
When Paul Newman recently passed away, I remembered I had a
figure of him, at least I thought I did. Kenner produced a
line of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid figures, which I had
never realized were actually for the prequel ("Butch
and Sundance: The Early Days") with Tom Berenger in the
Butch Cassidy role made famous by Newman in the earlier film.
This line was continued, albeit briefly, as Kenner's "The Real
West." (Check out
Toymania.) I can admit that I've never seen either
film. I doubt most kids of the late seventies had.
Couple that with the fact that cowboys didn't fit in kids Star
Wars universe, and it's easy to see what doomed this line of
posable posse members.
My main impetus for writing this isn't just because of a small
action figure line that faded out quickly. It's what some
of the lines ideas spawned. Namely, the vintage Indiana
Jones line.
Appearance:
I can't tell you if this figure is suppose to bridge the gap
between the two films or not. Obviously, the character is
the same in both, just at different points in his life. To
this end I have to say, this figure looks like neither Newman or
Berenger. He looks a bit more like a vintage Han Solo
figure with a hat than anything else. (The Sundance Kid
figure looks like a vintage Luke figure with a hat and a
moustache.)
I
also can't tell if he is suppose to have a vest on over a couple
of shirts or a jacket. The color of the arms and shirt
panel tend to say vest. The number of cuffs says jacket.
Maybe a future repaint was going to be the jacket version.
The color scheme aside, he does look to be dressed fairly
close to his on screen appearance. I found photos online
of an outfit with these colors, in which Butch appears to have a
jacket and scarf. I've seen other photos suggesting he
wore a vest as well, although the color scheme is different.
Some of the pictures look like his pants may have been more bell
bottomish, but I'm okay with these not being that way.
The sculpting for the most part has been "Kennerized." It's
a bit cartoonish, but has a decent amount of detail for the time.
The vest button holes are there, and the collar piece is raised a
bit. There's even a button sculpted on his pants.
Of course, no Western outlaw leaves home with out his gun belt.
I actually think the detail on the back is better than the front.
The front has a huge buckle all done in one color brown. The
back has small little ammo loops on it, that look pretty good.
The holster itself is more of a play feature, and doesn't really
hit the realistic mark. The leg tie down is cleanly painted
to match the holster.
The one thing that kind of detracts from this figure, is the
copyright notice. It's plastered over his shoulder blades
like a hockey players name on his jersey. That's a sign of
the times when he was made. Obviously, Kenner was concerned
with the play aspects and not so worried about collectors nit
picking them to death.
Fun:
I think this is an area where this line really shined compared
to it's Star Wars contemporaries. As a kid, I wondered why
Star Wars figures didn't move to this type of articulation.
I'm sure it was a cost thing, now. But back then I
wondered.
Kenner must have figured a trap door in the back of a horse
wouldn't work, so they came up with some articulation that would
allow these cowboys to sit on their equine rides correctly.
The main differences are in the hips and knees compared to a
standard Star Wars figure.
Instead of sitting with legs straight out, the hips splay open a
bit and allow the figure to look natural in a sitting position.
That's something not a lot of modern SW figs can say. This
same horse riding / sitting ability would be transferred to all
of the male vintage Indiana Jones figures. (See
Indy,
Belloq,
Cairo Swordsman.)
Which worked well since the Indiana Jones horse is a direct copy
of the Butch&Sundance horses.
Every gunslinger needs to be able to quick draw. Butch
here has button on his back that allows him to do just that.
An open holster lets the small rubber revolver come out quickly
and smoothly. Well, sort of. If the gun is wedge in
well enough, it won't come out.
While
Indy doesn't have a button the action still feels and acts the
same. Indy's open holster is based on this style. I
would imagine the button was removed so that Indy could use the
over head spring motion to crack his whip.
The two lines also share a downside. The arms of Indy and
Butch here are made from a harder plastic than most SW figs.
This has the unfortunate side effect of broken thumbs from
repeated accessory grabbing. It's not uncommon to find any
of these figures thumbless. Which must really suck for
text messaging.
Overall:
Given the time period, Butch comes from, he's
not half bad. While the choice of source material is not the
best, the Butch & Sundance line had some figure design choices
that really set it apart from its' Star Wars contemporaries.
I'm just grateful that this cowboy paved the way for a really kick
butt archeologist figure a few years later.
Engineernerd Score: 85/100
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