Showing posts with label action figures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label action figures. Show all posts

Thursday, January 5, 2017

New Year's Haul

Last weekend was a perfect storm of clearance sales in my area. My main goal was to attend the end-of-year sale at a local comic book shop, but I found that other stores were also discounting items I had been considering for some time. Here's a rundown of my great weekend haul.

Target


Target's Christmas supplies were on clearance, and they had already started putting out their Valentine's Day merch, so I picked up a Stormtrooper helmet ornament by Hallmark and a BB-8 candy dispenser by Galerie. The latter, one of the Valentine's Day products, plays sounds when a button on the front is pushed.

Stormtrooper helmet Christmas ornament by Hallmark
Stormtrooper helmet ornament by Hallmark

BB-8 candy dispenser by Galerie
BB-8 Candy Dispenser by Galerie

Rubber Chicken Comics (Bellingham, MA)


Rubber Chicken capped off 2016 with their annual sale week, which starts the day after Christmas with 20% off most everything in the store; the discount is increased incrementally each day through New Year's Eve. I waited until the last day, when the discount was 50%, and walked away with some great bargains. I hadn't been to the Chicken in a while, so I had nothing specific in mind, though I was hoping to grab some Godzilla merch, which tends to be a bit pricey. And I lucked out!

1974 Godzilla Vinyl Figure Bank
1974 Godzilla Vinyl Figure Bank

Godzilla Classic 1989 Vinyl Figure Bank
Godzilla Classic 1989 Vinyl Figure Bank

I also picked up a few Star Wars and Star Trek action figures, marked down from Rubber Chicken's already-low prices. It's hard to resist $2.50 action figures.

Obi-Wan Kenobi (Cold Weather Gear)
Obi-Wan Kenobi (Cold Weather Gear)

Ensign Ro Laren (Former Bajoran Freedom Fighter)
Ensign Ro Laren (Former Bajoran Freedom Fighter)

Esoqq (A member of the Chalnoth race)
Esoqq (A member of the Chalnoth race)

Q in Judges Robe
Q in Judges Robe

Darwyn Cooke was such a great artist and character designer, so I was happy to pick up the DC Comics Designer Series action figure based upon his Wonder Woman at half-price.

DC Comics Designer Series Wonder Woman action figure (based upon artwork by Darwyn Cooke)
DC Comics Designer Series Wonder Woman action figure (based upon artwork by Darwyn Cooke)

I'd also had my eye on Funko's Doctor Strange Pop Vinyl, so this was the perfect opportunity to grab that as well.

Funko Pop! Doctor Strange vinyl bobble-head
Funko Pop! Doctor Strange vinyl bobble-head

I am a fan of both jungle girls and Frank Cho, so at $2.50, this 2014 calendar featuring Cho's Jungle Girl character was an easy "Yes!"

Jungle Girl 2014 Calendar by Frank Cho
Jungle Girl 2014 Calendar by Frank Cho

I also added to my Heavy Metal collection with the movie's 1996 LaserDisc.

Heavy Metal LaserDisc
Heavy Metal LaserDisc

Newbury Comics


Newbury Comics is a New England chain that started as a comic book store and has evolved into an all-around pop culture emporium. I had been checking in with them for many weeks in anticipation of Funko's latest "Specialty Series" Pop figure, Max Rebo. Their Bellingham, MA store finally put my long wait to an end.

Funko Pop! Max Rebo bobble-head (Funko Specialty Series)
Funko Pop! Max Rebo bobble-head (Funko Specialty Series)

As luck would have it, they were having a BOGO 50% off sale on Pops, so I was finally able to pick up the 6" Davros from the Doctor Who line.

Funko Pop Davros
Funko Pop Davros

And I was surprised -- but happy -- to find the Danger Girl "adult" coloring book on clearance for $2.99!

Danger Girl Permission to Thrill Coloring Book
Danger Girl Permission to Thrill Coloring Book

Barnes & Noble


B&N had a bunch of stuff at 50% off, and I was happy to find the Air Hogs Speeder Bike on the clearance table. I had been eyeing that for a while, hoping I would be able to get it at less than full price. I was!


Remote Control Speeder Bike by Air Hogs
Remote Control Speeder Bike by Air Hogs

And I was able to pick up the "regular" version of the Vinyl Vixens Wonder Woman to go along with the B&N exclusive version I had bought for full price back in 2015.

Vinyl Vixens Wonder Woman (Barnes & Noble Pre-Release)
Vinyl Vixens Wonder Woman (Barnes & Noble Pre-Release)

Finally, one note


While clearance sales allow some of us to spend more than usual, it's a good thing to shop at these stores year-round, especially at small, single-location, independent comic book stores. These stores are critical suppliers not only of comic books, but of all manner of collectibles. Keeping them in business is important to the future of collecting. Ross Richie of Boom! Studios has more to say on this below.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Review: Mattel's Avatar Line

NeytiriWhen Avatar action figures started appearing on shelves weeks before the movie premiered, I hardly gave them a look. Though I was really looking forward to seeing the movie, and assumed that after doing so I would want to pick up one or two figures, the $8.99 per-figure price tag, along with my then-current focus on Hasbro's Star Wars line, and a gnawing feeling that I should be scaling back in favor of more "practical" spending like home improvement, retirement savings, college tuition accounts for the kids, weekly grocery shopping, heating bills (it was still winter, after all), etc., allowed me to easily look the other way.

I eventually saw Avatar, liked it a lot, and knew that my resistance to the blue guys on the pegs was to be short-lived. Further chipping away at my original resolve was the fact that by the time I had finally seen the movie, many stores had moved their Avatar toys to the clearance section. Several weeks later (it felt like several weeks, anyway -- it was probably much less), I had an almost-complete set of basic figures, at least enough to comfortably offer this review.

