Cora’s Thoughts on the Latest Masters of the Universe Trailers and Other Footage and the Marketing Campaign in General

The marketing machine for the upcoming Masters of the Universe live action movie is really running on full power. There has been yet another trailer and new featurettes, TV spots, behind the scenes footage and interviews with cast and crew have been released almost every single day. There’s even been a massive, world record breaking drone show in the skies above Los Angeles. This isn’t even the first drone show they’ve done, they’ve also done another over a congested highway in California some time ago. I kind of suspect that such drone shows wouldn’t have been allowed here in Germany – definitely not the one above the congested highway because it might distract drivers and cause accidents – but they’re very cool.

Amazon MGM is clearly pouring a lot of money into marketing this movie. At any rate, I can’t remember the last time I saw this much marketing for a movie. Possibly for one of the Avengers movies. At any rate, The Mandalorian and Grogu and Supergirl, which both come out around the same time and appeal to a similar audience, seem to have less marketing. Particularly Supergirl seems to be completely missing in action, which is just weird. I also haven’t seen a lot of marketing for that Steven Spielberg alien/UFO film Disclosure Day, but then I have little interest in it. Personally, I think it’s about thirty years too late. As for Scary Movie Whatever, which comes out on the same day and is apparently considered a serious challenger for Masters of the Universe, I haven’t seen anything about that one (though to be fair, I haven’t looked very closely either, since I have zero interest in Scary Movie Whatever) beyond a single trailer either. Anyway, let’s hope the marketing onslaught pays off and Masters of the Universe is a huge success.

So buckle up, cause this a long post, since there have been so many clips, featurettes, interviews and other promo material released.
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Cora Reviews Some Toys and Ventures into the Wasteland of Early 1970s Cinema

The next installment of my Eastercon report is coming, but I’ve also been blogging elsewhere.

For starters, I was at File 770, reviewing the first few movie figures from the new Masters of the Universe Chronicles collectors line, which will apparently replace Masterverse. This review only covers the three Heroic Warriors, namely He-Man himself, Man-at-Arms and Battle Cat. Part 2 will cover the three Evil Warriors released in the first two waves of movie figures, namely Skeletor, Trap-Jaw and Tri-Klops. We decided to split the review into two parts, because it was long anyway and besides one of the figures from the second wave, Trap-Jaw, hasn’t been delivered yet.

My more formal toy review – with size comparisons and a detailed look at the packaging and of course the “But can they kiss?” test – mainly go to File 770, because Mike likes publishing my toy reviews, where toy photo stories go here. And yes, there will definitely be more of those, when I find the time to do them. Also expect to see more movie toys – either here or at File 770 – since Mattel is producing a lot of those. And yes, I will probably also do a post analysing the latest trailers and featurettes about the upcoming Masters of the Universe live action film.

In other news, I was also at Galactic Journey, reviewing And Jimmy Went to the Rainbow, a bonkers spy thriller cum melodrama that is very typical of early 1970s West German cinema. There are also reviews of the horror comedy The Abominable Doctor Phibes (which I remember enjoying quite a bit, though I also haven’t seen it in ages), the Muppet fairytale film The Frog Prince, the avantgarde surreal erotic movie Pink Narcissus and another horror movie called Simon, King of the Witches. It is a weird selection of movies and in a way also very exemplary of the doldrums of western cinema in the early to mid 1970s, when TV had fully taken over in most western countries and movie theatre audiences were dropping a lot. For a while, it seemed as if studios were throwing everything at the wall to see what stuck. As a result, there were a lot of very strange movies, some of which were good, many of which were not. Plus, the sexual revolution had led to relaxed censorship standards, so early 1970s movies included a lot of sex regardless of genre, cause sex was one of the things which reliably drew audiences into movie theatres.

As for the movie I reviewed, it initially wasn’t a movie I was looking forward to. The main reason I agreed to review it is because it is borderline SFF (the plot is kicked off when a chemist who has developed a new chemical weapon and wants to sell it to the highest bidder is murdered) and because it is very typical of early 1970s West German cinema. Because Johannes Mario Simmel adaptations were to the first half of the 1970s what Edgar Wallace adaptations were to the 1960s to the point that some of the same people – most notably director Alfred Vohrer – were working on both. However, in my view the Simmel adaptations were a huge step down after the brilliant Edgar Wallace movies. See my dismissive remarks about the Simmel movies here.

