Thursday, June 29, 2023

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 3,042: Jawa (The Retro Collection)

JAWA (Cloth Cape, Kenner Style)
The Retro Collection 3 3/4-Inch Action Figure Shop Disney / Hasbro Pulse Exclusive Set
Item No.:
Asst. F7649 No. F7649
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: n/a
Includes: Blaster with R2-D2, Tusken Raider, C-3PO, Death Squad Commander, Obi-Wan Kenobi
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $69.99
Availability: May 2023
Appearances: Star Wars

Bio: The Star Wars Retro Collection features design and detailing inspired by the original 1970s Star Wars figures and eatures original figure design and detailing! Continue your collection from a galaxy far, far away. (Stolen from the marketing copy. Packaging has no bio.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Click here to buy it at eBay now!

Commentary: Before I opened up the Jawa I thought it looked good - because it's great! While not an exact replica of the original, it's excellent. Since I have a few Jawas from the old days, I've had a lot of fun playing with the genuine article and this 2023 release is on par. Those who are familiar with these toys know the very first release had a plastic vinyl cape, but Kenner decided to change it. A fan-made "custom" "replica" of it is surprisingly cheap and high-quality but not perfect, just the way I like it. Hasbro's new (old) Jawa also has enough changes made to it where it's obvious - but not awful - that they tweaked it.

Hasbro did make a few changes to the figure from the Kenner original, but thanks to the cloak none of them may matter. The figure's yellow eyes aren't painted as much as the original as there's an unpainted border now. The figure's body is a bit more saturated in color, giving it a little more red than brown. The right hand was notably retooled to better hold the included blaster (but you may not exactly want to swap it for the original figure. It's not a great fit.) The folds are in the same places with the robes, some of which have different depths. It doesn't quite seem as soft in detail as some other figures - whoever did it has done a better job - and at a quick glance you could probably be fooled it was an original. It's also worth noting the point on the back of his head hood is a different shape from the original, which I find to be welcome. Why do the exact same thing again? If it's better or weirder, a change is welcome.

The figure's blaster is different and arguably better. The original Jawa blaster I had handy is a very, very dark blue (almost black) plastic. The Stan Solo repro has a thinner grip, you can see light through it - it's close, but visible different. Hasbro's 2023 Jawa Blaster has some details that are bigger than the original! The pistol grip is thicker, and the peg hanging off the side is larger now too. I like this - the Stormtrooper blaster seemed like it experienced some generation loss, but this all-black blaster enjoyed some minor improvements. Not only is it distinct from the original, but it's different enough that I can look at it and go "oh, I might like this even more." The aspect of it that I don't like is a dimple on the side of the blaster that faces the body when he holds it. Other than that, it's a pretty good enhanced recreation. It might even be just different enough to make you mad, as you might want it even if you're happy with the old one.

What really amazed me about the figure is the cloth cape. Let's be honest - it is the figure. While there's a little guy with 4 joints and sculpted and painted bandoliers under there, most of us interact with the figure as a robed tiny alien. The cut is very close to the original figure, with a texture that - while different - is eerily close to the original. The dark brown is a little richer and darker than the 40-year-old original, but for all I know the original just faded a bit with time. It's super close, with a feel that would probably fool a lot of people. The hood is a little more open, although it might be mine wasn't sewn right. I can't quite tell from my one sample, but with a more open hood you can get a better look at the head. I like the cut more than the original ones I've had for decades. Maybe Hasbro will release a vinyl cape variant to sell the mold again - as long as they tweak the texture or cut of the cloak, I wouldn't mind. And I've got a legit original one I've had for decades.

As of my writing this you can get a complete original Kenner cloth cape Jawa figure - one that's over 40 years old - for $45. They tend to hold up very well with time. This new one is about $12, provided you want the whole boxed set. While I am all for getting the Real Deal and owning a piece of history, a lot of fans aren't going to be able to tell the difference and it might be hard to know how a cloth cape will smell until it is in your house. It's almost a shame it's part of a boxed set - I could see picking up a few more as "army builders." While some of the remade figures fall a little short of the original figure expectations, I'd say they nailed it with the Jawa. It's about as good as I expect Hasbro to be able to deliver, if not slightly better, when it comes to retro reproductions. The foot peg hole even fits on the PDT-8 on my desk without a fight. How awesome!

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Hasbro Pulse.

--Adam Pawlus



Day 3,042: June 29, 2023

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 3,041: Grogu (The Rescue Set, The Vintage Collection)

GROGU (The Rescue Set)
The Vintage Collection 3 3/4-Inch Action Figure PulseCon Set
Item No.:
No. F5551
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: #245
Includes: Cuffs, plus Grogu, Mando, and Moff Gideon
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $74.99
Availability: December 2022
Appearances: The Mandalorian

Bio: The Mandalorian leads a crew on a rescue mission to Moff Gideon’s ship where a garrison of dark troopers – the advanced droids that captured Grogu – are waiting. (Stolen from Hasbro Pulse. 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!

