Wiki Grayskull
Advertisement


Monster on the Mountain is the 120th episode of He-Man and the Masters of the Universe.

(Ink & Paint DVD booklet description: The Tingler, a giant living on Mount Fear, scares two townspeople, sending the small village of Ruxstown into mass hysteria. King Randor sends Prince Adam and Teela to investigate, where the pair finds a village full of paranoid people. Orko convinces Cringer to go to the water well, where the Tingler was last cited, but Cringer falls, injuring his leg. The Tingler finds Cringer and takes him back to his lair, where he fixes his leg. As Orko and Cringer learn that the Tingler is actually a misunderstood gentle giant, the villagers of Ruxtown start a crazed manhunt!)

Synopsis[]

This article is a stub. You can help Wiki Grayskull by expanding it before we are terrorized by evil villains!

Moral[]

Teela: "It's human nature to exaggerate."
Squire Wilkins: "And then, He-Man put across a bridge to span the canyon. Why, it must've been two hundred feet, easy."
Jed Hansen: "Two hundred? Why that bridge was four hundred feet if it was an inch."
Teela: "I guess as long as there are people, some of them will exaggerate and others will believe them and spread rumors. It makes it hard to tell what is true and what is false."
Orko: "The important thing is to use our common sense and not to believe everything we hear."
Teela: "That's right. So until next time..."
Orko: "Bye."

Heroic Warriors[]

Allies[]

  • Tingler
  • Emma
  • Farmer Elias
  • King Randor
  • Jed Hansen
  • Miller Perkins
  • Squire Wilkins

Artifacts[]

Locations[]

Cast[]

Behind the Scenes[]

  • Script was approved July 13, 1984 and final script revision took place August 21, 1984.
  • This episode is notable in that it contains no villainous characters, with the drama coming from the villagers' misconception that the Tingler is some kind of monster.
  • Fred Carrillo designed the villagers to resemble the peasants from Frankenstein (1931) and Emma to look like Margaret Hamilton in The Wizard of Oz (1939). He designed Buster the donkey in conjunction with Herbert Hazelton.

Continuity[]

Gallery[]

External links[]

References[]

Previous:
Next:
Based on:
Production Order
Advertisement