In
“The Brotherhood of Night,” Thundarr, Ariel and Ookla ride through the ruins of
Washington D.C., and Thundarr notes (amusingly) that “these woods have an evil reputation.” Some people would say the same thing about the city today.
Thundarr's description proves accurate when he learns of a werewolf cult that is
transforming innocent villagers into lycanthropes. The leader of the werewolves
also hopes to transform the powerful wizard Infernus into a man-beast, in hopes
of making his pack invincible.
When
Thundarr is bitten by a werewolf, Ariel and Ookla must discover a way to
reverse his transformation…
I
must confess that at several episodes in at this point, the imagery of Thundarr
the Barbarian is proving far more interesting and creative than the narratives
are.
Although “Brotherhood of the Night”
throws werewolves into the mix, the story is very similar to previous
ones. In particular animal people battle
human villagers for supremacy and Thundarr interferes to fight on behalf of the
humans. So far we’ve seen shark-people (“Attack of the Amazon Women”) bat
people (“Raiders of the Abyss”) and crocodile people (“Harvest of Doom.”)
Even
the idea here, of Thundarr transformed into an enemy, harks back to “Harvest of
Doom,” and Ookla’s enslavement under the influence of death flowers.
Thus
far, Thundarr has shown precious little variation in stories, and the repetitive
nature of the stories is becoming a bit dull.
But
again, I must accentuate the beautiful post-apocalyptic visuals. In this
episode, Thundarr visits the ruins of D.C., and very frame in the half-hour
features famous aspects of that town. In short order, we see the Capitol Dome,
the White House, and Smithsonian.
In fact, the episode’s final battle is set at
the museum, and once more we get the weird (and slightly unsettling…) notion
regarding this post-apocalyptic future.
All of our history is lost, and insignificant…just background material
in a barbarous world of magic, mysticism and savagery.
Next
week: “Challenge of the Wizards.”
John another interesting review. My favorite part of these entertaining episodes was the post-apocalyptic settings that are fascinating. If Thundarr The Barbarian had been live-action the budget never would have allowed such impressive post-apocalyptic visuals. ARK II would have been even more impressive if they could have visited such post-apocalyptic visuals.
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