Click here to buy it at eBay now!

Commentary: In the last couple of years, most items were made in numbers that were too big - but we don't know what that really means. Were runs bigger than usual? Are fans turned off? (Is it a mix?) Items like Grogu (The Rescue Set) are being sold on eBay somewhat cheaply, and what was most likely developed to be an awkward SDCC-type exclusive just sort of resulted in a semi-shrug given no one character in this set was truly exclusive. Grogu is a new mold, sure - but does it matter if you already have one, two, or several from other items you've bought?

This version of the figure has a jointed head and is specifically based on his appearances in The Mandalorian season two. He has slightly stretchy removable handcuffs which slip off his tiny hands pretty easily. (Just don't lose them.) He looks pretty good, because much of his person is molded in color. The brown robes, tan sleeves, and seemingly even the hands are all molded in their respective colors. Only the head has any paint, with pink inner ears and black eyes. It's a pretty impressive tiny figure, standing at a mere 3/5 of an inch, more or less.

Grogu's sculpting is good, especially for the size. The robes are wrinkled like he's crouching and extending his arms out. The head has subtle wrinkles and texture, but I'm too old to really see this well. While a lot of you are Grogu-ed out, the Hasbro team did do a nice job on this figure accessory. The one thing I don't love is that the head pops off easily... they also left off sculpting the feet under the robes. But it's not like you're going to notice.

This set (and what they charge for it) is a little absurd, but it seems to be that way with Hasbro's collector toys across the board right now. They're good, but a little too complex (and priced accordingly) if you ask me. I wouldn't recommend this set just for Grogu, or for $75, but people are selling just the little guy for $10 on eBay sometimes. It might be worth a look at that price, and given the price increases $75 for two $17 figures and a $30 Dark Trooper isn't terrible unless you recognize that 10-15 years ago, this would have probably been a $25-$30 Battle Pack. The important thing is that it looks like Hasbro did their best here, but nothing really makes paying 6-inch figure prices for your 3 3/4-inch figures easy to swallow.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Hasbro Pulse.

--Adam Pawlus



Day 3,041: June 27, 2023

Thursday, June 22, 2023

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 3,040: Chewbacca (Boushh's Bounty, The Black Series)

CHEWBACCA
Boushh's Bounty

The Black Series Return of the Jedi 40th Anniversary Packaging
Item No.:
Asst. F6853 No. F7078
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: n/a
Includes: Bowcaster
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $24.99
Availability: May 2023
Appearances: Return of the Jedi

Bio: Commemorate the 40th Anniversary of Star Wars: Return of the Jedi with figures from The Black Series, featuring classic design and packaging! (Taken from the packaging. There isn't anything specific to the character.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

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

Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Click here to buy it at eBay now!

Commentary:
While we got some interesting stuff for a couple of the 30th anniversaries, Lucasfilm (and LEGO, and Hasbro, and Mattel) have not really fanned the flames of the 40th anniversary of Return of the Jedi. One of the debut "new" figures is this Chewbacca, which uses the same Chewbacca you may have purchased seveal times already with slightly different fur deco and another new head. Is it new enough to warrant purchasing? Maybe - at this point I feel like we're future-proofing our collections for a diorama that may never be fully fleshed out. We got a pretty swell Jabba the Hutt for SDCC in 2014 - reissue san carbonite incoming - but there's no plastic throne or dungeon or any of that. It's mostly the heroes, Jabba, and Bib Fortuna. After 10 years, that's a crappy showing of things - but if you want Luke, Leia, Lando, and arguably the droids, you're all set.

Figures like this are sensible from a manufacturing perspective, but after the original Chewie, multiple issues of The Force Awakens Chewie (including the theme park one and Archive one), a Cloud City Chewbacca, Solo Chewbacca, the comic Krrsantan, and whatever I'm forgetting, Hasbro has made some good money off this mold by only changing out the head, deco, and sometimes, accessories. It was a pretty big and impressive figure for the price, and I have to say I'm glad Hasbro hasn't succumbed to temptation to charge "deluxe" prices for this "basic" figure. And it's not bad - the new head has Chewie's distinctive parted hair and spiked collar, complete with a chain that sadly is not linked and feels a little too short. His jaw is a separately molded piece, but his big blue eyes and slightly-parted mouth is surprisingly expressive. The designers did a good job capturing his personality without blacking out the eyes.

The body is the same it's always been, with a black 3-part bowcaster. I don't love that it pops apart, and after fidgeting more with other scales of figures, I'd go as far as to say it's kind of bad. I know we have to be careful with our toys, but this is something that falls apart pretty easily if you touch it. That's not what I want on a toy rated "ages 4 and up." It's also a bit of fight to get the grip of his bowcaster in his hands - I would have loved to see a more open or rubbery fist to better wrap around it without a fight. You can get it in there, but the entire product feels like a thing you buy to pose and never touch again. And it also doesn't make sense that this "outfit" has a weapon, as he never used it while chained. But that's nitpicking - you have to throw something in the package.

