Thursday, December 30, 2021

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 2,886: Darth Vader (Skywalker Saga, Gold)

DARTH VADER
with Stormtrooper

Skywalker Saga Commemorative Collection Walmart Exclusive 3 3/4-Inch Action Figure 2-Pack
Item No.:
Asst. E8177 No. E8183
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: n/a
Includes: Lightsaber, blaster
Action Feature: n/
Retail: $14.92
Availability: October 2019
Appearances: Star Wars
Bio: Once a heroic Jedi Knight, Darth Vader was seduced by the dark side of the Force, became a Sith Lord, and led the Empire’s eradication of the Jedi Order. (Taken from marketing copy. There is no bio.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Entertainment Earth now!

Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Commentary:
When I first saw The Rise of Skywalker line, I knew things were going south. This Darth Vader figure is evidence of what's more or less wrong with the series over the last few years - on one hand, it's an easy-to-make gold repaint of a 2016 Rogue One mold. But Hasbro did a whopping nine of these packs, some of which are better than others. There were a handful of silver figures from about 2002-2006 too, but I think that grand total was maybe six figures. Walmart sold 19 golden figures in a couple of months, and if you like the whole gold thing, they're neat. Otherwise you can add them to the pile of Carbonized Metallic figures, Holiday Edition figures, Prototype Edition figures, and other things that are more in line with typical collector's edition fare - things Hasbro largely eschewed for the bulk of the toy line's history. Kenner did as well - repaints for the sake of repaints were rare, usually there was prior art or a story purpose for those droids, clones, or other repaints. (Even the 2002-2010ish holiday edition figures largely had precedent in existing holiday cards.)

This is a good set to leave in the package. (The Stormtrooper's neck peg immediately sheared off. More on that when that review comes.) Vader's joints are nice and smooth, but the gold paint is already sticking to itself. Limbs are sticking to the cape, and I assume the lightsaber's gold paint will stick to the hands over time - matte silver paint does not typically age well. I do love how it highlights just how much work went into the figure's sculpt, but curiously the gold also highlights the problems. Darth Vader's nose has an indentation that is pushed in too far, and it's made painfully obvious now that the black, shadowed area is brightly colored. You'll love seeing the folds and wrinkles in the costume, though - but I assume this figure is going to look terrible with any sort of touch as the cape flexes and joints move over time. I already see parts on the figure where the cape stuck to the body, and you can see pock marks of where they got stuck together.

I generally don't have a big problem with weird figures, but this one came out at a time when we were being told "kid line figures" weren't viable and it seemed Hasbro was intent on producing lines that were redundant, repetitive, and generally lacking in important things like the title character of a movie. Along with the Celebrate the Saga multipacks, these gold figures were the end of what should have been a much better cap on a mountain of toys. Hasbro doing hundreds of dollars worth of "just like the figure you have, but splattered/shinier" figures at once has made the hunt less and less enjoyable. It's one thing to drive around to get a figure you really wanted, but it's even worse when it is most likely something you didn't want in the first place - but recognize that if you don't have it, your collection may forever be incomplete, and then you're staring down if this matters to you or not. And who wants to have that level of introspection while shopping for toys? Not me, that's for sure.

For the die-hard fan who never opens a figure, I think this is a good set to leave packaged. I would emphatically advice against getting it to open unless your entire design on this collection is to open them, place them on a shelf, and never, ever touch them again. The gold paint looks cool but it's just not going to age well. It is, however, interesting in that it's one of very few Hasbro figures completely coated in paint - typically there are elements with exposed bare plastic. The only non-silver, non-gold 2-pack exceptions might be the various vac-metal C-3PO figures we've had over the years and those by and large held up better than Vader has after a mere fifty seconds out of the package.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Entertainment Earth. These sets were initially Walmart exclusives.

--Adam Pawlus


Day 2,886: December 30, 2021

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 2,885: The Emperor (The Vintage Collection)

THE EMPEROR
Old Sculpt

The Vintage Collection 3 3/4-Inch Action Figure
Item No.:
Asst. E7763 No. F1902
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: #200
Includes: Energy bolts, cane, hood, robe
Action Feature: n/
Retail: $13.99
Availability: October 2021
Appearances: Return of the Jedi
Bio: Scheming, powerful, and evil to the core, Emperor Palpatine restored the Sith and destroyed the Jedi Order. (Taken from marketing copy. There is no bio.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Entertainment Earth now!

Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Commentary:
I feel like I say "this is a weird one" a lot. This The Emperor figure is meant to be an update of the 1984 figure... and the funny thing, it's an update of a 2005 figure. This is the Revenge of the Sith Evolution figure with a new robe. The head is pretty much the same (PulseCon got a really nice new sculpt for the throne version), but you get some hands with short lightning and a cane too. So Hasbro gets to cash in on 16-year-old tooling, and because the robes are a bit improved (I think) most fans will not recognize the body sculpt is a reissue.

I didn't like the head sculpt before. Slicked-back hair and visible teeth were very, shall we say, extreme? Even for the time this was a stylized choice, and on a vintage cardback it just looks sort of like someone did a swap-out. The hood is nice, the face paint is fine, but the face says "I am from one shot of the movie and not a good all-purpose Emperor figure." The make-up is exceptionally well-painted, given that the figure has very little paint elsewhere I assume they could put the entire budget into the head - including painted hair you may never actually see. They did a nice job with the task at hand.

The joints are tight, and it's very good for a figure of that (ha ha) vintage - ball-jointed knees and elbows were all the rage, so he can sit on a throne if you got one. Also keep in mind, way back in 2005 the idea of getting super-articulated Star Wars figures was a new thing - our first one was a late-2003 Clone Trooper, followed by three waves of the very first Vintage Original Trilogy Collection in 2004 and 2005. (And some of them had only swivel joints, with C-3PO having 5 total - one fewer than his 1995 figure!) These "Evolutions" figures were the Vintage follow-up and were the standard collectors expected from then on (and did not get, by and large, for quite some time.) It just goes to show you that you can use really good designs for a long time, but I also went back in my old toy vault and was very happy with the 1997 Jedi Final Duel Emperor Palpatine (on the throne, no moving legs) and the 1997 carded Emperor Palpatine (basically a salt shaker with arms.) This is nice too, but getting the robes to look perfect is kind of tricky - that's cloth for you. The molded plastic ones limit your options, but look good. Which is better? Well, you decide. (Plastic. The answer is plastic.)

Carded fans may like this figure, as it looks good in this presentation. Openers may prefer the PulseCon version, which I will post here shortly. But it's a nice Emperor if you don't have one, and certainly not any worse than the many, many previous releases to use this mold. It may well be the best figure that uses this tooling, but after 16 years, it really ought to be. I'm just unexcited due to its "more of the same"-ness.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Entertainment Earth.

--Adam Pawlus


Day 2,885: December 28, 2021

Thursday, December 23, 2021

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 2,884: AT-ST Driver (The Vintage Collection)

AT-ST DRIVER
Photoreal Richard Marquand Edition

The Vintage Collection Walmart Exclusive Action Figures
Item No.:
No. F3115
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: #190
Includes: Blaster, harness, helmet
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $12.93
Availability: July 2021
Appearances: Return of the Jedi

Bio: AT-ST Drivers control the two-legged transports used by Imperials in both the Battle of Hoth and the Battle of Endor. (Stolen from Walmart's ordering page. Packaging has no bio.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Commentary:
This AT-ST Driver sat next to my desk for months before opening it - I just wasn't in a rush, and since Walmart didn't sell out if it, apparently you weren't either. This figure is a redeco of a retool - the mold is over 10 years old, but this particular version uses a Richard Marquand head - which debuted later as a Kmart exclusive - and gives it photoreal paint. It's pretty essential as the only "vintage" carded AT-ST Driver, and if you take the helmet off it's a really nice Richard Marquand head you can use for your Jagged Edge making-of dioramas.

For a modified figure that's over 10 years old, this is excellent. It's a super-articulated body (pre-weird hip joints) so you get 22 points of articulation. The sculpt is nice and clean, but what I love about this one is that even though the legs are sculpted apart when he's standing, they swing forward and get closer together. He just slides right in the AT-ST's seat with zero fuss. That's a perfect pilot figure right there! It helps that he also has swivel wrists and jointed elbows, so you can get some pretty good poses out of somebody whose sole purpose is to occupy a seat in a small box on stilts. This is a well-made toy figure that is also a nice figure for collectors.

