Do you have a video playback issues?
Please disable AdBlocker in your browser for our website.
Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.
A series of powerful adventures tells of a girl named Adora, an orphaned girl who turns her life into a historic turning point when she leaves behind her evil former life. Adora begins a new life when she discovers a magical sword that transforms her into a warrior princess called Shi-ra. After Xi found a new family in the rebellion, she is trying to unite a group of magical princesses through the ultimate battle that was the dominant evil.
CRITICS OF "She-Ra and the Princesses of Power - Season 1"
Den of Geek
This isn't a series that's stuck in the past, trying to recapture that franchise's old glory. It's taking the building blocks of OG She-Ra and making it something fresh and new for the audiences of today.
This is not the She-Ra you or your parents grew up with. The new show,... is so timely in its messages and so modern in its inclusivity and respect for its young audience that I'm mad that it didn't exist when I was growing up.
In so many ways, the show is about female leadership-new female leadership especially-women stepping into roles they didn't previously occupy and trying to figure out how to lead as best as they can.
On She-Ra, the (retro-)future is female, with a cast of mostly women existing on a multi-dimensional spectrum: good, evil, good but solitary, evil but understandable, utterly amoral, full-blown hippie.
While it takes some time to find its footing, it's a promising show that's full of heart, emphasizing that you don't always need a mystical sword to become a hero.