At nearly a decade old, the elbows that don't bend a full 90 degrees and legs that are hindered by a hairy skirt piece feels increasingly old. I don't know if Hasbro can do better, and neither do they - it would have been nice to see Chewbacca 2.0 by now. I wouldn't necessarily recommend this figure unless you don't have any Chewbacca, or want this specific one for a diorama or packaging collection. Hasbro did a great job with it, but given the limited number of slots, and how many figures we get are just trooper and clone repaints, it is incredibly difficult to name more than a couple of genuinely exciting figures in this scale from the past several months.

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

--Adam Pawlus


Day 3,040: June 22, 2023

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 3,039: R2 Unit (Red, 2023 Pride Collection)

R2 UNIT Disney Exclusive
Star Wars Droid Factory
Item No.:
???
Manufacturer: Disney
Number: n/a
Includes: Red R2 unit, orange R4 unit, yellow R5 unit, green R6 unit, blue R7 unit, violet R8 unit
Action Feature: Comes apart
Retail: $74.99
Availability: May 2023
Appearances: n/a

Bio: Meet the colorful collection of droids from the Star Wars Pride Collection. Each one of the six detailed R Unit figurines has just rolled off the Droid Factory production line and boasts a different design, creating a special set featuring every color of the rainbow. (Stolen from the marketing copy.) In celebration of Pride and the company's Pride collection, The Walt Disney Company is giving funds as part of our ongoing commitment to organizations around the world that support LGBTQ+ communities. (Taken from the packaging.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Click here to buy it at eBay now!

Commentary: When I was a kid I checked out the book The Art of Star Wars from the public library, and it featured all kinds of cool artwork, the movie's script, and clippings from comics in pop culture. The world has since come a long way (newer editions of the comic change the language), and decades later there are Pride Collection figures including the "I'm mad I wasn't able to buy one" R2-RNBW (reissue it) and this new collection with a bright red R2 unit. I'm mad Disney beat me to it - I always wanted to do a rainbow set, although I was thinking it'd be cool to match the Crayola 8-packs. This is probably a lot more culturally relevant, but most importantly it's great. I like the colors of the set and it's the kind of thing they should have done a few years ago when the bin parts kicked off so people could get a bunch in a hurry. "Here are a bunch of build-a-droid parts in lots of different colors" is a sensible product, even if the price is not amazing - $12.50 per droid is on the higher end of these droid box prices. But it's a good droid. If they just sold this for $13 in bins, you'd still want one.

Star Wars doesn't tend to have a lot of color in it, so I'm mostly happy with this set. The reason I'm not happy with this red R2 unit specifically is they once again left off painting the processor state indicators under the eye - it's the red and blue blinky light on R2-D2. Given this set has no new tooling and no hats or accessories of any kind, they can afford it. But other than that? It's pretty great. There's a little room for improvement, but they painted the silver "guts" on the neck under the dome. The eye is painted black, the panels are red, there's a darker red on the dome and various panels on the body. You can find a little painted detail on the back, but not much - honestly, few of these are probably going to be opened. Which is a shame, everybody should have a big box of colorful toy droids. I'd have killed for this as a kid, it would've been a great add-on for the Droid Factory.

It's not for everybody - or it is, depending on how you want to look at it - but I appreciate that they made something and it's just neat. It's probably going to be the easiest way for fans to get most of these different build-a-droid molds in one spot, even if they left out the R3 and R9. And R0. And revised R3. Hey, maybe they can do them next year! I'm happy they made a red astromech that's not the same as the many (many) red droids I've already got, and it's nice to see one of these "event" droid sets look like they could probably appear in the background of an episode of a Star Wars. And of course if you don't want to buy this set, you shouldn't... but it's probably my favorite droid pack in quite some time.

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

--Adam Pawlus



Day 3,039: June 20, 2023

Thursday, June 15, 2023

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 3,038: Death Squad Commander (The Retro Collection)

DEATH SQUAD COMMANDER (Star Destroyer Commander, Kenner Style)
The Retro Collection 3 3/4-Inch Action Figure Shop Disney / Hasbro Pulse Exclusive Set
Item No.:
Asst. F7649 No. F7649
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: n/a
Includes: Blaster with R2-D2, Tusken Raider, C-3PO, Jawa, Obi-Wan Kenobi
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $69.99
Availability: May 2023
Appearances: Star Wars

Bio: The Star Wars Retro Collection features design and detailing inspired by the original 1970s Star Wars figures and eatures original figure design and detailing! Continue your collection from a galaxy far, far away. (Stolen from the marketing copy. Packaging has no bio.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Amazon now! 

