While Todd McFarlane is now known for his infamous interview a few years back where he talked about the difficulty of selling female figures at mainstream retail and how little boys just don't want female figures, he sure has been filling out the DC Multiverse roster with some incredible women as of late. Today I'm checking out Power Girl, one of the most powerful women (no pun intended) in the DC Universe. I mean, c'mon; she's cousins with Superman (though from Earth-2) and a fellow Kryptonian. You know she's an A-list talent. She's also the counterpart of Supergirl from Earth-2 (she's Kara Zor-L/ Kara Zor-El, Karen Starr, or Dr. Paige Stetler). Power Girl is part of the McFarlane Collector Edition series which is where McFarlane Toys has been putting more of the collector focused characters as of late. Ready for a great classic take on Power Girl? Then join me after the break...
Height: 7 1/2 inches
Articulation: Double swivel hinged ankles, double hinged knees, swivel/hinge hips, balljointed waist, swivel/hinge shoulders w/ ballsockets, bicep swivels, double hinged elbows, double swivel/ hinge wrists, and a barbell jointed neck.
Accessories: 4 swappable hands, pauldron, Streaky the Supercat, collector card, and card display stand.
Non-Scalper Price: $30 dollars
The Positives:
* Power Girl has had quite a few outfits over the years, but this one is kind of an amalgam of her most well known looks: White one-piece outfit, blue gloves, and boots, and, yes, the window right on the front of her chest. Rather than her cape having a small gold medallion holding it on, this take on PG has more of a pauldron on her left shoulder while the cape is permanently attached to the figure underneath the neck piece. If there's reuse here, I'm not seeing it. McFarlane has altered the articulation a bit here to improve the overall look of the figure, so there's no mid-torso joint. The waist joint is very well hidden and the rest of her torso is one solid piece. The paint work is bright and bold with much of the color being due to piece molded in the right colors of plastic, such as her gloves and boots: They are separate pieces molded in blue.
* Power Girl comes with a selection of three pairs of hands: Some fists, some pistol grips, and some open handed gestures. I'm guessing the pistol grips were included either because they were part of the mold or because they kind of work for a beckoning gesture. I do wish she has a pointing hand for doing the "My eyes are up here" pose.
* Power Girl comes with Streaky the Supercat as a companion. That's an interesting choice, as Streaky is Supergirl's pet, but it's a cool inclusion nonetheless. He's not a Kryptonian but he does have Kryptonian powers due to exposure to a form of Kryptonite. He's a solid slug figure with lightning bolts on his sides and a little cape. How cute!
* I really like the little cloth cape. It's pretty cute and definitely makes for a fun accessory.
* You also get a disc stand to keep Power Girl standing on your shelf. The McFarlane Collector Edition stands get a silver DC logo to differentiate them from the unwashed masses of those standard figures.
* My only negative with the figure is the weird way McFarlane handled the neckline. Power Girl's neck area is a separate piece that fits over her torso. It's not flush, though, and looks quite odd. The cape is attached to the figure here, but the cape really could have been attached to the pauldron piece. It was an odd choice and while the pauldron piece mostly covers it, it would have looked better with the cape as a separate piece attached to the pauldron.
I'm kind of surprised, but this is the first figure of Power Girl/ Karen Starr that I've reviewed. This is also the first figure of Streaky the Supercat I've reviewed, too. For more DC Multiverse reviews check out the following:
Aquaman (Flashpoint)
Arsenal (Titans)
Bane
Bane (The Dark Knight Trilogy)
Bane (Trench Coat) (The Dark Knight Rises)
Batcycle (The Flash)
Batgirl (Batman: Three Jokers) Jokerized
Arsenal (Titans)
Bane
Bane (The Dark Knight Trilogy)
Bane (Trench Coat) (The Dark Knight Rises)
Batcycle (The Flash)
Batgirl (Batman: Three Jokers) Jokerized
Batman (The Dark Knight Rises) Jokerized
Batman (DC vs Vampires)
Batman (The Flash)-- Keaton
Batman (Hush)
Batman (Knightfall)
Batman Duke Thomas (Tales from the Dark Multiverse)
The Batman Who Laughs with Sky Tyrant Wings (Dark Knights: Metal)
Batwing (Batman Inc.)
Batwoman Unmasked (Batman Beyond)
Beast Boy (Teen Titans)
Beast Boy (Titans)
Catman (Villains United)
Catwoman (Batman: Knightfall)
Catwoman (The Dark Knight Rises)
Clock King
Batman (DC vs Vampires)
Batman (The Flash)-- Keaton
Batman (Hush)
Batman (Knightfall)
Batman Duke Thomas (Tales from the Dark Multiverse)
The Batman Who Laughs with Sky Tyrant Wings (Dark Knights: Metal)
Batwing (Batman Inc.)
