He-man Sequel Series (Netflix)

I know I'm gonna get flack for this but... This is how I like animated projects made today to be done in terms of voice casting. Yes, Hamill is a long time VO actor, but he's also been and had a career as a live action performer.

Absolutely, I respect the hell out of a lot of the "name" VO workers like Maurice Lamarche, or Billy West or the grand old timers like Welker.

At the same time... I do think live action performers bring a lot more, well... realness to the performances, less, how do I say this... Less just some simple "put on voice" and more a real performance. The list of great actors and actresses from say, JLU is pretty impressive and I think the work stands for itself.

If I am honest, a lot of what contributes to how I judge an animated project, American, Japanese or otherwise is how much recycling of talent they do. I'm sorry but... It gets REALLY boring and tiring listening to the same Dozen or less VO actors do the same handful of archetypical voices they have in their arsenal.

Strong disagree. Voice acting, especially really good voice acting in terms of getting different voices, is a different skill. If you watch some, it is pretty clear some could never do the voices in live action, because of the muscle movements needed to make that voice. I mean, lets not get into the issues of the dub/american production split with voice actors. I would much prefer a more even split of veteran voice actors and stunt casting.

I mean, c'mon. Chris Wood? Smith's wife and daughter?
 
I think there are some good live action actors who can do voices but a lot of them do stink. At the same time we do hear the same dozen or so professional voice actors in a hundred different things with nary a difference in their vocals.

No hate on H. Jon Benjamin but he's Coach Bob Archer Katz McGuirk to me. He's a great voice actor, terrible with the variance.
 
Well if you look at the voice cast, there are a lot of experienced voice-over talent in there along with the bigger names.

It's not that uncommon for shows like this to have some more prominent names in there.

Look it's a Kevin Smith show, is it so surprising his friends and family are playing roles? However, the key will be in the writing and the execution

Jason Mewes as Stinkor? Yeah I can see that. His daughter's character was a one-off in the original Filmation series. Maybe she has a bigger role here, but not like she was cast as Adora/She-Ra
 
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Kevin Smith Says His Masters of the Universe Series is Still on Track Despite Coronavirus

One of Netflix's biggest moves in 2020 is the bigger shift into anime, and one of the surprise projects that is coming up from this effort is a new He-Man: Masters of the Universe anime that's set after the end of the original cartoon series with Kevin Smith attached as showrunner. Masters of the Universe: Revelation is currently on track for its release on Netflix in the future, and Smith confirmed that work on the anime is still underway despite the current difficulties presented by the spread of the novel coronavirus.

In an episode of ComicBook.com's Talking Shop with Chris Killian, Kevin Smith opened up about the upcoming Masters of the Universe: Revelation and confirmed that work on the new series is continuing with animatics, voice work, designs, and more now set in place at the time of the interview.

As Smith explains what he's seen of the show so far, he also mentions that we'll have to wait until sometime in 2021 to see it all for ourselves. When asked whether or not the series is still on track during the novel coronavirus pandemic, Smith confirms that it is indeed on track as much of their schedule was set with the Summer in mind.

Taking note of the situation, Smith mentions how the schedule for the series has yet to be impacted in a major way, "In a world where everything's shut down where you can't go to a movie set or stand there on TV or shoot anything, animation is a very solitary act made by many solitary people all over the world. Masters of the Universe has been able to continue unabated. We haven't been able to record the last three episodes, but we weren't scheduled to record those until June anyway. So schedule wise our records are totally fine. Our animation...we're in good shape there."

Kevin Smith Says He-Man Characters Look Like Classics, No One's Been Redesigned

Announced to be in the works last year, the new Masters of the Universeanime is gearing up for a release on Netflix sometime next year. Speaking with ComicBook.com's Chris Killian during the latest edition of Talking Shop, Masters of the Universe: Revelation showrunner Kevin Smith opened up about how the new sequel anime series is shaping up. Alongside confirmation that development on the new anime series is still underway despite the novel coronavirus, Smith assured fans that the new edition of the characters will be just as fans of the original animated series remember.

Once again confirming that Masters of the Universe: Revelation will be picking up right where the original series leaves off, Smith noted how the new designs for the characters have only been updated to fit with Powerhouse Animation (Castlevania, Seis Manos) anime umbrella,"Powerhouse Animation absolutely killed it...This art work is amazing. The design work that Powerhouse has done...absolutely spellbinding."

But while the series will feature new designs, Smith confirmed that there aren't any major redesigns to the characters and they'll closely resemble their classic look, "It's in the style of an anime...what Netflix calls an anime original...but looks exactly like our classic characters. Nobody's been redesigned to where you're 'Oh that's the 2020 version.' They all look like they're supposed to. And the story functions as essentially the next episode when [the 1980s original animated series] stopped."