Click here to buy it at eBay now!

Commentary: While the original 12 figures are spoken of as some sort of amazing legendary line-up of figures, I would say to you that it's strong - but not a perfect line-up. One of the weaker entries in that line-up was the Death Squad Commander, later renamed Star Destroyer Commander because it didn't exactly sound great for kids and the term "Death Squad" was coming up in the 1970s in some very horrible ways on the news during that era. But Hasbro went to the original name - given these are figures made for collectors, at high price points, that won't be on retail shelves, what have they got to lose? People aren't thinking about political activities in South America from the 1970s right now. What they're thinking about are action figures.

Toys like this are what it's all about. It may not have been your favorite, but maybe you got it at a garage sale, or as a birthday present. He probably went on a lot of adventures and never as anybody's favorite figure, but a trusty stooge to hang out with Darth Vader and the Stormtrooper as Imperials were pretty limited at first. He's on my desk now next to the Grand Inqisitor and an original Kenner Death Squad Commander... I just wish I had a little playset with a cardboard backdrop here for them to enjoy. Or a Mini-Rig based on the Inquisitorius Scythe shuttle. I feel like that's something lost in this era of action figure collecting. The old school was never about hoarding piles of the things - they were toys you got to put with your ships and monsters and playsets. They're better in groups, but exquisite when they can sit in some Imperial hardware.


While C-3PO was a pretty gosh darn good remake of a tough-to-replicate figure, this one is not quite as impressive. He's smaller. His legs are squeezed together. At first glance it's a good replica with some improvements, like a cleaner rank badge and nicer silver paint on the belt and the gloves. The boots and helmets aren't glossy, and the mold lines are cleaned up a bit. Some of you may like it, some of you may not. If you look at this figure as a "what might a figure look like if it were cranked out for 40 years and parts were replaced as they wore out the molds," I'd say this would hit that mark.

The plastic colors are different. The body suit is a lighter gray, and I think looks pretty great. The face is cast in a slightly more translucent plastic which does it no favors - the beat-up originals have a bit more personality. The eye paint is just different enough to look off, but again, you'd have to have an original handy to realize it. The 2023 figure looks legit until you compare it and notice the wrinkles on the shirt are all in the right spots, but not precisely the same level of detail. The circle on the belt buckle isn't quite right either. It's still pretty good, and it's not all bad. I like the sharp detail on the circles on the helmet, and the silver buttons on the glove may have never looked better. The trade-off is that the subtle texture on the body is all but gone, now giving you a very smooth figure. You're getting how people perceive these figures, rather than how they were. It's also worth noting the right hand isn't as open, and grips much more tightly as a result.

You also get an improved, straight rank badge. Sure it's just two stripes of paint, but they look better. The blaster is notable in that Hasbro showed a blue one in its product photography for this 2023 figure. It's actually super black. Not blue black, or black-adjacent, it's black. As of my writing this I don't know if that means there's a variant out there or not. A lot of these will be sealed in a six pack with nothing to do, never seen, and never checked. But some people open them up to split and dump on eBay, and maybe we'll see something there. But I digress. It doesn't quite look like an original blaster, with a rounder magazine and softer details. The grip is also smaller and lacks texture. You won't mistake it for an original, unless you really don't know your originals. It also is worth pointing out the new smaller grip is too small for the 1978 figure - it falls right out of the hand. This is the kind of change I love, subtle, and not affecting the appearance of the figure. It's different, but not different enough to be maddening.

It's not as good as the original, the cuts on the hips and the silver squares on the belt are all just altered a bit. It isn't bad - it's just different. As nobody seems to be talking about designing these guys, we don't know if it's intentional or a result of the factory not quite getting the tooling 100% right and people just shrugging and saying "good enough." And "good enough" is what I'd say here. It would be nice to see a meticulous remake of the original, but I can live with some softer detail and slight changes to colors. Goodness knows it happened in the old days. While I don't love the fact that he's shorter or has his legs pinched together, at least he looks and stands differently from the genuine article so you've got a solid excuse to buy an updated version of an old figure you probably only bought out of completism. If this figure were sold individually for about $12, I'd recommend it. At this point I think it may be difficult or impossible (or undesirable) for Hasbro to do a perfect remake, so as "good enough" and "different enough to be interesting," I'm having a good time. The only problem is the more of the Retro guys Hasbro does, the less interest I have in anything else they do. I just want more to play with. Throw me a Rey, crank out a Sabine, or just grab the Super7 Maria figure because she looks like she belongs.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Hasbro Pulse.

--Adam Pawlus



Day 3,038: June 15, 2023

Tuesday, June 13, 2023

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 3,033: Boba Fett (Kenner Flavor, The Vintage Collection)

BOBA FETT Kenner Flavor
The Vintage Collection 3 3/4-Inch Action Figure, Target Exclusive
Item No.:
No. F8069
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: #275
Includes: Blaster
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $22.99
Availability: May 2023
Appearances: A white mail-in box in 1979
Bio: With his customized Mandalorian armor, deadly weaponry, and silent demeanor, Boba Fett was one of the most feared hunters in the Star Wars galaxy. (Taken from the Tareget description. There is no bio.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Amazon! 

