Filmation
occasionally reused animation to amusing effect, hid jokes
within a particular scene, and gave some characters the
most bizarre powers and dialogue. Characters would sometimes
be reused as another character, or their image would change
completely. In this section we aim to showcase all of the
comical, coincidental, bizarre and possibly missed moments
in the He-Man series.
Adam had one of the best bookcases, mainly because it held
a great secret.
Adam and Adora should maneuver smoothly into their odd change
sequence poses.
MU131 onwards?
Just how useful were the three eyes of Tri-Klops?
Two women in bird costumes?
The magazine listing! The date! The episode!
What happens when you mix Adam, He-Man, Teela, and a Monster,
with Busta Toons?
The BBC's seven-minute segment on He-Man and She-Ra.
Who is that holding the Starsword aloft?
A character that looked like Ming the Merciless on a bad
day was reused twice!
Back in 1995 He-Man and She-Ra debuted
on the Internet, and the quest for the episodes began!
Two
very memorable poses that should not be used in regular
animation sequences.
Two
very memorable poses that should not be used in regular
animation sequences.
Alien
currency was not all that different to our own.
He-Man's "The Dragon Invasion" and "The
Dragon's Gift" share more than just a similar title.
Just whose side were they supposed to be on; Skeletor's
or Hordak's?
Director Richard Trueblood decides to animate Spikor quite
wildly, proving that the character was not a total loser.
The UK's Channel Four polled The 100 Greatest Kids' TV Shows.
Where did He-Man finish?
Continuity was something that the Temple of The Sun missed
out on.
A map is just a map, isn't it?
In-between He-Man's season one and season two something
happened to Kothos.
In the worlds of He-Man and She-Ra, some
things are supposed to remain unseen.
A little look at Faker's appearance in the cartoon, and
what he should have looked like.
Ram Man butted many things in the He-Man series,
and here they all are.
One character that was noticeable in the toys never made
it into the cartoon.
He-Man, like Batman had a "Bat Signal," and the
Widgets had the privilege.
Trap Jaw had many arm attachments that he used against the
heroes of Eternia, and even Etheria.