It’s very much worth your time.Īnd for those of you who are eagerly awaiting Season 3’s Friday release, I think you’re in for a treat. If you’ve watched and couldn’t get pulled in, give it another go. If you haven’t watched The Dragon Prince yet, do yourself a favor and add it to your queue. (The problem with Netflix screeners is you finish the show before it’s even out!) I know that my entire family found ourselves completely hooked throughout Season 3 (which I had screeners for) and already eager for Season 4. This leads to organic conflict and some truly epic adventure. I like not knowing for sure where any of this is going, and I like that I can sympathize even with characters like Lord Viren, despite his myriad flaws.Ĭharacters are constantly presented with hard choices and difficult bargains, and even the kindest soul is faced with problems that good intentions can’t always solve. As a huge fan of The Last Airbender and The Legnd of Korra, I am beyond pleased to have another fantasy show made for families that doesn’t hold hands or make everything easy to understand. Season 3 doubles down on all the show’s best qualities, and gives us a satisfying conclusion to the first three-season arc.Īs the title suggests, I think it’s one of the best fantasy shows on TV, and I’m not simply referring to show’s for kids. What follows is a story that’s entertaining, funny, heartfelt and often surprising. Like Ehasz’s previous show, Avatar: The Last Airbender, The Dragon Prince weaves a complex narrative where good and evil isn’t always as clear as it seems. And characters who once seemed fairly two-dimensional, suddenly find hidden depths. Martin did very well in A Song Of Ice And Fire and it works just as well here.Īs we learn more about King Harrow and the Dragon King and the ancient powers that loom behind everything, we gain sympathy in surprising places. Or rather, the mysteries of the past make the present adventure that much more exciting and intriguing.
The lore and backstory are also so rich that the past is almost as fascinating as the present, perhaps more so. I love that a show ostensibly for children (though I think it’s top-notch for all ages) can have such wonderfully complicated characters and conflicts. Even Viren is more complicated than just “evil dark mage trying to conquer the world” though his growing bond with Avaros sends him further and further down that path.įamily ties are tested, and old histories dig up new wounds. Callum and Rayla are, too.īut what about Claudia and Soren? They’re loyal to their father, but they aren’t wicked by any means. Sure, some of them are less complex than others. What I love about The Dragon Prince is that it’s never really a show about black and white, pure good vs pure evil. Viren himself is eventually imprisoned by the remaining powers-that-be in Katolis, though he continues to speak with Aravos by way of a strange little caterpillar that speaks with Aravos’s voice in his ear. Aravos reeks of evil, and we learn that he’s imprisoned somewhere, though he does not know where.
He meets a mysterious Startouch elf named Aravos (Erik Dellums) who he finds when gazing into a magic mirror that once belonged to the Dragon King and Queen. Lord Viren himself has attempted to take power in Katolis, and urged the other four human kingdoms to go to war. And the loyalties of Claudia and Soren–torn between the boys and their power-hungry father–have been tested. Ezren and Zym have a bond that goes beyond mere closeness, with the two actually looking like one another, and even sensing one another over great distances. Meanwhile, his relationship to Rayla has grown noticeably closer.
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Somehow Callum figures out how to tap into air magic. Humans had to sacrifice magical creatures to harness dark magic. Up to this point, only elves and other magical creatures could use magic. Callum has become the first human (that we know of) to tap into elemental magic rather than dark magic. What follows is a grand adventure that constantly upends our expectations of both the characters and the deep, rich history of the fantastical world that creators Aaron Ehasz and Justin Richmond have crafted so lovingly.īy the end of Season 2 we have a mounting conflict between the races of men and elves. Soren (Jesse Inocalla) is a somewhat dim kings guard. Claudia (Racquel Belmonte) is a dark mage apprentice, though far more lighthearted than her father. They were pursued both by their aunt, General Amaya (who is deaf) as well as the children of the dark mage, Lord Viren (Jason Simpson).