Click here to buy it at eBay!

Commentary: That sense of shame you feel when you pay for Boba Fett is hard to ignore. I begrudgingly like the figure a lot, despite the colors not quite matching and the price being a complete robbery. Hasbro made a super-articulated version of one of 1979's most infamous action figures. Of course it's going to sell out. If you see it, it pushes the buttons in your brain and asks if you "Want to be 5 years old again?"

It's a Boba Fett TVC 186 [FOTD #2,791] figure from 2021, which was $12.99 at the time. This new release lacks the cape, and has fewer paint applications, yet costs a whopping $10 more. There may not be a Boba Fett tax, but we've absolutely seen Hasbro charge an exclusive tax on items at Amazon, Walmart, Target, GameStop, and elsewhere over the last couple of years. If this one hits clearance, it's really going to sting. The 2021 mold is Hasbro's best for Boba Fett, but we've also seen vast improvements made in Hasbro action figures over the last couple of years. It's pretty inexcusable to charge us that much more, especially with a standard Vintage figure having climbed to $16.99 now, but here I am, paying for it. And the sick thing? The colors are off in at least a few places.

Hasbro got a completely new mold for a Boba Fett exclusive last year, and it cost less than this repaint. This is my main beef. But how is the execution? Close - but off in enough ways where I think you can say it's not quite good enough. If you're charging me $10 more for a repaint from two years ago, I expect as close to perfection as man can achieve. Thanks to Boba Fett having a fair amount of variation in his production runs over the years, maybe there's some interpretation and mixing and matching being done here, because the colors don't look specific to any one of the Kenner Fetts I've got handy. The blue body suit and yellow armor elements match one I have standing on my desk which I got from a neighbor when I was a kid. The visor and red on the mask and gauntlet look a little closer to a different, later release. The red rocket doesn't seem to match any Boba Fett I've ever seen, with the painted tip of the rangefinder not matching the original toy one bit. The blue on his backpack is a very good match, while the visor does not match the brown (or black-ish) colors of the originals. Also the green on the chest and codpiece don't match anything I've got in my stash, but it isn't far off from the tri-logo version.

If you look at the back of the helmet, you'll see some red highlights with a stripe around the top and a red box painted on the back. The back of 1979 Boba Fett's helmet was completely unpainted. Maybe someone over there felt the rangefinder needed "something" to make it look not totally cheap, but if I were them I'd have left off the red on the back of the helmet. Nobody's going to see it other than openers, and those of us who do see it are going to ask why they bothered. If they want to maximize revenue, why spend money to put something there that doesn't belong?

Given the price point and the specificity of this release, I'm nit-pickty. The Wookiee scalps weren't on the original, but I can understand not wanting to retool the figure for this release. In terms of Hasbro making money hand over fist marking it up higher to Target, and then Target charging us more for it, and I assume it will completely sell out, I assume all corporate parties will be very pleased with this figure's performance.Surely someone over there will be asking how to do it with Darth Vader, or even Luke with a yellow opaque lightsaber blade and a lemon head for us beautiful junkies out there. The nostalgia animal will eat itself, and as long as you pick a popular character there's probably little risk of being stuck with unsold product.

If Hasbro were a singular person I would hope they feel some shame for this release only because with less paint, an easy redeco, and something fans line up to buy, charging us secondary market mark-ups at the time of release makes me feel that we could be in for an unpleasant road ahead for collecting toys. Companies tend to charge what they think they can get for an item, and I bought one. You probably did too, if you saw it. If it were a little better - if that rocket were the right color, or the visor better matched the old Kenner toy - I'd probably say "yeah, well, they did it right." I'll pay a premium for perfection, but this ain't it. Instead I'm paying for nostalgic novelty, and the sick thing is you can just get a Kenner-style Boba Fett on Amazon for about the same price - with Bossk thrown in for about the same cost. I admire Hasbro's line of thought here, and I imagine it was hard work getting the blue of the body right. Color matching red is difficult, possibly nearly impossible. I guess the question now is "when will they do it again?" and "will it be the 12-inch Kenner Boba Fett figure colors next time?"

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Target.

--Adam Pawlus



Day 3,037: June 13, 2023

Thursday, June 8, 2023

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 3,036: Moff Gideon (Mission Fleet)

MOFF GIDEON
(with Outland TIE Fighter)

Mission Fleet Stellar Class Vehicle & 2 1/2-Inch Figure
Item No.:
Asst. E9342 No. F1137
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: n/a
Includes: Cape, pistol, Darksaber, E-Web laser cannon, projectile, TIE Fighter
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $19.99
Availability: September 2021
Appearances: The Mandaloian

Bio: Imperial Moff Gideon is fiercely determined to capture The Child, known as Grogu. (Stolen from the marketing copy. Packaging has 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!