As mentioned before you could buy him at Kmart in a 2-pack, but this one is an upgrade - the head has pretty good photoreal paint that seems to shave a few years off the director of the third movie. He looks good! Not much else to say - but if you disagree, you can leave the helmet on. It slides off and on easily with the chin strap not getting in the way, which is in and of itself a notable feat. Sometimes it's a nuisance, here it's a joy.

Considering that this is an older figure brought back to market, it holds up remarkably well. It does everything I want a pilot figure to do, plus it has a secret cameo by the film's director. There's even an Imperial cog on the shoulder. What more could you ask for? Vintage packaging - and you got that too. If for some reason you missed this one, and he's still available, he's worth the $13. There's probably little chance of them making a more perfect and easy-to-use pilot for your vehicles, and it's a great example of them looking in their tooling library and saying "this is as good as it's going to get."

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Walmart.

--Adam Pawlus


Day 2,884: December 23, 2021

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 2,883: Obi-Wan Kenobi (The Black Series)

OBI-WAN KENOBI
Sixth Redeco and/or Release

The Black Series 50th Anniversary The Power of the Force Line Look
Item No.:
No. F1266
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: n/a
Includes: Cloak, lightsaber (PulseCon set includes Ponda Baba, Dr. Evazan, bar, glassware)
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $104.99
Availability: November 2021
Appearances: Star Wars: A New Hope

Bio: On the run from Imperial stormtroopers, Jedi Knight Obi-Wan Kenobi and Luke Skywalker enter the seedy Mos Eisley Cantina in hopes of finding swift passage to the planet Alderaan. Inside, among the gallery of criminals are the murderous Dr. Evazan and the brutal Ponda Baba - both of whom are thirsty for a fight with Skywalker. Reaching for their blasters, the villains are suddenly cut off from Luke by the pulsating blaze of Obi-Wan's lightsaber! Will Obi-Wan triumph and save the Rebellion's only hope? (Taken from the single figure's packaging.)

Image: Adam's photo lab. Sample pictured is from the Cantina Showdown PulseCon 3-pack.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Entertainment Earth now!

Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Commentary:
This is a good figure, but at this point you have to roll your eyes a little bit. I think these 50th anniversary items were a cute idea with poor distribution, lots of repetition, bizarre price increases (surge pricing, perhaps?) and other issues make some of them frustrating. This Obi-Wan Kenobi is the sixth release of this same figure sculpt - he was sold on a 40th anniversary cardback, a Black Series red and black box, and also sold as a San Diego Comic-Con exclusive with furniture from his house. This is his second entry in the 50th Anniversary line, the previous one being the vinyl cape "Kenner" deco as an Amazon exclusive. Oh, and I almost forgot the Spirit of Obi-Wan from Walgreens.

Were it not for COVID-19, this Obi-Wan figure would have been a SDCC exclusive twice over. While there are changes to his face deco and cloak, there's really no way to sugarcoat how boring some of this can get. Hasbro did include bar sections (and two first-to-market figures) to sweeten the deal, but each is a $22.99 retail figure, and this set was $104.99 before tax and shipping. Hasbro also promoted the partial Cantina bar section as a selling point - buy two and build the whole bar! While obscenely pricey, Hasbro also had a limit of one per customer, so such a double-purchase wasn't exactly possible. Like I said, it's been a frustrating year for a lot of this stuff.

We used to be able to count on some new (or at least, not available for at least five to ten years) characters in every wave. The fact that we've had the very same Kenobi mold five times in roughly as many years just sort of makes me sad. I'm happy fans have opportunities to buy him, but four of them were in very short supply and one was a mainline regular boxed figure - and those tend to also be in short supply. I haven't even talked about the figure - which is good! - yet, but Obi-Wan certainly does feel like the canary in the coal mine showing how Star Wars action figure collecting has been a shallower experience for those who dare to collect them all, especially given some variations are just bonus accessories and packaging - you know, things that are important to hardcore fans.