Now Johannes Mario Simmel was a staple of West German bookshelves in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s – along with Heinz G. Konsalik, Marie Louise Fischer and Uta Danella. Every shelf wall unit in every living room seemed to have books by these four authors, usually the Bertelsmann Book Club editions. My Mom had all of them. I inherited a whole shelf full of Marie Louise Fischer as well as plenty of Simmel and Uta Danella and some Konsalik, too. And yes, I read books by all of them – usually when I had run out of other reading material and was bored.

As an adult, I’d say that Simmel was probably the best of the bunch, though as a teen, his “ripped from the headlines” (headlines from before my time, at that) plots, the melodramatic romances, which inevitably seemed to end tragically and his unique journalistic style irritated me as did the obsessions with WWII and Nazis that both Simmel and Konsalik had – though for very different reasons. As for the Simmel movies, teen Cora found these just incredibly dull. There were seemingly endless blurry scenes of couples running around who would break up anyway in the end plus random revelations of deep dark secrets, which mostly weren’t that thrilling or shocking to me.

When I looked at which movies, TV shows, songs, events were coming up in Journey time, I realised that the era of the Simmel movie was about to start and that I should probably review one of them, because they were so very typical of the early 1970s downfall of West German cinema. I wasn’t exactly looking forward to (re)watching And Jimmy Went to the Rainbow (cause I’m honestly not sure if I watched it before or not, since the Simmel movies all feel kind of similar to me), but to my surprise I wound up enjoying it more than I thought I would. The romantic scenes shot through a vaseline smeared lens were still irritating and overly long – and it’s odd that I mainly remember those – but I did enjoy the spy thriller plot and – to my own amazement – the Nazi era flashbacks, too.

Besides, it is notable that though West Germany in the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s didn’t really want to hear anything about the Third Reich – the “Nazis all the time” rememberance culture which dominated my childhood and teenage years didn’t really become a thing until the late 1970s and 1980s – they were perfectly willing to read about the Third Reich and Nazis being evil and destroying lives, when a popular author like Johannes Mario Simmel wrote about it and a popular director like Alfred Vohrer made movies about it. This isn’t even Vohrer’s only Third Reich movie either – he also adapted Every Man Dies Alone by Hand Fallada a few years later. It’s also worth noting that both Simmel and Vohrer were at risk of Nazi persecution and worse – Simmel, because his father was Jewish (the plight of Valerie Steinfeld who has to denounce her Jewish husband to protect her son in And Jimmy Went to the Rainbow was that of Simmel’s mother) and Vohrer, because he was gay.

And Jimmy Went to the Rainbow also has an insanely star-studded cast. For starters, there is Ruth Leuwerik, the darling of postwar West German cinema and my Mom’s favourite actress, and the movie makes this paragon of wholesomeness, who played Maria von Trapp and Queen Louise of Prussia among others, say “anal sex” multiple times, which I imagine must have been shocking in 1971. Coincidentally, this was her penultimate film role and Ruth Leuwerik had been mostly retired after popularity waned in the early 1960s, though she did live until 2016. She obviously wasn’t lacking for money, since she was very selective about her roles in the last half of her life, so Ruth Leuwerik clearly must have wanted to play this role. Ruth Leuwerik’s former husband Herbert Fleischmann also appears in the movie as a French agent.

Furthermore, we have two future TV detectives, Derrick-to-be Horst Tappert as a lawyer, and Tatort investigator-to-be (he will actually debut later in 1971) Klaus Schwarzkopf as an assassin. Legendary film and TV villain Horst Frank, known to every kid of the 1970s as the man who bought Timm Thaler‘s smile (and was actually the devil in disguise), plays an SS-officer. Another legendary movie villain, Jochen Brockmann, who played the criminal mastermind the Masked Frog in the Edgar Wallace adaptation Face of the Frog, also shows up.  Two up and coming actresses, Judy Winter and Doris Kunstmann, give very early performances, though Judy Winter as a brothel madam and double agent is more impressive than Doris Kunstmann as the female half of the vaseline smeared romance. We also get Friedrich G. Beckhaus, who played astrogator Atan Shubashi aboard the space cruiser Orion 7 and voiced Captain Future’s robot pal Grag in the 1979 anime, as a sadistic Nazi judge who also utters the word “anal sex” several times. We also get two more voice acting legends in Peter Pasetti and Karl Walter Diess, who would voice Skeletor and Man-at-Arms respectively in the German Masters of the Universe audio dramas of the 1980s. Here they play two spies who conspired to assassinate French heartthrob Alain Noury, who never had a big break, though he is certainly easy on the eyes.

