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[She-Ra, S.H.I.E.L.D., and sci-fi legend Ursula K. Le Guin arrive to occupy your weekend](
Aug 02, 2019 12:00 AM
She-Ra, Ming-Na Wen, Ursula K. Le Guin Photo: Netflix, Mitch Haaseth (ABC), Courtesy of The Oregonian (PBS)
Hereâs whatâs happening in the world of television for Friday, August 2 and Saturday, August 3. All times are Eastern.Â
Top picks
Busy weekend aheadâespecially if youâre a Princess Of Power, an Agent Of S.H.I.E.L.D., or a fan of one of the greatest American writers:
[She-Ra And The Princesses Of Power]( (Netflix, Friday, 3:01 a.m., complete third season): The third season of Noelle Stevensonâs take on Adora and friends is what you might call a barnburner.
We spoke with Stevenson (Nimona, Lumberjanes) about the unexpected places season three takes the Princesses Of Power, what other shows are doing right by female, queer, and non-binary characters, and how you go about nabbing Geena Freakinâ Davis.
The A.V. Club: What would you pinpoint as the core of She-Raâs third season?
Noelle Stevenson: This season is really about pushing the characters into unfamiliar territory, and getting them to re-examine their perceptions of their selves, who theyâre trying to be, and what they really want. Especially Adora and Catra, who have ended up on opposite sides of the war. One is the hero, one is the villain. They both, for their whole lives, had some kind of path laid out for them, whether they wanted it or not. This is the season where theyâre trying to evaluate that. For Adora: Does she have a choice, or is this something that sheâs inherited, meaning she has no choice at all? And for Catra, can she choose to break out of this self-destructive path that sheâs on? Can she choose to let go of anger and bitterness, and choose to be happy?
I think all the other characters are also sort of struggling with that. Like Hordakâunexpectedly, his insecurities and his struggles end up being pretty similar to the other charactersâ struggles. He was also just a soldier fighting in this war that was bigger than him. Weâre trying to deconstruct the characters and put them in a position where for the first time theyâre asking, âWho are you, who do you want to be, and why?â
AVC: Adora and Catraâs dynamic is more important than ever here. What makes that relationship so compelling to you?
NS: These are two people who have been given a destiny for as long as they can remember. Adora was groomed to be the hero for the Horde. Sheâs finding that now pretty much the exact same thing is happening again, but this time itâs the good guys. Theyâre telling her that she doesnât have a choice, that her purpose is to serve others and fulfill a function. [Catraâs] been trying to prove herself. Sheâs been struggling against people telling her that sheâs no good, that sheâs not worth anything, and that has been pushing her more and more toward villainy. These two people are so bound together by everything that theyâve gone through, and their paths still continue to interweave. For both of them thereâs a sense of, âHow did this go so wrong? Is it something we can stop or is it unfixable?â I think thereâs something thatâs so compelling about that. Thatâs something that weâve all experienced at one time or another, where thereâs a relationship that matters to you so much and itâs just so thoroughly broken. And with each season, that just keeps gettingâthey keep digging that hole deeper and deeper.
AVC: How has the wide-open nature of the season impacted the visual storytelling?
NS: Itâs really great. From this point on, weâre getting to explore more and more of Etheria. We have our home bases, Bright Moon and the Fright Zone, but the chance for the characters to travel and explore is so fun. There are so many parts of Etheria still to see. Itâs a visual treat.
AVC: In episode two we meet Huntara, voiced by Geena Davis. Why was Davis the right person to voice her?
NS: Huntara was definitely a crew favorite. In the original show, sheâs this kind of super babely space bounty hunter, and she and She-Ra have this amazing smack-down fight, and end up really respecting each other. Sheâs one of those characters who just walks into a room and everyoneâs like, âWhoa, whoâs that?â We definitely knew that we wanted her to have a major part in our show. The Geena Davis part was just so fortuitous. She runs the Geena Davis Institute On Gender In Media, and she came to DreamWorks to give a speech and did an amazing power move while she was there and said, âHey, by the way, anytime you want me to voice a character in one of your animated shows, you know who to call.â And we were like, âOkay. I mean, if youâre offering! We have someone in mind that we would love you to voice.â Right place, right time. Everything fell into place.
AVC: She-Ra deals with ambiguity, identity, self-evolution, and loads of other big ideas in a way few shows actually dare to doâexcepting shows like Steven Universe.
NS: We owe a huge debt to Steven Universe. Being able to center these unabashedly queer stories, center the stories of these female and non-binary charactersâthat was huge. It certainly paved the away for us. There are a lot of people in the childrenâs animation sphere who are working really hard on making sure that there is positive representation, to show kids that they can choose for themselves who they want to be, how they want to present, and who they want to be with. Steven Universe is definitely the standout amongst those.
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[Marvelâs Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D.]( (ABC, Friday, 8 p.m., two-hour sixth-season finale): This week, Marvelâs Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. [completed its final day of shooting]( on its seventh and final season. But thatâs all still to come. For now, itâs time to wrap up an eventful and ambitious sixth season with a two-hour finale.
Liz Shannon Miller is ready to recap.
Regular coverage
A Black Lady Sketch Show (HBO, Friday, 11 p.m., series premiere)
Wild card
American MastersâWorlds Of Ursula K. Le Guin (PBS, Friday, 9 p.m.): Ursula K. Le Guin was a science fiction and fantasy writer back when that was considered a path straight to the disreputable side of the magazine rack. But to watch the career she carved out over the course of her life on the latest installment of PBSâs American Masters is to marvel at the cool and unflappable demeanor of a woman who not only bore witness to massive cultural transformations both within and outside her genre, but was also partly responsible for the progressive changes that transpired. Le Guin died in January of last year, but leaves behind one of the most formidable legacies imaginable for any writer, let alone a sci-fi/fantasy scribe.
âI never wanted to be a writer. I just wrote,â Le Guin says early on in this engaging but minor tribute to the late author. Throughout its hour-long runtime, the documentary offers up a bevy of the genreâs greats (Neil Gaiman, David Mitchell, Samuel Delany, Theodora Goss, China Mieville, and more) as they discuss the influence and legacy of Le Guin on themselves and their field; collectively they make a powerful case for the value of her work to anyone not already acquainted. Touching on milestones of her careerâespecially the universe of 1968âs A Wizard Of Earthsea and the subsequent seriesâ influence on the realm of YA fantasy (âAt the time, this was not a well-known idea, a wizard school,â Le Guin coyly mentions)âthe picture that emerges is clear. Le Guin was a pioneer of American science fiction that challenged existing culture, whether it was the dynamics of gender, alternatives to violence and exploitation, or the ethics of anthropology, the last of which is directly tied by both the documentary and Le Guin herself to the influence of her father, the founder of the anthropology department at Berkeley. By the time she talks about penning the first literary depiction of what a nonviolent anarchist utopia would look like, sheâs already outpacing those training a camera on her.
Unfortunately, the fleet pace means thereâs rarely more than a few minutes to discuss any one topic or publication. Le Guinâs output was so prodigious, and the scope and depth of her treatment of these topics through her chosen medium so vivifying, itâs unfortunate the filmmakers werenât given greater space in which to unpack each one. The film was made over the course of a decade (with Le Guin and her familyâs participation); given the rich nature of what we do see, hereâs hoping thereâs a (very) extended cut of this documentary. In the meantime, weâll have to content ourselves with this short but absorbing look at one of the genreâs luminaries. [Alex McLevy]
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