For new fans, this is a great figure - plain ol' Obi-Wan was never produced in big enough numbers to satisfy market demand for very long, as is also the case these days, so if you never got an Obi-Wan? This is a good one. The robes are a bit nicer, and at least my sample seems to hang on the head much better than previous releases. (The weight could be improved on as it doesn't hug the head quite right, but it's still a good pattern.) The lightsaber seems to be the same, as does the body deco, but you'll want this for a movie-specific photo-real Alec Guinness head. There's a little color in the beard, with glossy eyes and painted lips. I didn't feel there was a problem with the previous head, but I admit these are a bit more lifelike and will no doubt spoil us. It meets the "just different enough to make you mad" qualifications, but odds are the Cantina bar section - complete with drink dispenser that does not exist in the 3 3/4-inch line - is enough to make this set desirable, even if you have other versions of the figures.

Of course, the original 1997 Cantina Showdown 3-pack is only worth about $15. It's not like it was even rare when it was new - I bought a few of them on clearance for $2 a pop. I assume it's being done to take advantage of the Ponda Baba (Ceremonial Luke retool) and Dr. Evazan (D.J. and Jedi Luke parts) molds in the mainline, combined with the anniversary, and Hasbro trying to make photoreal versions of just about everybody. It's a weird world we live in, the one bright side being that there are opportunities for newbies to get figures that they missed, but with figures like this selling out nearly immediately they're not exactly great experiences for any but the uninitiated fan.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Hasbro Pulse in the PulseCon exclusive boxed set.

--Adam Pawlus


Day 2,883: December 21, 2021

Thursday, December 16, 2021

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 2,882: R5-D33R (Droid Factory)

R5-D33R Disney Parks Holiday Exclusive
Star Wars Droid Factory
Item No.:
???
Manufacturer: Disney
Number: n/a
Includes: Antler hat
Action Feature: Comes apart
Retail: $12.99
Availability: October 2021
Appearances: n/a

Bio: All different types of Astromech droids populate the Star Wars galaxy. Each droid is different and has their own unique personality and colors. This droid is optimized to function in the sub-zero environments of Hoth and amongst its dangerous creatures. Join R5-D33R on his adventures throughout the galaxy! May the Force be with you... and your Droids! (Taken from the figure's packaging.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Commentary: Christmas is almost here, so we get a new holiday droid continuing the ongoing tradition! R5-D33R takes a break from previous naming conventions, all of which had the model number prefix (R3, R2, etc.) followed by HXX, the XX being the current year. (This year also saw a reissue 4-pack of droids from 2015-2018, but more on that in the future.) This R5 unit uses existing robot tooling and adds a newly tooled antler hat to, I assume, invoke either Rudolph the Red-Nosed Montgomery Ward mascot or perhaps the Caffeine-Free Coca-Cola cans of the 1990s. Only you can decide!

The droid uses the standard legs and feet cast in gold plastic, while the body and dome are cast in white plastic and painted gold. The match is excellent, but the shine is very different with the paint. At a glance, you wouldn't know they were different materials and that's quite the achievement. The droid body adds numerous gold panels to the front and back, and it looks like it could hang out with any small holiday village collectible shelf you may have seen in someone's home. Without the hat, it's just a cool-looking and original droid design, which is more or less exactly what I want from these releases.

The red beanie sort of looks like Rudolph's noses, with the antlers looking like antlers. Presumably you can hang a coat or a bra on them, if you have one sized appropriately. It fits on this figure's dome without any fuss, but it also has a small hole in it so it can cap R2 domes without being blocked. It's nice that they considered hat sharing. While it is very goofy, we've also had R5 units with gun heads - seeing horns or other accoutrements stapled to a robot head feels like something we could see in an upcoming streaming series nowadays. They're ready to get weird.

If you can find this one at a fair price, I'd say buy it. It looks neat, it fits in with pretty much any scenario, and you can lose the hat if you want. It's just a cool-looking droid repaint, and Hasbro hasn't given us a new astromech colorway in over a year, and prior to those three Droid Factory sets at Target, it was R1-J5 in 2019. I miss droids in stores outside of theme parks.

Collector's Notes: I got this from Shop Disney.

--Adam Pawlus


Day 2,882: December 16, 2021

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 2,881: Ponda Baba (The Black Series)

PONDA BABA
6-Inch Debut

The Black Series 2020 Line Look Orange Star Wars: A New Hope Packaging
Item No.:
Asst. E8908 No. F1872 or for PulseCon, No. F1266
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: #02 - Star Wars: A New Hope
Includes: Blaster, alternate hands (PulseCon set includes Obi-Wan, Dr. Evazan, bar, glassware)
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $22.99
Availability: November 2021
Appearances: Star Wars: A New Hope

Bio: A burly Aqualish thug, Ponda Baba smuggled spice for Jabba the Hutt alongside his friend Dr. Cornelius Evazan, a murderous former surgeon Ponda had rescued from a bounty hunter. (Taken from the single figure's packaging.)