Smith also teased that these classic designs and vibes were necessary to begin with, but changes for the rest of the universe will be coming down the line, "We begin where they ended, the same tone like that, and then our tone shifts as something cataclysmic happens. That's where our modern story kicks in. Even then, it's not like 'Everything you know about He-Man is wrong. We're gonna upend the universe." Everything you knew about He-Man you need to know in order to watch the show because we play thick and fast with mythology."
 
Kevin Smith Describes His Masters of the Universe Show as a Game of Thrones Version

Not only were He-Man and the Masters of the Universe fans taken by surprise when it was announced that a Masters of the Universe sequel anime was in the works for Netflix, but that it was going to be overseen by Kevin Smith. Speaking with ComicBook.com's Chris Killian in the latest edition of Talking Shop, Smith opened up about how Masters of the Universe: Revelation was coming along. Not only did he confirm that work on the series is still continuing on despite the impact of the novel coronavirus, but mentioned how this new series like their own "Game of Thrones" take on the franchise.

In the interview, Smith explained how Ted Sarandos at Netflix urged Smith and the Revelation team to treat the property seriously, and to treat it with the high stakes that Sarandos and many children thought the original series had, "That was part of the thrill of being able to do this job. Being handed a world full of IP like Mattel's Masters of the Universe line and then being able to go hog wild, and telling a grown up story. I don't mean a grown up story like this ain't for kids..."

This eventually led the team to basically play around the mythos and deliver their own "Game of Thrones version," He gave us license to create a Game of Thrones version of Masters of the Universe minus the nudity and dragons." As Smith broke down further, Game of Thrones helped get fantasy into the doors of many homes that were dismissive before:


"That was set in a world of swords and sorcery which, prior to Game of Thrones, people outside the genre would be dismissive of. Then it became one of the biggest shows on TV where people who never picked up a fantasy book or went to a Comic-Con in their lives would sit down and watch this magic dragon show."
 
This sounds interesting. I hope it turns out well.
 
Boy, you would have thought "game of throne" version would have died out in the parlance due to the reaction of the last season.
 
Kevin Smith tends to use hyperbole a lot and has for decades really, so I tend to filter a lot of what he says.
 

He-Man's Skeletor Is The Role That Brought Mark Hamill Back To Voice Over Work

On IMDb's "Movies That Changed My Life" podcast, Kevin Smith - who is serving as director - stated that Hamill came out of voice acting retirement to take on the role of Skeletor, the most famous villain of the He-Man universe. The opportunity to add another iconic evil role to his resume was too good for Hamill to pass up. Read Smith's full comments below:

And Mark was out of the animation game altogether, he was like, 'I was done doing voice overs, but then my agent called me and said Skeletor, and I was like, ooh.' It's as big as The Joker and Luke Skywalker, for heaven's sake. And he's delicious. He does--he inflects with Tallulah Bankhead quite a bit. So he'll be very rough, then he'll be very broken like this. It's so spellbinding. And watching him and Lena Headey bounce off one another was wonderful.
 
God, after She-ra, a Kevin Smith He-man is the last thing I want. I hope the CG cartoon is better.
 
Henry Rollins on His Wild New Movie 'Dreamland' and His 'Masters of the Universe' Role

You’re also voicing a character for the Masters of the Universe animated series reboot playing a villain alongside Mark Hamill. What made you want to do that project? Were you a fan of that world?

ROLLINS: One of the people who’s running the thing, Kevin [Smith], I’ve known for I don’t know how many million years, and he contacted me to audition for a different character, so I did that. They said, “Okay, we like it, but try it a different way.” I did, and they went, “Okay, that’s not what we want. Try this guy, Tri-Klops.” That one, I was able to get in on. Tri-Klops is a true believer in the motherboard. He will not be swayed. He’s no one that you can negotiate with. So, I just played the best villain that I could. Anytime you get involved with any of those big animation jobs, it’s fun ‘cause you’re around blinding talent. Those people get those jobs because they’re really great, and I’m the ham who sneaks in. I have no training in anything, except for sleeping late and procrastinating. I’m real good at that. But I’ve done a ton of TV and film and voice-over. I’m just working off of my 1979 high school graduation paradigm of, “Oh, no, I’ve got no plan.” That’s what I’ve been doing for the last 40-some years. And so, when these things come up and I think I can do justice by them, I go for the audition.