Click here to buy it at eBay now!

Commentary:
You probably already breezed past this, but I bought Moff Gideon and the Outland TIE Fighter on extreme clearance at a Burlington Coat Factory last month. I'm hesitant to collect any new scale, but I'm a fiend for clearances and I love toy vehicles - so I tried it. And it's really good. If Hasbro made this exact toy, but maybe twice as big (at twice the price) and scaled for 3 3/4-inch figures I think you'd all absolutely love it. Because it's smaller - not Action Fleet small, but close - it was easy to skip, despite being a surprisingly well-made vehicle with a well-made figure. I just don't want to collect yet another line of squat, big-headed figures that is probably, ultimately, going to be pretty shallow as these things go. It's a good package - it's just not a size that older fans were already buying. Had Hasbro slapped this in a Retro box at twice the size and price, they couldn't keep it on the shelves. It's very good.

The Moff Gideon figure is good, and if you got this quality and articulation at 3 3/4-inches you'd be happy. The shoulders have the bend-and-swivel lateral movement, each leg is jointed at the hip, the wrists swivel, and the ball-jointed head turns. It's good, it's efficient. The cape fits on with a peg, with good detailing and decent paint. Everything is clean. Gideon's face has just enough detail to look like Giancarlo Esposito, complete with mustache. You can see the smile lines, there are wrinkles in his forehead, and his eyes perfectly capture his personality on the show. It's clearly a toy with big hands, an enlarged head, squat proportions, and oversized feet, but it's stable. It's sturdy. It looks good - nobody took shortcuts here. I'm sure if anyone at Hasbro is reading this they're rolling their eyes, but I really do think old-school fans - even Vintage collectors - would probably appreciate a kid's line made with this attention to detail... at four inches tall.

His accessories include an E-Web cannon, a Darksaber, and a blaster. I love the sword's white border, and I think it's one of the better looking Hasbro figure accessories. The blaster is nothing particularly special - good sculpt, good size, fits in the hand. Everything here works well, including the E-Web Cannon. Gideon can hold it to shoot things, or you can take it off the two-part tripod and mount it in any of three places on the included TIE Fighter vehicle. It's fun - this is a great play feature that probably would've been awesome to have on 3 3/4-inch scale toys, provided collectors didn't complain about them.

The Outland TIE Fighter itself is also excellent. With wings only 6-inches tall it's not exactly big, but it feels good in your hands and it might make you nostalgic for when Hasbro used to make new toy vehicles at bigger sizes. That's part of what kept me on board for so long - cool ships are fun to play with, and this one gets the job done. The top hatch opens to seat one figure (without cape), the wings pop in place and stay put nicely. Each wing also folds down like on The Mandalorian, which I believe is unique to this toy. The blue/gray coloring is sharp, the black solar panels have lots of detail, and you get little laser emitters under the window. I feel like the last time I was this happy with a toy Hasbro vehicle was for Rebels, so if Hasbro is taking notes I'd gladly pay $40ish for a bigger toy with these features - figure or no. If you see it cheap, I'd recommend it highly, even if you're not buying any new scales either. It's a good one-off.

Folding the wings down can be a little sticky - they don't necessarily want to fold the first time. A geared mechanism on each wing to go down smoothly would have been awesome, but for all I know there's some physics reason to not do that. At least you get a decent looking vehicle at a perfectly reasonable (clearance) price, and as much as I'd love to go back and fill in the ships I missed I don't think I want to spend hundreds of dollars right now. But hey, Hasbro can still make a good Star Wars vehicle toy when they want to, sadly it's just not at the size most older collectors would want. And if they did them in a bigger size, I assume kids and parents might be put off by the price. But I'd love to see what they could do, if they wanted.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Burlington Coat Factory for $4.49.

--Adam Pawlus



Day 3,036: June 8, 2023


Tuesday, June 6, 2023

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 3,035: See-Threepio (C-3PO, The Retro Collection)

SEE-THREEPIO (C-3PO, Kenner Style)
The Retro Collection 3 3/4-Inch Action Figure Shop Disney / Hasbro Pulse Exclusive Set
Item No.:
Asst. F7649 No. F7649
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: n/a
Includes: n/a with R2-D2, Tusken Raider, Death Squad Commander, Jawa, Obi-Wan Kenobi
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $69.99
Availability: May 2023
Appearances: Star Wars

Bio: The Star Wars Retro Collection features design and detailing inspired by the original 1970s Star Wars figures and eatures original figure design and detailing! Continue your collection from a galaxy far, far away. (Stolen from the marketing copy. Packaging has no bio.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

Availability: Click here to buy it at Amazon now! Click here to buy it at eBay now!