Image: Adam's photo lab. Sample pictured is from the Cantina Showdown PulseCon 3-pack.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Entertainment Earth now!

Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Commentary:
It will not surprise you - but it may disappoint you - to find out Ponda Baba has a Rogue One-inspired sculpt on a Luke Skywalker (Yavin Ceremony) body. In the interests of keeping costs down things like this are inevitable, but given just how much of this line is repaints - all those Carbonized, Credit Collection SKUs plus trooper and droid variants - it's kind of a pity to see a scrawny body like Luke Skywalker's reused here on a burly bruiser like Ponda Baba.

In 1979 Kenner gave us Walrus Man, a wildly wrong take on this character that colored our perceptions for decades. Kenner revised it in 1997, and future figures tended to get closer and closer to what we saw in the movies. This guy just doesn't quite seem to have it right - the torso is too narrow, teh arms are too skinny, and the sad thing is this could be the last The Black Series version of the character we get for quite some time. Were this a figure whipped up in a hurry to flesh out the line, or one of the first releases, I'd shrug and say "well, that's how you get product to market." Given that Hasbro double-dipped on this item as both a standard and a convention release, and before that Ceremonial Luke was also done as an expanded deluxe release and a single release, Hasbro could've sprang for some more new parts here. I shouldn't be able to pick up a new figure like this and immediately go "...hey wait a minute, is this just Luke again?" As only the second cantina alien in this line since its inception in 2013, I always assumed the delay was because they wanted to get the sculpt right, or it was just on the backburner for some reason. If I knew it was just going to be a head swap, I think I could have kept waiting. This version of Ponda Baba has a whiter shirt - as opposed to off-white - which makes this closer to his appearance in Rogue One. That checks out given his slightly shaggier beard, too. The head sculpt is great with big glossy eyes, dirty and freckled skin, and the mouth which could be the subject of jokes for years. The head was a very good recreation of what we saw in the movies, and the hands are very good recreations as well.

As to the body, it's Wormie. The jacket may share some similarities to what Ponda wore in terms of the unique ribbed sleeves, but the pockets are all wrong and a lot of other details are different. These are things they got more or less right on the 3 3/4-inch figures, which is what makes this sting a bit - the 6-inch line is meant for adult fans and collectors. This set was sold as an online convention item at a premium price, and what we got failed to meet a pretty low bar for success in a line like this one. It's possible each collectible crew is working from a different set of reference points, but things like the clear Holiday Special jacket do look different from this one. After all, there's what appears to be a rank badge over the Ponda figure's left breast - he didn't have this in the movies.

You're probably going to buy this because there are no alternatives of merit in this size. After seeing Plo Koon and Kit Fisto reuse parts of Obi-Wan and Anakin to few to no fan complaints, I assume we're going to see more shortcuts like this as time goes on. With Marvel comic figures, it's standard practice and sensible given the similarities in build. You could use Spider-Man for dozens of other figures. For Hasbro's flagship Star Wars figure line these days, it's just disappointing. It seems like nearly every tooling may be up for reuse given the metallic repaints, but seeing it for regular characters was a bit of a downer. If you're not all-in on 6-inch, just hug your 3 3/4-inch Ponda Babas tightly and be glad that good ones already exist for you to love.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Hasbro Pulse in the PulseCon exclusive boxed set.

--Adam Pawlus


Day 2,881: December 14, 2021

Thursday, December 9, 2021

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 2,880: Dr. Evazan (The Black Series)

DR. EVAZAN
6-Inch Debut

The Black Series 2020 Line Look Orange Star Wars: A New Hope Packaging
Item No.:
Asst. E8908 No. F1873 or for PulseCon, No. F1266
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: #03 - Star Wars: A New Hope
Includes: Blaster (PulseCon set includes Obi-Wan, Ponda Baba, bar, glassware)
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $22.99
Availability: November 2021
Appearances: Star Wars: A New Hope

Bio: A grubby, scarred smuggler from Alsakan, Cornelius Evazan was once a promising surgeoun, but became notorious for conducting cruel medical experiments. (Taken from the single figure's packaging.)