When I look at it and go, “Nope, I can do nothing, but slow these people down, I don’t even show up for the audition.” It’s not even a thing of being embarrassed. I’m used to that. It’s just that, if there’s nothing I can add, why slow down people with your worthless audition. That’s seven minutes that we’ll never get back. When I think I can do something, I go for it, but what you see me get is nothing compared to what I don’t get. I get one job, in 500 auditions. It’s like finding the lost tooth of your uncle in the ocean. You have to be prepared to spend a lot of time in the ocean. Someone like Mark Hamill gets calls like, “Hey, we really want you to do this.” I don’t get those calls, except maybe every other year, like with Dreamland. That was an offer. I didn’t audition. Bruce said, “Tell me what you think of this guy.” We got on the phone and I said, “Here’s what I think.” He said, “I like that. You want this?” And I went, “Yes.” That kind of thing happens to me so infrequently. I cannot overemphasize how little that happens to me. Otherwise, I go in and I get in that long line of handsome with big biceps, and I go in and audition, and it’s over in a minute and a half, and I get my parking ticket validated and get back on the 101.

A lot of my employment comes from things like, “I’m writing a book.” “You’re a writer?” “No, I’m just writing a book.” “How are you gonna get it published?” “I own the publishing company.” I invent my own opportunities. I wanted to do a radio show, so I went to do a radio show. I wanted to do a photo book, so I took the photos and I did the writing, and it came out. For the most part, my employment is that I came up with an idea and I executed it, and then I brought it to market. All of the other stuff, like acting and voice-over, that I don’t invent myself, are offers that come in, and I do them with great intensity and interest, and I take it all very seriously, but it’s between tours, or I don’t have half of my body in the mouth of a whale, on a project of my own invention.
 
Masters of the Universe: Kevin Smith Updates Fans on Netflix Anime' Progress During COVID-19

Netflix is looking to enter into the realm of He-Man, Skeletor, and the other warriors of Eternia with the Kevin Smith produced anime series of Masters Of The Universe: Revelation, and recently, we had the opportunity to chat with the well known director regarding how, if at all, the coronavirus pandemic affected the production. With the likes of Mark Hammil, Kevin Conroy, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Jason Mews, and Phil Lamar, fans of the long running He-Man franchise are looking forward to diving back into the anticipated series.

In an interview with one of our writers, Kevin Smith discussed the production and the global pandemic of COVID-19 that has been affecting so many properties in both animation and otherwise:

"Yeah, we were uninterrupted by the quarantine because animation, the nature of it is such that you can do it from your house. So our two directors, even though Powerhouse Animation had to shut down their offices, they're in Austin, Texas, everyone could still work. So we're up to the animatics. I just watched the fifth animatic yesterday. It's breathtaking. The animatics are incredibly bare. They're a suggestion of what the cartoon will look like. Basically they're digital storyboards, right? So you're watching like a very thin lined black and white version of what the show will eventually be. If somebody has watched it without reading the script they might not know who is who and stuff. But if you've worked on the scripts, you can watch the animatic and your mind fills in any blanks."
 
Henry Rollins on His Wild New Movie 'Dreamland' and His 'Masters of the Universe' Role

You’re also voicing a character for the Masters of the Universe animated series reboot playing a villain alongside Mark Hamill. What made you want to do that project? Were you a fan of that world?

ROLLINS: One of the people who’s running the thing, Kevin [Smith], I’ve known for I don’t know how many million years, and he contacted me to audition for a different character, so I did that. They said, “Okay, we like it, but try it a different way.” I did, and they went, “Okay, that’s not what we want. Try this guy, Tri-Klops.” That one, I was able to get in on. Tri-Klops is a true believer in the motherboard. He will not be swayed. He’s no one that you can negotiate with. So, I just played the best villain that I could. Anytime you get involved with any of those big animation jobs, it’s fun ‘cause you’re around blinding talent. Those people get those jobs because they’re really great, and I’m the ham who sneaks in. I have no training in anything, except for sleeping late and procrastinating. I’m real good at that. But I’ve done a ton of TV and film and voice-over. I’m just working off of my 1979 high school graduation paradigm of, “Oh, no, I’ve got no plan.” That’s what I’ve been doing for the last 40-some years. And so, when these things come up and I think I can do justice by them, I go for the audition.

When I look at it and go, “Nope, I can do nothing, but slow these people down, I don’t even show up for the audition.” It’s not even a thing of being embarrassed. I’m used to that. It’s just that, if there’s nothing I can add, why slow down people with your worthless audition. That’s seven minutes that we’ll never get back. When I think I can do something, I go for it, but what you see me get is nothing compared to what I don’t get. I get one job, in 500 auditions. It’s like finding the lost tooth of your uncle in the ocean. You have to be prepared to spend a lot of time in the ocean. Someone like Mark Hamill gets calls like, “Hey, we really want you to do this.” I don’t get those calls, except maybe every other year, like with Dreamland. That was an offer. I didn’t audition. Bruce said, “Tell me what you think of this guy.” We got on the phone and I said, “Here’s what I think.” He said, “I like that. You want this?” And I went, “Yes.” That kind of thing happens to me so infrequently. I cannot overemphasize how little that happens to me. Otherwise, I go in and I get in that long line of handsome with big biceps, and I go in and audition, and it’s over in a minute and a half, and I get my parking ticket validated and get back on the 101.