Addendum: As the comment below states, you can indeed pull off the head and limbs - but they are not as smooth as the original removable limbs function, and probably were not intended for you to yank them off. I still advise not yanking them off more than once or twice to keep this figure in the best possible shape.

Commentary: After saying "But I don't bother" for years Hasbro realized they could show up with the coldest six pack, rather than saying "no" to everything. Finally - finally - we got reissues of the rest of the original 12, or the figures that came out on 12-backs in 1978. If you believe my older friends, not all 12 came out at the same time and getting a Jawa in some areas came a lot later but I haven't had a lot of confirmation of this. What I do know is that the 2023 reissue of See-Threepio (C-3PO) is excellent, and better than the ones Stan Solo made. And his are usually slightly better reproductions compared to what Hasbro gives us. His have variant paint jobs - and I hope Hasbro takes notice - but the official product's sculpting and/or paint is much closer to the original for a fraction of the cost. You should get this one.

Hasbro actually got the details replicated extremely well here. If you compare a 1978 C-3PO to 2023, they're pretty much the same. I think they must have worked harder to get this one right, because the little sculpted details are all here and have to show through the vac-metal paint process. You can see all the joints. The sculpted panels fit together and you can see all the lines cleanly detailed. The chest has the three indentations. For whatever reason, the Stan Solo C-3PO - while neat - leaves these off, probably (again) due to the painting process washing it out. There's no beating the original. The detail is a little softer, but it's probably about 98% as good as the original and that 2% is a wash because the joints are tight and the paint is clean.

It's a good figure. C-3PO has the metal rivet so he can stick to magnets. How cool! The joints are all nice and smooth, and since it's modeled after the 1978 version you can't pop his limbs off. The only thing I don't think they replicated properly was the foot peg holes, as he doesn't seem to really want to play nice with the PDT-8 on my desk.

This time around, the cardbacks come unpunched and that's a nice surprise. It still has the doofy sticker (thus raising costs) and the awful faux weathering (presumably a licensor requirement), and the backs of the card are hideous walls of words with none of the charm of the original art or design. I know it's a challenge to include multiple languages here, but I can't imagine they're selling enough in all of these countries (or even distributing the at all) to warrant teeny tiny illegible letters when you could show upsells and illustrations. At least it's on a nice cardback, packaged in a wonderful box modeled after an old Canadian exclusive boxed set. Other than the sticker and the back of the card, Hasbro did a nice job with the packaging here.

I don't know if 6-packs are something they're considering for the future, but they probably should. Fans are going to want Bespin Han, Snowtroopers, and Hoth Luke. Ugnaughts and 2-1B might be tougher sales. Similarly we've already got Boba Fett, but I would probably buy another Hammerhead, Greedo, and Snaggletooth if they came with R5-D4, a Blue Snaggletooth, and a clean X-Wing Pilot Luke. Also it's probably cheaper for all involved - six figures in one box would be cheaper than shipping six individual figures, or tracking them down in shops.

It's funny that after years of complaining about the same characters being reissued and resculpted, and samey troopers getting repainted and re-repainted, I'm heaping praise on replicas of action figures I got at garage sales for pennies 30-40 years ago. But Hasbro did a good job here and it's worth saying they really seem to have improved this one - but with the vac-metal deco, they have to. If the paint washed out the sculpted details, I'd be complaining. Instead, I'd say you can go ahead and be happy you bought this one. Please note it's a Shop Disney and Hasbro Pulse exclusive, and is $20 cheaper at Hasbro Pulse at press time.

Collector's Notes: I got mine from Hasbro Pulse.

--Adam Pawlus



Day 3,035: June 6, 2023


Thursday, June 1, 2023

Star Wars Figure of the Day: Day 3,034: Mon Mothma (Senator, The Black Series)

MON MOTHMA
Senator

The Black Series 2023 Closed Box Line Look The Mandalorian Packaging
Item No.:
Asst. E8908 No. F5530
Manufacturer: Hasbro
Number: #07 - Star Wars: Andor
Includes: n/a
Action Feature: n/a
Retail: $24.99
Availability: April 2023
Appearances: Star Wars: Andor

Bio: In an era filled with danger, deception, and intrigue, Cassian Andor embarks on a path that will turn him into the rebel hero who will challenge the evil Galactic Empire. (Despite being a legacy character who has been around for 40 years, Lucasfilm did not deem it worth writing anything involving that this is a character with her own agency on the box.)

Image: Adam's photo lab.

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

Click here to buy it at Amazon now!

Click here to buy it at eBay now!