Image: Adam's photo lab. Sample pictured is from the Cantina Showdown PulseCon 3-pack.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Entertainment Earth now!

Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Commentary:
Did you realize it's the fifth anniversary of Rogue One this year? It's true! We got a bunch of repaints and retools to celebrate, but this Dr. Evazan isn't as Rogue One-y as his pal Ponda Baba is. (More on that in a few days.) But if this figure looks familiar, it's because Hasbro did an exquisite job at hiding that his limbs are all recycled parts - a new head and torso is what you'll notice first, but eagle-eyed fans will quickly see D.J.'s pants (from The Last Jedi and Luke Skywalker's arms (from the 2014 Jedi Knight figure.) Since there are very few good reference shots of the original costumes, Hasbro and DisneyLucasfilm probably assumed most fans would never notice - and they'd be right. But if you've been collecting figures for decades, you'll notice similarities to other 6-inch figures and differences from previous Dr. Evazan costumes.

Shot mostly in close-up and in the dark, Dr. Evazan's most notable elements are his head and torso - you can't miss the disfigured head, the brown worn vest, the belt, or the open shirt. These sleeves are tighter, as opposed to the more open ones in most reference pictures or The Vintage Collection figure. The body is right, the upper body colors all match nicely, and hands are hands. The face looks fantastic with the fancy photoreal paint, arguably more convincing than stills of the make-up from the movie. The hair looks closer to the 1977 film, a little whiter, a little less poofy than what we saw for a second in 2016.

The legs are a little redder, as opposed to the brown or grey of previous figures. Which is more correct? I have no idea. These see a little bulkier, but his boots more or less match previous Hasbro figures despite being D.J's lower extremities. The double-jointed knees are a dead giveaway that this was made of older parts, but it more or less works. The legs seem pretty thick compared to the scrawny arms, but that's what happens sometimes. I would have preferred a completely new figure - this set was really expensive - but he's sturdy. The figure stands with no problems at all, and everything looks good when you look at it as a whole rather than a compilation of eight years of pre-existing parts.

Up until 2021, the only Cantina alien Hasbro ever gave us was Greedo way back in 2013 - it's great to add to the mix, and this one made a great choice for so many reasons. I doubt we'll ever see a 2.0 in this scale, and that's just fine. I would've loved more paint on the facial scarring, but it could have been visual overkill. He's plenty creepy as it is, so if you see him I think you'd probably enjoy having him to add to your less-than-huge original trilogy 6-inch figure collection.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Hasbro Pulse in the PulseCon exclusive boxed set.

--Adam Pawlus


Day 2,880: December 9, 2021

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 2,879: Clone Pilot Hawk (The Black Series)

CLONE PILOT HAWK
Clone Wars 6-Inch Retro Style

The Black Series The Clone Wars Lucasfilm 50th Anniversary Collection - Target Exclusive
Item No.:
No. F28011
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: n/a
Includes: Blaster
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $24.99
Availability: May 2021
Appearances: Star Wars: The Clone Wars

Bio: "Hawk" was a clone trooper pilot who served in the Galactic Republic Starfighter Corps during the Clone Wars. Bred from a human template, the bounty hunter Jango Fett, he often performed escort, drop-off, or extraction duties for Jedi General Anakin Skywalker's 501st Legion. (Taken from Wookieepedia. Package has no bio.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Commentary:
Despite being part of an anniversary line with 2008-2009 The Clone Wars packaging, this Clone Pilot Hawk is actually the Hasbro action figure debut of this character. (There is a Fighter Pods figure and a LEGO figure.) It makes use of a body that's been used for nearly seven years, with the double-hinged knees and elbows and not the newer bend-and-swivel joints. It has a new head. Is that enough? Well, yeah.

Since that's what's new, let's focus on the changes. I love the blue highlights on the armor, and the scuffs look pretty good too. The 501st legion blue markings are great, but the white soles on the boots are a little disappointing given this figure had a slight price increase and not much newness - and only one blaster. He has no problems holding it, and the figure stands well. The joints are the same as always, a little stiff and ratchet-y. The good news is this means he's sturdy and stiff, which may limit your action poses. Of course most of you will just have him in the package, or stand on a shelf, so once you open it you won't necessarily make much use of them anyway.