A lot of my employment comes from things like, “I’m writing a book.” “You’re a writer?” “No, I’m just writing a book.” “How are you gonna get it published?” “I own the publishing company.” I invent my own opportunities. I wanted to do a radio show, so I went to do a radio show. I wanted to do a photo book, so I took the photos and I did the writing, and it came out. For the most part, my employment is that I came up with an idea and I executed it, and then I brought it to market. All of the other stuff, like acting and voice-over, that I don’t invent myself, are offers that come in, and I do them with great intensity and interest, and I take it all very seriously, but it’s between tours, or I don’t have half of my body in the mouth of a whale, on a project of my own invention.

I really like this guy's work ethic!
 
Masters of the Universe: Revelation Was Developed Strictly for Fans of Original Show

If you're worried about who the latest Masters of the Universe series will be geared towards, you need not fret — there's a good chance it was written from the ground up with you in mind. ComicBook.com recently caught up with Masters of the Universe: Revelation showrunner Kevin Smith and according to the filmmaker, the series will cater to those who grew up with the original series. Though it isn't going to explicitly be an adult property, Smith says he's confident fans who watched the original show as kids will love the new series just as much.

"Our orders were you are making an animated series for people who grew up watching that, who now have children of their own, who want to watch it with their kids," Smith tells us. "It wasn't like get the widest possible audience. Teddy [Biaselli] was like, 'Get me. Get me and everybody like me.' This series is specifically for them. He's going 'I hope it plays for everybody else but this is about honoring the past and what's gone before.'"

As such, Revelation picks up immediately following the original series. "Everybody looks similar, of course they're all down in Powerhouse's current style, the anime style, but they're all wearing the same outfits, everyone behaving the same way," Smith adds. "Then by the end of our first episode, that's when the world starts shifting and stuff. So it is, I'm so happy with it."

The filmmaker compared the relaunch of the project to HBO's Game of Thrones in tone. "Treat it as seriously, no winking, no nudging, just treat it like I felt it was when I was a kid, it was real," the writer concludes. "Because of that, we do have something damn special...I feel like He-Man fans from childhood, people for whom like Teddy it was their religion, that was the audience we were told to go after. They're doing a He-Man and the Masters of the Universe 3D CG animated cartoon and that's for everybody, that's for kids primarily. They're going after the audience that Filmation went after years ago with the original He-Man and Masters of the Universe."

Kevin Smith Explains Why New Masters of the Universe Series Has Revelation Title

Things are amiss in Eternia and according to Kevin Smith, the proverbial poo is about to hit the fan. Smith, the filmmaker who's leading the charge on the writing and development for Masters of the Universe: Revelation, says Prince Adam and the Masters of the Universe are going to get a world-ending surprise just one episode into the first season of the reboot. Speaking with ComicBook.com, Smith revealed the series initially had a much different name before one Netflix executive decided it revealed too much about the storyline of the series. As such, some might view Smith's comments as spoilers. Proceed with caution if you want to go into Masters of the Universe: Revelation knowing as little as possible.

"I just watched four and five yesterday back to back and they are so crazy emotional," Smith tells us of watching the series come to fruition. "Like high adventure, scenes that you've never seen before with the Masters of the Universe characters but always wanted to see. It's insanely emotional."

That's when he adds the series was initially called End of the Universe before Netflix Original Series boss Ted Biaselli decided it might have revealed a little too much. "So instead it's called Revelation," he adds. "So with that old title in mind, there are stakes in our series."

Before the reboot gets to episode five, Smith says, the world will definitely be in flux. "One of those stakes comes into play and it is rendered by the good folks at Powerhouse and voiced by our talent so expertly that even with a very sketchy black and white animatic that I'm watching I was bawling real tears yesterday," the filmmaker concludes. "The voice talent on this show is unparalleled. Powerhouse is absolutely realizing a far more imaginative Eternia than even I did or the writers did when we put it down on the page."
 
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Yup, this is a sequel to the original series. However, Netflix also has an unrelated CGI He-Man cartoon in the works. :yay:

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Oh nice. I didn’t realise that either.
 
Is this going to have a traditional/stylistic/detailed anime art style, or CGI? Please tell me it's traditional.
 

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