Commentary:
Sometimes you just wonder if there's serious contempt for action figure fans in an office building out there somewhere. It's not that Senator Mon Mothma is a terrible figure. She has a great head sculpt, the costume has excellent detail, and her articulation shows a lot of work went into her. It's just that someone, somewhere, forgot to mention that Mon Mothma action figures usually don't do great business and a figure that sees no action, with no accessories, and whose costume prevents most of that articulation from being used is probably going to prove ultimately problematic for sales. Mere weeks after release, sold auction listings on eBay were about $21 shipped - that's a sign of a problem. New figures are generally desirable and in short supply, when there's instant abundance you know that a problem could be brewing for the line, and in this case I don't think you can blame the plastic-free packaging.

Waves like this make me want to advocate for reducing The Black Series to only the top-tier face-in-the-poster characters for new shows and movies, and the most popular stuff from older shows. Cad Bane? Makes sense, and I hope he sells. But even popular characters like Luthen Rael - well, allegedly popular - can be bought on eBay already for $28 shipped, or less. Nobody's making money with prices that low once eBay's fees are paid, especially after you take the shipping box and actual shipping fee into account. These are not bad figures, but they're not fun, and like Indiana Jones the drop-off from the main character to the rest of the cast is pretty severe. It's also very possible in a few years, these will be sought-after collectibles after they're dumped and collectors realize nobody bought them.

Let's start with the good. Be it Hasbro or Lucasfilm, some sculptor provided an amazingly good sculpt with one of Hasbro's better faces. From some angles she looks a little like Gillian Anderson, but generally she looks like Genevieve O'Reilly. I assume we'll see even better face printing some day, but by today's standards she's a winner The eyebrows and hair color may not be perfect, but you can tell who it is. You're not left going "Well I guess it looks like Han Solo but I don't know if it's Harrison Ford," it's clearly the actress from Andor. The texture on her outfit is great, and the wrist and elbow joints work very nicely. The collar on her shirt is jointed and everything seems pretty well-hidden by her dress. In many respects, you have got to give it to Hasbro for making a figure with minimal paint yet somehow evoking multiple layers of fabric with nifty metal jewelry to boot. Her brooch looks excellent, as do her earrings. It's subtle, and my sample seems to be painted well. That's incredibly important during this weird interim plastic-free packaging area.

From the waist up, this figure is expressive and emotes well with her arms and head. You can get subtle nods with her head, and the hands move without much of a fight in her massive sleeves. And then the problems start. The figure has no waist articulation, and I honestly think they may have been better off going full "salt shaker" or "chess piece" here. She has hip joints. It looks like she has a thigh swivel. There are bend-and-swivel knees and rocker ankles. And you can't move most of them. My sample looks like the leg was assembled rotated strangely, and it's difficult (or for me, impossible) to get my fingers to swivel the upper leg in position, which results in leaning. More importantly, each of those pieces requires tooling and assembly, despite the fact they're functionally useless. All she can do is stand - which is one of the reasons I've been increasingly disinterested in The Black Series. Getting them to balance right can be tricky, but with no vehicles or playsets their sole purpose tends to be merely to serve as a collectible. In the box or on the shelf, you buy it, look at it, put it down, and that is the extent of your interaction with the product. If you have alternate heads or accessories, at least you can fidget with them a bit - but they're never going to go on any adventures, they will not inspire you imagination, all you can do is say "wow, they did a great job painting her!" and then go about your day. And, of course, you can pick her up if she should fall over because the ankle joints are a little weird. She has fallen over at least twice while I write this review.

She has no gear, nor should she. She wields vast sums of money and conspiratorial whispers - neither of which are compelling toy accessories, and that's where this figure continues to struggle to find a reason to exist in this format. She doesn't interact with any of the other figures released from this line in their current outfits (yet, anyway.) She has no cool accessories, antiques, or other curiosities from the show which could pad out the box to make the mostly-empty container seem worth $25. Again, that's not really Hasbro's fault, but they could have put a second Luke Skywalker in the case and made a heck of a lot more money here while making a lot of fans happy. If this wave hits stores in a big way, I assume she's going to be languishing on pegs for a long time. (And don't say it's not a problem - I know a Walgreens that still has 2015 Finns on the pegs.)

Luke, Din, and maybe the HK-87 droid should sell just fine. The rest of the wave will most likely be selling for below cost this summer and next to impossible to give away later this year. (Cassian was previously sold with a droid last year, which didn't sell out and was offered through other outlets.) I think Hasbro did their absolute best with Mon Mothma, with a character who was played well and given a performance that was tense and impossible to look away from, but that doesn't matter when your audience wants helmeted bad guys and weird monsters and beeping robots. You can try to appeal to actual four-year-olds and inner-four-year-olds' sense of a more adult show, but it's not going to get you merchandise sales. Normally I would say "get her at full price," but looking at the market as it is today? I am confident you can wait for a sale unless Hasbro destroys a portion of its inventory. Whatever the market is for these, Hasbro will probably have made too many which is kind of a shame. (And while I would have preferred a Retro wave of these characters, I freely admit I don't think they would have sold well either.)

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

--Adam Pawlus


Day 3,034: June 1, 2023