In short, this was clearly a high budget movie with a star-studded cast and a very good director. It was also pretty bonkers, but I enjoyed it more than I thought I would and I guess I now have a better appreciation for the popularity of the Johannes Mario Simmel adaptations of the early 1970s. Though to be fair, I also picked one of the better ones. The next Johannes Mario Simmel adaptation, Liebe ist nur ein Wort (Love is only a word), seems to be a lot more painful. It’s basically The Graduate – young college student has an affair with an older married woman – with an unhappy ending. And yes, I know lots of people believe that The Graduate didn’t have a happy ending either, but I always found it super romantic. Meanwhile, the kid in Love is only a word kills himself in the end.

As for Johannes Mario Simmel himself, his work was reevaluated in his later years and is no longer considered just popular trash, because a new generation of critics realised that Simmel was actually very clever about addressing serious subjects amidst all the melodramatic soap opera stuff and spy thriller intrigue.

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Cora’s Adventures at Iridescence, the 2026 Eastercon in Birmingham, Part 3: Easter Saturday at the Con

Over the Easter weekend, I was at Iridescence, the 2026 Eastercon in Birmingham, UK.

I’ve already chronicled my adventures in getting to Birmingham and wandering around the city in part 1 and my adventures on Good Friday in part 2. So here is Easter Saturday:

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Cora’s Adventures at Iridescence, the 2026 Eastercon in Birmingham, Part 2: Good Friday at the Con

Over the Easter weekend, I was at Iridescence, the 2026 Eastercon in Birmingham, UK.

I’ve already chronicled my adventures in getting to Birmingham and wandering around the city in part 1. Now – after some delays caused by the Hugo finalist announcement, various Masters of the Universe trailers and life just happening – let’s get to the actual con, starting with day 1 or Good Friday.

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Cora’s Comments on Yet More New Masters of the Universe Footage

April 28 was apparently Masters of the Universe Day as declared by Tom Bradley, the then mayor of Los Angeles in 1987 on occasion of a stage show called the He-Man and She-Ra Power Tour playing in the city. For more about that, see He-Man.org, who even have a full cast list as well as a link to a recording of the show.

Also on Masters of the Universe day, sad news have reached us that Roger Sweet, the Mattel employee who co-created He-Man together with Mark Taylor and designed many of the characters and action features from the vintage toyline, has died aged 91. Mark Taylor died on Christmas Eve 2021, so none of the two men who were so instrumental in creating the character and toyline that brought joy to so many kids will be around to see the new live action movie.

What is more, Michael Halperin who wrote the series bible for the Filmation cartoon, died this February. We lost Alfredo Alcala, artist of many of the early mini-comics, in 2000, Tony Guerrero, the artist who sculpted the prototypes of the early figures, in 2012 and H.G. Francis, who wrote the German audio dramas, in 2011. Of the people who shaped Masters of the Universe in the early days, only Donald F. Glut, who wrote the first few mini-comics and named Castle Grayskull and Teela among others, and Paul Kupperberg, who worked on the second run of mini-comics and the Superman crossover and came up with Prince Adam as He-Man’s civilian identity, are still with us.

Though thankfully, Roger Sweet gets more acknowledgement in the mainstream press than Mark Taylor did upon his death in 2021, which went almost completely unnoticed beyond the fandom bubble. Here is a detailed obituary for Roger Sweet from the New York Times as well as one from Forbes and one from Variety. I strongly suspect that the increased presence of Masters of the Universe due to the upcoming movie has a lot to do with this as well as the understandable outrage that Roger Sweet’s wife Marlene had to take to crowdfunding to pay for her husband’s care, even though he co-created a billion dollar franchise.

Meanwhile, Mattel and Amazon MGM are using Masters of the Universe Day to further ramp up the promotion of the upcoming Masters of the Universe movie even further and released a new poster as well as two featurettes focussing on the heroes and villains of Eternia.

The poster can be seen here and the two featurettes are embedded below:

There’s quite a bit of new footage here, including our first good look at several characters, so let’s take a closer look at what we’re seeing here, starting with the “Heroes” featurette

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Cora’s Thoughts on the latest Masters of the Universe Trailer

Most of us didn’t expect another Masters of the Universe trailer quite so soon, but we did get one only three weeks after the last one. This one is billed as an international trailer and while it shares a lot with the trailer released on April 1, there is quite a bit of new footage, too, which gives us some more insight into Adam’s life on Earth.

