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Masters of the Universe (DVD)
Ok, so the movie did not stay true to the cartoon. This is still a kickin' movie. He-Man, the strongest man in the universe, and hero to all who live on the mystical planet of Eternia, comes to the big screen. He-Man comes from one of Mattel Toys biggest sellers in their history, and toy history. The line was called 'Masters of the Universe'. Mattel spun off the line into a cartoon for the small screen that was produced by animation group, Filmation. The cartoon and toys was so popular amoung youngsters and even adults, that a live action movie came about.

Now, I have read the original script for the movie. Much better than what actually made it to screen. The only fault of the movie is too much Earth. People want to see it on Eternia. But, the movie is still cool, with great effects and a nice score by Bill Conti.

The true highlight of the movie is Frank Langella as Skeletor. He was made to play the role. He is very scarey and at most very evil in the movie.

Also, Friends fans of Courtney Cox will love the movie too, she is in it as Earth girl Julie who finds the Cosmic Key and aids the Eternians on Earth.

I give the movie 5 stars because that is what it should get. I am a huge He-Man and She-Ra fan and this movie is part of He-Man's history.

By the power of grayskull.... YOU have the power!

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Oh, what might have been...., April 9, 2002
By 
James Mason "IrishWriter34" (Dearborn, MI United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Masters of the Universe (DVD)
This was the premise of a classic toy line and the classic cartoon that emerged from it: When the planet Eternia-think a futuristic Camelot-comes under attack by the demon sorcerer Skeletor in an attempt to abscond with the mythical Castle Grayskull and thus conquer the universe, Prince Adam, teenage son of Eternia's King Randor and Queen Marlena, discovers that he has been chosen by destiny to bear Grayskull's power against all who would threaten Eternia's safety. By raising the enchanted Sword of Grayskull aloft and shouting "By the Power of Grayskull," Adam is transformed into the superheroic swashbuckler He-Man, and proceeds to do battle with Skeletor...and to try and prove himself to his demanding father.

From that premise, Filmation created a terrific cartoon that, even though it had its share of `80s cheese, was rich and complex, deftly mixing Arthurian legend with sci-fi. At its essence, MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE was a coming-of-age story set against a high-tech sword and sorcery backdrop. As such, it had the makings of a great movie. Unfortunately, the low-budget Golan-Globus team (which destroyed SUPERMAN IV) got their hands on it, and we the viewers got cheated. The essence of MOTU was trashed; the Adam/He-Man duality and everything it entailed was tossed away. Several critical characters, like Randor, Marlena, Cringer/Battle Cat (Adam's pet tiger), and the like were ignored. And finally, 90% of the character and set designs immortalized by the toys and cartoon were changed as to be unrecognizable. Only Man-At-Arms, Skeletor, and Skeletor's lover/servant Evil-Lyn emerged on film as being visually recognizable as their cartoon counterparts.

So what did we get in return? We got a shameless, low-budget STAR WARS rip-off. Instead of the myriad beasts, demons, and cyborgs that Skeletor employed in the cartoon/toy line, we got three beasts and a bunch of armored stormtroopers. Instead of getting a He-Man who captured the feel of the character, we got a wooden Conan wannabe who relied more on laser guns than on his sword. Instead of a story that spanned Eternia and carried the appropriate sci-fi/fantasy feel of the series, we got a story that took place primarily on Earth, complete with a crabby cop and two ditzy teens. Instead of having a skilled, experienced director at the helm, we got unsteady, pedestrian direction from novice filmmaker Gary Goddard (whose day job was designing amusement parks). Sure, we got some excellent FX work, a great Bill Conti score, and a terrific Castle Grayskull throne room set, but we also got bad costumes, a stupid Grayskull exterior that looks like a pirate ship, a plotless script that's all noise and no depth, substandard fight choreography, and really bad acting. Only Man-At-Arms (Jon Cypher), Skeletor (Frank Langella), and Evil-Lyn (Meg Foster) are well-acted in this film; Langella's theatrical performance in particular is the film's saving grace, and deserved to be in a much better movie. Otherwise everyone else in the cast stinks. Dolph Lundgren is a perfect physical match for He-Man, but the guy can't act and his awkward Swedish accent has been the butt of fan jokes for years. Everyone else is just too vapid, too bland, and just too unsuited for the roles to be any good. This film needed to be a big-budget affair with top-rate actors and a script that followed the cartoon closely, not a STAR WARS wannabe that fails on most levels. THE BEASTMASTER with Marc Singer was far closer to the spirit of MOTU than this film (and Singer's Dar looked and acted far more like He-Man than Lundgren's hero did), and is a vastly superior movie. Pretty sad that the actual MOTU movie didn't even come close to matching that level, isn't it?

