"srebak, post: 113068, member: 25156" said:
Personally, i found that the reboot was superior to the original in various ways
They were definitely trying to create a mythos
The adventures and fights felt more serious and grand
The story was taken a lot more seriously than the 80's cartoon's ever did, (at least to me)
The heroes were actually more realistic in terms of Personality; Lion-O's struggle to be prove himself a worthy leader was actually consistent part of his character; Tygra was actually given a few traits to help establish what he was like; Kit and Kat both definitely had the skills but were not so quick to jump into danger (in fact, they were realistically frightened by some of the things that came their way), also, we were actually given a reason why they were "parent-less" this time; considering Panthro's background, abilities and imposing appearance, it would make sense that he would be a little gruff. Also, it was kind of nice to actually see the true relationship between Lion-O and his father, rather than just see Claudis every now and again be left to assume that they had good relationship, which Lion-O conveniently can barely remember any way.
The villains were a lot more menacing than their 80's counterparts and their motivations seemed a lot more justified (if only a little) too; Mumm-Ra, at his core, truly believes that he could bring order to a chaotic universe; Slithe and Ratar-O both just wanted their own respective peoples to receive the finer things in life, which the Cats have long hoarded for themselves; Kaynar and Addicus are a criminally insane lunatic and a sociopathic serial killer (nuff said); Grune was an ambitious soldier who sought more than what he had in life and allied himself nearly completely with someone who could help him get that. In the original series, they were all just evil for the sake of being evil (at least from my point of view)
Also, certain aspects of the villains were made more believable; Mumm-Ra' weakness to sunlight is far more acceptable to me than his reflection being his weakness (to me, that seemed just plain silly); Grune getting trapped in a spirit world would make his (theoretical) return as a ghost more acceptable than him just being magically banished and ending up like that some how; also, Mumm-Ra having been in a deep sleep before reawakening by the time of the series helps to avoid the main question; why do the people of Third Earth look so peaceful and prosperous for the denizens of a planet under the control of an evil demon priest mummy?
In my opinion, the reboot handled the premise much better than the original, but that's just me
I respectfully disagree.
and I cna answer your question about mumm-ra. because by the time of the original series Mumm-Ra had already taken control of the planet. He was the most powerful force on the planet and there was NOBODY there to challenge him. Since he'd taken out ANY rival to his power in the past he didn't feel the need to be active anymore. Did you see any of the people living on third earth even THINK about challenging him? No. Because there wasn't any needs. Mumm-Ra already controlled the planet and that being said he figured nobody around, including Mumm-Rana, could defeat him. So he stayed in his sarcophagus and everyone else just did what they wanted.