He-Man and the Masters of the Universe [Season 2,] Episode
68: Day of the Machines by AverageMansReviews
Review Time:
5 things about this episode
Warning: there are flashing
effects/other effects/transformation/animal cruelty.
Storyline/Moral message: it
is excellent, but it has to be said compared to what it becomes the beginning
in comparison is a little bit slow and the Moral message is:"Now we all
make mistakes and we shouldn't be afraid to admit to them and when they aren't
don't waste precious time putting the blame somewhere else, just do what you
can to make things right."
The
second part of this Moral message is clearly absolutely garbage and it is/was
[this is speculation on my part,] but this was quite possibly was designed to
make parents lives easier having children take responsibility for things that
were not their fault, this is/was a terrible moral/advice to give to children.
Because
just based on this episode for an example Duncan/Duncan is in summary in a
high ranking position in short the right-hand man to King Randor and Queen
Marlena and not forgetting the really tiny; ever so grain of salt detail really
that he is a fully grown adult so based on these two points he should take
responsibility even though this situation may or may not have been his fault [I
am trying not to give too much away,] hence why I said this is/was a terrible
moral/advice to give children, now if they had said basically "If
something goes wrong, try to fix it or if you can't there is no shame in asking
for help from somebody." Or "if you fail at something don't give up;
try and try again but if you fail at it you know you've tried your best and
that is as much as anyone can give." These two examples are much better
suitable for young children and up.
Remote-control computer grid cube memory prison: we have Action and Art going hand-in-hand there is this incredibly tiny Duncan/Man-At-Arms inside this main computer for the Royal Palace of Eternia which controls everything which has a computer chip in it. So in this small sequence; Duncan/Man-At-Arms has to run through this grid without basically getting in close proximity to these memory cubes which unfortunately he is not successful and the Art is imaginative as we have as I have already said this incredibly tiny Duncan/Man-At-Arms looking over this situation before coming up with a course of action [in a nutshell throughout roughly speaking a lot of this episode we have this perspective of what is usually tiny to us is now noticeably larger compared to what they were; a world within a world.]
This episode receives: 8/10, this
episode is excellent; it has lots to offer its viewers in one way or
another
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