To be fair, I initially saw this film when I was 9 and enjoyed it, but over time I realized how weak it really was, and how it could have been so much more. While I don't HATE the film, I don't like it too much, either, and it hasn't aged well. This summer, Mattel will relaunch MOTU with a brand-new cartoon series and toy line that retells the story of Prince Adam/He-Man from the beginning. Hopefully, if Hollywood decides to make another go at a He-Man movie, they'll use the cartoon as the baseline and get it right this time. As it stands, the 1987 film is an OK way to kill a few hours, but as a He-Man film and as a fantasy film, it just doesn't cut it.

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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is actually... Jack Kirby's Fourth World: The Movie, April 24, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Masters of the Universe (DVD)
Don't get me wrong, Masters is a great movie, but it's not Masters of the Universe. This isn't the He-Man "By the Power of Greyskull" that we all know and love. That war-mongering dictator ain't Skeletor.

Ever wonder why, with such a plethora of characters in the MotU line, why they made NEW characters like Blade?

This movie is actually more derivative of the comic book series "Jack Kirby's Fourth World", featuring characters from the DC Comics Universe, Orion (He-Man), Kalibak (Beast Man), Kanto (Blade), and Darkseid (Skeletor). There are much more parallels to be drawn from the 4th World source material to the characters in the film than from the He-Man material.

[The follwing are comments made by Comic Book Legend "John Byrne" in issue #497 of 'Comic Shop News']

"The *best* New Gods movie, IMHO, is 'Masters of the Universe'. I even corresponded with the director, who told me this was his intent, and that he had tried to get [Jack] Kirby to do the production designs, but the studio nixed it.

"Check it out. It requires some bending and an occasional sex change (Metron becomes an ugly dwarf, The Highfather becomes the Sorceress), but it's an amazingly close analog, otherwise. And Frank Langella's Skeletor is a *dandy* Darkseid!"

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars so corny, yet so much fun!, April 22, 2003
This review is from: Masters of the Universe (DVD)
This movie was once called, "a Star Wars for the eighties". Now, I'd have to disagree with that, because this movie is a bit too silly to be compared to Star Wars, which was a very lofty title. Nevertheless, this movie is just plain fun to watch. It's quite different from the cartoon, which is kinda disappointing, but in the long run nobody cares. It has everything you would expect from a campy, and pretty bizarre, comic-book style world. A super-strong hero with a magic sword, an array of weird bounty hunters out to get him, a diabolical fiend whose body is nothing but bones, a magic trans-dimensional key that sounds like a synthesizer from the Sharper Image, a pair of naive humans who are fascinated by the new world they've sicovered, and a wild showdown in a futuristic palace. You can't take it too seriously, but that just makes it all the more enjoyable. See it!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good live-action rendering of the animated series., July 12, 1999
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I often watched the He-Man cartoon series with my kids as they were growing up, and I fell in love with the characters and the wonderful stories, some of which had some strong adult truths buried just beneath the surface. Unlike "Transformers", He-Man and She-Ra were about fighting evil for a higher purpose, without getting preachy about it. The movie takes the main characters from the series - He-Man, the loyal Man-at-Arms and his warrior daughter, Skeletor and Evil-Lynne - and brings them to 20th-Century Earth in a very convincing way. The dwarf-gnome character in the movie serves as a stand-in for Orko, but is obviously based more on the Hobbits from "Lord of the Rings." This bit of artistic license grounds the movie in our reality by providing a character that the human teenagers can interact with as the story unfolds to its obvious, but very exciting conclusion.

