
I'll admit it. I wasn't an X-men fan until the cartoon. When I
was a kid I never really cared for the big team books that arc
across several issues. That said the animated X-men had
some cool characters with some interesting powers.
My favorite of the band of animated mutants was Gambit. I've
always associated with the loner rogue types. Part thief, part
hero. Falls for the wrong girl. Dude has it all.
When the last X-men film came out, rumors were out that Josh
Holloway (Sawyer on Lost) was in the running to play the Ragin'
Cajun. Personally, he'd be my pick.
In the upcoming Wolverine film Gambit is being played by
Taylor Kitsch. It's good to see Remy Lebeau
finally making it to the big screen. Now, this should mean
new Gambit figures heading to the shelves. (You can check out
the first series
here.)
But,
before looking forward, I thought it would be cool to look back.
In this case way back, to when Toy Biz was making a line of
plain ol' X-men figures. You know before water shooting figures,
BAF's and Wally World exclusives.
Appearance:
Let's just get it out of the way. Monsieur LeBeau is
known for his trench coat. It's to him what a vest is to Han
Solo. In this case it falls a bit short. Instead of
a sculpted or soft goods coat like we would see today, Gambit
came with a vinyl semi coat shaped thing. The material is
more like the foil bags electronics come in versus vintage Star
Wars figure capes. Sadly, the coat is a bit of a let down.
The seams are starting to come undone on mine, and he's
virtually un-played with.
To get the high collar on the coat, Toy Biz sculpted the
collar onto the figure. Thus, without his coat, Remy has
permanent brown bowl behind his head.
Past the coat, Gambit looks pretty much like his comic book
incarnation. The techno collar, belt and boots are all
there. The patterns on his legs are there, as well.
In the comic books, it's not possible to tell if the patterns
are raised or not, so we'll go with not.
Remy's
got his fingerless gloves that let him charge the objects of his
choice. The right hand is closed to hold his staff and the
left is open in a vaguely "I'm using the Force" kind of pose.
Overall, there isn't much detail sculpting. The hair is flat and
his face is generic. The figure is in a fairly neutral pose.
Really, for the early to mid nineties that would be all I would
expect. Mr. LeBeau is a bit shorter that the current Marvel
Legends and a quite a bit taller than the throngs of 3 3/4"
figures out there.
There are two other details to point out on Gambit. The
first being his eyes. Remy is know for having deep red eyes
that give him that bad boy mutant look. This figure has
white eyes. I'm really surprised they missed that.
The second thing to take note of is the rivets at the elbow and
knees. These are metal rivets clearly seen inside and out.
They are a clear indicator this line of figures was intended for
kids and not the, ahem, serious collectors of the modern world.
With his coat on they mostly hidden, but are definitely noticeable
with out the coat.
Fun:
The aforementioned coat isn't much of an accessory, but a
necessary one. Gambit also comes with some sort of staff thingee.
It has a vaguely technological look to it and is designed to fit
in his closed right hand. The years have not been kind to mine.
The staff has a permanent bend to it. The silver has held up
well, though.
The essential thing that is missing? Cards. Remy's favorite
weapon of choice was charged playing cards. Probably deemed to
difficult to produce, they weren't included. I would have much
rather seen a left hand sculpted in mid throw with a couple
cards coming out of it.
Of
course back in the day, action features were a must for
superhero figures. Remy gets the standard push a button on his
back and he kicks. Not the greatest feature, but not the most
obtrusive, either. I almost didn't realize he had it until I
took his coat off.
Overall:
Is this Gambit going to come close to ML
standards? No. But that wasn't the intention. The intention was to
produce X-men figures that kids would want to play with. This
figure does accomplish that. To that point, if you look at the
breadth of the early Toy Biz line, you can see a vast array of
characters that kids could get their hands on and have fun with.
Looking at this version of Remy LeBeau, I have
to ask myself have collectors snobbed up the action figure market.
We've wanted more articulation and more detailed sculpting for
years. But do kids need it? I don't think any of us
"collectors" ever would have noticed there's no ball jointed chest
or articulated ankles on this figure when we were kids. Just
food for thought people.
Now, I'm off to watch some vintage animated
X-men on VHS. (Yes, the ones Burger King gave out.)
Engineernerd Score: 83/100
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