Batwoman Unmasked (Batman Beyond)
Beast Boy (Teen Titans)
Beast Boy (Titans)
Catman (Villains United)
Catwoman (Batman: Knightfall)
Catwoman (The Dark Knight Rises)
Clock King
Deadman (DC Rebirth)
Donna Troy (Titans)
Earth-2 Batman (Batman: Arkham Knight)
The Flash (DC Rebirth) Black & White Accent Edition
The Flash (Flashpoint)
The Flash Jay Garrick (Jay Garrick: The Flash Age)
Fulcum Abominus (Dark Knights: Metal)
Gladiator Batman (Dark Knights: Metal)
Grifter (Infinite Frontier)
Harley Quinn (The Suicide Squad)Donna Troy (Titans)
Earth-2 Batman (Batman: Arkham Knight)
The Flash (DC Rebirth) Black & White Accent Edition
The Flash (Flashpoint)
The Flash Jay Garrick (Jay Garrick: The Flash Age)
Fulcum Abominus (Dark Knights: Metal)
Gladiator Batman (Dark Knights: Metal)
Grifter (Infinite Frontier)
Hugo Strange (Batman: Transference)
Huntress (The New 52)
Impulse (Flash War)
The Joker- Bank Robber (The Dark Knight)
The Joker (The Dark Knight Rises) Jokerized
The Joker (Infinite Frontier)
The Joker- Sonar Vision (The Dark Knight)
Jonah Hex & The General (All Star Western)
Justice Buster (Batman: Endgame)
Kalibak (The Darkseid War)
Man-Bat (DC Rebirth)
Mister Freeze (Victor Fries)
Impulse (Flash War)
The Joker- Bank Robber (The Dark Knight)
The Joker (The Dark Knight Rises) Jokerized
The Joker (Infinite Frontier)
The Joker- Sonar Vision (The Dark Knight)
Jonah Hex & The General (All Star Western)
Justice Buster (Batman: Endgame)
Kalibak (The Darkseid War)
Man-Bat (DC Rebirth)
Mister Freeze (Victor Fries)
Mister Zsasz
Nekron (Blackest Night)
Nightwing (Batman: Knightfall)
Nightwing (Titans)
The Penguin (DC Classic)
Project Superman (Flashpoint)
Nekron (Blackest Night)
Nightwing (Batman: Knightfall)
Nightwing (Titans)
The Penguin (DC Classic)
Project Superman (Flashpoint)
The Question (DC Classic)
Raven (Titans)
Red Hood (Dawn of DC)
The Riddler (Arkham City)
The Riddler (Batman Forever)
The Riddler (DC Classic)
Robin (Batman Forever)
Robin (DC vs. Vampires)
Robin- Tim Drake (Robin: Reborn)
Scarecrow (Batman Begins)
Scarecrow (The Dark Knight Rises) Jokerized
Scarecrow (The Dark Knight Trilogy)
Sergeant Rock (DC Classic)
The Signal Duke Thomas
Sportsmaster (DC Classic)
Raven (Titans)
Red Hood (Dawn of DC)
The Riddler (Arkham City)
The Riddler (Batman Forever)
The Riddler (DC Classic)
Robin (Batman Forever)
Robin (DC vs. Vampires)
Robin- Tim Drake (Robin: Reborn)
Scarecrow (Batman Begins)
Scarecrow (The Dark Knight Rises) Jokerized
Scarecrow (The Dark Knight Trilogy)
Sergeant Rock (DC Classic)
The Signal Duke Thomas
Sportsmaster (DC Classic)
Starfire (McFarlane Collector Edition)
Superman (Black Adam) Black & White Accent Edition
Superman (Superman: Lois and Clark)
Superman Vs. Doomsday
Two-Face (Batman Forever)
Two-Face (The Dark Knight Trilogy)
Two-Face as Batman (Batman: Reborn)
Superman (Black Adam) Black & White Accent Edition
Superman (Superman: Lois and Clark)
Superman Vs. Doomsday
Two-Face (Batman Forever)
Two-Face (The Dark Knight Trilogy)
Two-Face as Batman (Batman: Reborn)
Oh I'm looking forward to Mattel's figures even if it just means no more ugly pin-holes.
ReplyDeleteAnd yeah I've really not liked the way McFarlane's been attaching neck/collar and capes lately. The current Superman figures where the neck looks like skin being worn over the top of the costume/cape is kinda gross.
They do attach them in odd ways often.
DeleteI'm just not sure what to expect with Mattel these days. I like Masterverse but Mattel's style looks very toyish, which works fine for MOTU but I'm not sure what it will do with DC again. DCUC was a great line whose articulation hasn't held up terribly well, but many of the figures (especially the BAFs) are still quite nice.
I've just been so invested in DC Direct/ DC Collectibles' stuff over the years and I love how McFarlane's scaled nicely with most of their lines. If they keep the figures the same size as Masterverse, I think they'll still scale well with McFarlane's and I'll be interested in adding new figures to my collection.
I don't think Mattel will get very deep these days like they did in the past with DC. I'd like to be wrong, but I expect things to heavily revolve around the movie lineups and main characters. I'll always take new versions of Batman villains and allies, but I just don't expect to get the crazy and obscure characters McFarlane sometimes put out.
Maybe it's just me, but her face reminds me of Missi Pyle, specifically how she looked in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, as Violet Beauregarde's mom.
ReplyDeleteI can see it a little bit. I think it's the hair.
DeleteTodd's interview never made much sense to me anyways. For one thing as a kid I DID want the women too because they were usually fun characters themselves, but also even to complete the teams. But also most people who buy modern action figures like McFarlane's are adult men, many of whom quite like buying figures of rather attractive female characters anyways.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you. I wanted a full team, not just one or two random guys. I can absolutely understand that Todd wanted to make sure that Batman, Superman, and big robot guys were always on the shelves for parents, kids, and people buying gifts for boys. That makes sense and I agree that masculine heroes and monsters always will sell through. To be honest, I think that since the line has come out he has done a pretty good job of getting women in the line, especially over the last year or two. The only thing that still boggles my mind is that the classic Wonder Woman was so limited. Why? She should have had a rerelease already, even if the packaging were different or the paintjob slightly altered.
DeleteIf he gets me a comic Harley Quinn (or 10), a comic based Poison Ivy, Zatanna, Black Canary, and a rerelease of Wonder Woman, I'll be pretty happy.