So let’s take a look:

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Some Thoughts on the 2026 Hugo Finalists

Part 2 of my epic Eastercon report is coming and I’ll have a (now belated) birthday plus roadtrip post in the works as well as an essay about Masters of the Universe and masculinity. However, today we interrupt your regularly scheduled programming, because the 2026 Hugo finalists were announced last night.

I didn’t follow the announcement live, because I was out grocery shopping at the time. So the first thing I saw was my phone buzzing with some congratulatory messages in the Hugo finalist Discord, while I was looking for pickled garlic and Vegeta (the Croation seasoning mix, not the Dragonball Z character) at the Edeka market at Jute Center mall in Delmenhorst.

So let’s delve straight into the categories, starting with… Continue reading

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Cora’s Adventures at Iridescence, the 2026 Eastercon in Birmingham, Part 1: The Flight Out and Roaming Around Birmingham

Over the Easter weekend, I was at Iridescence, the 2026 Eastercon in Birmingham, UK.

I’ve been aware of Eastercon for many years now, but so far I’ve never attended, mostly because Eastercon happens at Easter, which is prime travel season in Germany, when airports are busy and flights expensive. Besides, Easter is also a family holiday and I didn’t really want to leave my elderly parents alone. Not to mention that we have lots of birthdays in my family in March and April, so Easter is often also someone’s birthday.

With my parents gone, I briefly considered attending Eastercon last year. But since it turned out that my birthday was actually on Good Friday, I decided against it.

So why did I decide to attend Eastercon this year. Well, that’s largely due to the Brisbane in 2028 Worldcon bid. They were planning to have a fan table at Iridescence, but needed someone to help staff it. And since I’ve been friends with Brisbane bid co-chair Jo Van for a long time now, she asked me, if I would be willing to do it. And that’s how I came to attend my first ever Eastercon.

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Cora’s Thoughts on the New Masters of the Universe Trailer

A new trailer for the upcoming live action Masters of the Universe movie dropped today. This is not actually a great time for me, because I’m flying to Iridescence, the 2026 Eastercon in Birmingham, UK, very early on Thursday morning and still have tons of stuff to do.

BTW, if you are at Iridescence, drop by and say hello. You can find me at the fan table for the Brisbane in 2028 Worldcon bid.  There will also be chocolate and candy and swag to give away, including incredibly cute tiny koalas.

But for now I’m still at home, so here are my thoughts about and analysis of the new Masters of the Universe trailer:

As is customary these days, there was a trailer for the trailer a day before, featuring actors Nicholas Galitzine (Adam/He-Man) and Camila Mendes (Teela) messing about with the Power Sword prop. It’s cute and Nicholas Galitzine and Camila Mendes clearly have a lot of chemistry, which is important for one of the central relationships in Masters of the Universe. Though Camila Mendes’ brown suit reminds of Frau Niesert, my old sewing and crafting teacher in seventh grade.

The actual trailer dropped a day later. You can watch it below:

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Easter Decorations 2026 and Springtime Photos

Before I’m off to Eastercon on Thursday, I wanted to show off my Easter decorations.

But before we get to that, I also have a couple of links to share about where else I have been of late:

For starters, I was at Galactic Journey three times, reviewing the 1971 science fiction thriller Tomorrow is Too Far by James White (with a bit about the latest adventures of the terrorist group that will be known as the Red Army Fraction), the 1970 East German science fiction film Signals – A Space Adventure (with a bit about a new crime drama called Tatort, which just debuted in Journey time and will go on to be a juggernaut) and the 1970 Czech children’s fantasy series Pan Tau, who may or may not be a Time Lord. Pan Tau also features the screen debut of the then 21-year-old skier and model Ivana Zelní?ková, better known under her married name Ivana Trump. She is pursued by an obnoxious guy in the show, who still manages to be not nearly as obnoxious as the man she eventually married. What is more, I was also at the Postcards from a Dying World podcast, discussing the 1950 science fiction story “The Little Black Bag” by Cyril Kornbluth with David Agranoff and John Battisberger.

Meanwhile, my basement is still a mess due to the ongoing work to get a heat pump installed, which took much longer than expected, because the crucial person fell ill and was out of commission for three weeks. Of course, people do fall ill, but the whole thing was nonetheless very frustrating.

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