Dolph Lundgren looks the part of He-Man and he swings a mean sword, but it's obvious that his dialogue was kept to a bare minimum. Still, the other characters pick up the slack, and Frank Langella is marvelous as Skeletor - as in many of the animated shows, he's the one who drives the action. The opening scene where Skeletor marches triumphantly into Castle Greyskull (which is rendered very authentically) sends a genuine chill down your spine, and the final battle between He-Man and Skeletor is worth the wait. One touch I really appreciated was the theme of music as the key to the universe. The film's music score is top-notch and paces the storyline very well. Kudos also to Meg Foster (is that right? you'll know her when you see her) who gives Evil-Lynne some real depth and a truly sharp edge not seen in the series. The entire cast was wonderful; it's a shame they could not put together a sequel using the same people. It's not quite Star Wars, but you'll enjoy this fun adventure film for many years to come.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Masters of the Unverse: A must-have for true He-Man fans!, February 3, 1999
By A Customer
To the people of newer generations who missed out on the amazing He-Man franchise, this movie would be nothing more than another cheap sci-fi Star Wars wannabe. But to true He-Man fans like myself, this movie is nothing less than a milestone. The special effects were ahead of their time, and the action sequences (especially the final confrontation between He-Man and Skeletor) were exceptional. The acting left little to be desired -- particularly Frank Langella's portrayal of the sinister Skeletor. And though the movie would have fared better to include more classic cartoon-originated characters (Where the heck were Trapjaw, Tri-clops, Ram-man, and the others?) and fewer "newbies" (Where the heck did Karg, Saurod, and Blade come from?), it still had a decent plot. Others would say I'm crazy, but I truly love Masters of the Universe!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Guilty Pleasure, November 14, 2007
By 
This review is from: Masters of the Universe (DVD)
I've loved this movie since I was a kid when it first came out, He-Man was one of the biggest toys and cartoon series going around at the time. I'd always had this on VHS until a few years back when VHS was replaced by DVD, and I never bothered to get this movie on DVD until now.

PLOT: Dolphy Lungren plays He-Man, a soldier for Castle Greyskull who fights for the Sorcerer on the side of good. But the evil Skeletor has taken over Greyskull and has the Sorcerer as his prisoner.

He-man teams up with surviving good guys, Leela and whatever her fathers name is, and they rescue a small dwarf alienish guy named Gwildor who they find out is an inventor of the cosmic key. A device that can open a portal tp anywhere in the universe.

They wind up trying to rescue the Sorcerer from Skeletor but find they must retreat or be defeated, they end up using the portal device to flee and find themselves on Earth.

They run into Kevin and Julie (Cortney Cox, her first movie) who accidently find the cosmic key thinking it is a musical instrument but not knowing that when they use it, Skeletor and his army are hot on the trail looking to steal it back.

Then the rest of the plot is trying to get the thing back, avoid Skeletors henchmen and get back home before Skeletor inherits the powers of Greyskull forever.

Overall, when I look at this movie now, it seems pretty corny and lame in so much of it, but yet, fun at the same time. If I had not have grown up watching this, then I'm not sure what I would think of it today, but I enjoyed this as a kid, and still have a guilty pleasure to watch it today.

The make up effects are pretty good, i'd say they had someone who was involved with Star Wars doing the effects to this. There not the best effects you have ever seen, but at the time, they where probably the best it could get.

It really reminds me of Star Wars and cough.. Suburban Commando alot. Fans of those movies may get a kick out of this one. As long as your not a twit who keeps saying, "oh those effects are so lame" well, it was the 80's and the effects are not what you are supposed to pay every bit of attention to.

I never really questioned this movie compared to the cartoon, so many reviews do, but I think i watched this more then I ever watched the cartoon, and when you think about it, how the heck could you pull off riding around on lions and a floating ghost back in the 80's anyway, it would have been way too expensive and looked lame anyway.

The bonus features are not much, i'd have loved to see deleted scenes and whatever else could be dished up. So hopefully it exists somewhere and there will be a special edition of Masters Of The Universe in the future.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fun, fun, fun!, December 16, 2001
By 
This review is from: Masters of the Universe (DVD)
Great movie. Dolph is excellent as the redux He-Man. Colorful characters new and old, a rich, engaging Bill Conti score, plus what really made the movie for me, Frank Langella, unrecognizable as the terrifying megalomaniac, Skeletor. Deffinately a movie you can watch with your kids, and a classic 80s flick all-around. One of my favorite "popcorn movies."

The DVD includes insightful audio commentary by director Gary Goddard.

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