"Barbie is a Musketeer"? Okay! I said, seeing a new cartoon about the famous blonde and clicked on play.
And really, why not our blonde beauty try on a hat with a feather, not learn to masterfully wield a sword and ride a horse?
Of course, it was not very clear who this elderly lady, who undertook to train Korin and her friends, why she studied along with the musketeers, and why now in her arsenal only a bucket and mop. Oh, come on. Inventing a story, after all, is not easy.
But what happened at the end made me very upset. Apparently, ardent feminists worked on the plot - otherwise how to explain the fact that the prince, instead of standing up for the clearly not indifferent to him Corin in the final battle with the main villain, just hides behind her back. And when the sword flies out of her hand, he picks it up and carefully holds out to the lady - "Hold it, they say, it's yours." And he continues to follow the battle with interest, but with indifference. Here's an infantile prince who apparently wasn't taught that girls should be protected. He could only be interested in science in this life. But standing there and watching a woman fight for you is normal for a man. Sadly, but it seems for a modern American cartoon - yes. For the men in this film generally hurt - either villain or stupid. The ball is run by women and only women. The story could have been more logical if Corinne and her girlfriends had been the princess' guard. But alas.
Therefore, the end, in which to the brisk song “As one for all”, the heroines who have just been initiated into the Musketeers leave for their first task (again associated with the protection of the Malachol prince), I have already watched in complete disappointment.