🌊🌊🌊🌊 (4/5 waves) Perfect for: Fans of “Kiki’s Delivery Service” meets Polynesian mythology. Skip if you need a villain song in the first 10 minutes. Next Episode Preview: Moana builds a crew. An old rival from another island arrives. And we finally meet “Kalo” — a young boy who claims he can speak to the extinct giant sea turtles.
Posted by: The Wayfinder’s Gazette Date: April 17, 2026
I just finished , and I need to talk about it. Consider this your spoiler-friendly (but careful) review. What Happens in Episode 1? Forget the "where you are" opening song—for now. Episode 1 opens three years after the events of the first film . moana episode 1
Unlike a film, the show takes its time. We see Moana eating dinner with her family, arguing with a village elder about tradition vs. exploration, and mending her own sail. It’s slice-of-life with a mystery simmering underneath. What Feels Different This isn’t Moana 2: Bigger Villain . Episode 1 has no musical breakout (yet—I’m betting episode 3 will deliver). The tone is more Avatar: The Last Airbender than Frozen . There’s a quietness, a spiritual mystery about why the ocean is “holding its breath.”
The conflict begins quietly. A blight touches Motunui’s coconut groves. The fish aren't biting. The elders whisper that the ocean has “gone silent.” An old rival from another island arrives
Maui is absent—off carving new islands and polishing his hook. Moana feels torn between her duties as chief-to-be (her father, Tui, is now gray-haired and hinting at retirement) and the pull of a mystery: a strange, silent storm that sits on the horizon, unmoving, for weeks.
— Mahalo
If you grew up with the 2016 film, the name Moana conjures one thing: a heroic demigod, a fiery lava monster, and a catchy chorus about where you’ll lay your heart. But Disney’s new Moana: The Series (streaming now) is here to prove that Motunui’s story is far from over.