The helmet, hoses, and chest components are new and pretty great - they made a decent translation to "realistic" with few compromises. The animated designs for the chest box show more black and less visible white space, which gives this one a bit less dynamic look. The animation model looks more lively with black behind some of the sliders, while this one leaves the area near them largely unpainted. Still, it's nice to see them sculpted there, with most of the landmarks present. They're just not sized or colored in a way that "pops."

It's another Clone, with no vehicle to put in. (And, sadly, no 3 3/4-inch counterpart yet.) As part of a complete set, you can't miss it - but if you're skipping the cartoons, you won't need this one. It's good, it's a clever retool, and it's not too expensive on the secondary market. But is it exciting? If you're a 501st fan, it's a great addition to your army - otherwise it's another clone to shelve.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Target. And I hope I can find Echo and Obi-Wan some day.

--Adam Pawlus



Day 2,879: December 7, 2021

Thursday, December 2, 2021

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 2,878: TIE Fighter Pilot (The Vintage Collection)

TIE FIGHTER PILOT
(Redeco, 2021 reissue)

The Vintage Collection
Item No.:
Asst. E5912 No. F1883
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: #65 (reissue)
Includes: Blaster, removable helmet
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $12.99
Availability: February 2021
Appearances: The Empire Strikes Back

Bio: TIE pilots served in the Starfighter Corps of the Imperial Navy by piloting the various TIE Series starfighters. Distinguished by all-black flight suits and bulky, fully enclosed, vacuum-sealed helmets, the Galactic Empire at its height produced millions of TIE pilots and generally considered them expendable assets. The TIE pilots formed the elite of the Imperial Navy's Flight Branch. (Stolen from Wookieepedia. Packaging has no bio.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Entertainment Earth now!

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Commentary:
The current era of The Vintage Collection straddles the fence between "awesome, incredible" and "I can't tell if this is new or not." Occupying the "just different enough to make you mad" space, this particular TIE Fighter Pilot is a mishmash of releases - the helmet deco (and indeed suit deco) are identical to the Vintage pack-in Imperial TIE Fighter Pilot [FOTD #2,589] from 2018, but the head under the helmet is different. Aren't you sorry you asked?

For ultimate completism sake you'll want this, but if it's arguably interchangeable with the Walmart The Vintage Collection TIE Fighter pack-in pilot. With the helmets on, they're virtually identical with the lettering and silver stripe down the helmet's crest. The buttons and switches are colored the same, with the same outlines, although some may be sloppier than others because that's life.

I'm always riding for cool variations and the 3 3/4-inch line, but the fact that I had to squint at this figure and compare it against a parade of existing figures to realize that it's different - and how it's different - shouldn't be the way things are in any collector's line. If it's the same? Awesome. If it's clearly different and marked as such? Fantastic. It's also worth noting that the TIE Pilot is a veritable ship of Theseus, as this figure has been upgraded with new parts since its debut in 2004. It's not super-articulated, but it's good enough to fit in the pilot's seat and the holster for the blaster is adequate for when it was retooled over a decade ago. An all-new TIE Fighter Pilot mold could be an exciting prospect, but as a repaint of a retool of a repaint of a retool, it's great for anyone who needs a Pilot. But I assume something better will, some day, see production. (But I also thought that in 2004, and we're still dealing with that one's offspring.)

Since this is the "photoreal" era, here's what matters: the 2018 pack-in? Unpainted black head, glued-down helmet. The 2021 carded version has a very pale skin tone with a complexion and deco that may strike you as "stoned/zombie" in appearance. The details are sharp with glossy lips and a bit of eyeliner, but one of the eyes on mine seemed a little uneven. It's a little peculiar in 2021, the helmet deco is fine but the human heads have evolved into such incredible things that seeing this I can't say that it's good. It's OK. For carded collectors, it just plain doesn't matter. But for those who need all the differences, this waxy, barely-different pilot is a variation you'll want. (And carded variant collectors, you'll want this.)

I you don't have a TIE Pilot, it's great! If you missed the 2018 TIE Fighter exclusive from Walmart, it's a good pilot substitute - heck, it's better! But if you've been doing this for 20-40 years and are looking for corners to cut, this may not be different enough to have been worth your creds.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Entertainment Earth.

--Adam Pawlus



Day 2,878: December 2, 2021