The Good

Avatar Norm SpellmanThe line gives good coverage to the main characters, even the ones that don't make such great "action" figures -- like Parker Selfridge and Norm Spellman. Many of the likenesses, particularly of the Na'vi and avatars, are really good. Notable among them are Tsu'tey and Avatar Norm.

The figures are very well articulated and very detailed. Paint applications are consistent. Also, each figure is well-proportioned, even if not in scale with other figures in the line.

Parker SelfridgeAn important point (for me, anyway) is that the i-TAG (a sort-of ID badge for each figure, which, when used in conjunction with a webcam and some downloadable software, allows you to control digital representations of the toys on your computer) packed with each figure also serves as a figure stand, which helps keep the figures standing despite some small feet.

The Bad

The figures are incredibly over-packaged. I found opening these a truly unpleasant chore, one which I put off, at times for several days. The wrap-around bubble is not as easy to separate from the card as a traditional bubble, and there are a couple of those annoyingly tight rubber bands to contend with on each figure, along with a paper backing that is tightly taped at several points.

Tsu'teyThe figures are kind of scrawny and flimsy. The arms, particularly on the Na'vi and avatar figures, are a bit rubbery, and I don't trust the figures to stand without their included i-TAG stand. Unfortunately, the foot pegs don't fit very snugly, so they still teeter easily when bumped, and the stands are so big that the figures can't be displayed very close together.

The articulation, while plentiful, is achieved with some odd-looking joints which are at times unsightly and give the figures an amateurish feel in some poses -- especially when the legs are pulled sideways.

Pvt. Sean Fike (orange gun)Some accessories, like Jake's wheelchair or Pvt. Fike's big orange gun, just aren't on par with what the packaging calls "detailed movie replica[s]", while others are noticeably absent. While the re-deco'd Fike comes with a permanently attached face mask, none of the other figures do. I expected this mask to be removable and standard with all RDA personnel figures, or at least the soldiers. Quaritch, whose figure is noticeably shorter than the others, I assume so he can fit into the AMP Suit vehicle, comes with only a handgun. That may be movie-accurate (I don't recall him using any other weapon except the gun and the AMP Suit), but I feel the toughest "bad guy" in the film should have come with a heavier weapon -- or at least a face mask and his signature cup of coffee. And while Selfridge's golf club is a nice touch, a chunk of floating unobtanium would perhaps have been a more relevant choice, as would have been a clipboard -- or anything scientific -- instead of Grace Augustine's machete.

Col. Miles QuaritchThe scaling is noticeably off, not only on the afore-mentioned Quaritch, but on the Na'vi, which stand only a head taller than the humans, when they should be almost twice their size. I'm guessing this was an economical decision required to make the line affordable -- or at least no more than $8.99 per figure -- though this, along with the accessory issue, points to what I feel is the line's biggest shortcoming.

It seems apparent that someone, either from Mattel or the film production, felt it necessary, given the buzz about technical innovation and novelty surrounding the film, that the toy line attempt to match that novelty and innovation. To that end, potentially great action figures were downgraded to good action figures in order to finance the complex packaging and the i-TAG software. I do not have a webcam, so I have not downloaded or experimented with this i-TAG software. Still, I would rather have had the money from i-TAG development spent on the overall quality of the figures.

Final Say

I like these figures enough to have collected almost the entire line. That said, I don't think I would have amassed this collection if I had to do it at retail price. I wish I could display the figures reliably in tighter clusters; I will probably need third-party stands to do that. Most of all, though, is the nagging feeling that these figures could have been pushed to a really great level -- with better quality joints, bulkier construction, more accurate scale, better accessories -- if they hadn't been burdened by over-packaging and i-TAG gimmickry.

You can see more pictures of the figures mentioned in this review here.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Favorite Action Figures: Xena

I am most often uninterested in figures with built-in "action" features, like buttons on the back that make the arms move up and down, or legs that can be squeezed together to make... well, the arms move up and down. Such features usually detract from a figure's look with unsightly knobs and levers, or simply don't work.

This is not the case for the simply named "Xena" figure from Toy Biz's Xena: Warrior Princess line. Although this Xena sports an ungainly button, which juts out of the figure's back like a broken bone, pushing this button produces a really cool action effect. Thanks to a magnetically enhanced hand, this Xena can draw her sword quickly out of its scabbard in a fraction of a second. The speed and consistency with which this feature functions, along with the excellent default pose and detailed outfit, make this a great figure.

Favorite Action Figures: Darth Vader (removable helmet)

This figure was part of Kenner's Power of the Force 2 line and was the first in its scale to reveal Darth Vader's badly scarred face and head. I was for some reason amazed that this figure was made -- it seemed too gruesome to be a toy back in 1998, when McFarlane was just getting started with its brand of creepiness -- but I knew I had to have one.

I don't think I ever found this one "in the wild," instead paying $12.99 (more than twice the regular retail price) at one of those "collector's stores" whose staffers often come by their merchandise by arriving at real toy stores before anyone else.

Even though Hasbro has since surpassed the gory detail of this figure (see the battle damaged Anakin Skywalker from 2005's Revenge of the Sith line), this was the first time we got to see under the helmet on a Vader figure, which to me was a big deal.

Favorite Action Figures: Insect-Body Mr. Freeze

This is based on the "Cold Comfort" episode of The New Batman Adventures, where all that remains of a badly deteriorated Mr. Freeze is a head, now kept in a jar and mobile only on spider-like mechanical legs or a robot body. It was a cool moment in the series, and I thought it was a great choice for an action figure. This was pretty hard to find in its initial release; I got mine thanks to my sister-in-law, who found it in a small shop on the Jersey shore. I came across this figure pretty regularly months afterward, possibly re-released in a revised wave.