#3397: Wonder Man

WONDER MAN

MARVEL LEGENDS (HASBRO)

“Longtime Avenger Simon Williams makes a move out West to join his friends as a founding member of the West-Coast Avengers”

When he was introduced in Avengers #9, Wonder Man was originally intended to only be a one-off character, seeing as he died at the end of his first appearance and all. This was further solidified by DC Comics letting Marvel know that they weren’t really fans of a “Wonder Man” potentially confusing readers of their own “Wonder Woman”. Marvel repurposed much of Wonder Man’s arc with the similarly powered Power Man…and then DC introduced a “Power Girl”, and Marvel decided all bets were off and brought Wonder Man back from the dead. When Simon came back, he held onto his original green outfit for a bit, before getting a George Perez designed update.  That update (dubbed by some fans as one of his worst, though I don’t fall in with them myself) was itself pretty short-lived, and was damaged just a few issues later.  Simon donned what was meant to be civilian garb in the mean time, but the look, which featured a pair of sunglasses and a distinctive red safari jacket, wound up sticking, lasting over seven years.  It’s a rarity on the toy front, but it’s gotten a Minimate, and now, it’s also got a Marvel Legend.  And, would you look at that?  I’ve made it all the way through this intro without totally going crazy about the fact that THEY TOTALLY MADE A SAFARI JACKET WONDER MAN MARVEL LEGEND AND IT ACTUALLY HAPPENED AND ITS BEEN MADE AND NOW IT HAVE IT AND I’M TOTALLY GONNA REVIEW IT NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!

…sorry, I could only hold that in for so long.

THE FIGURE ITSELF

Wonder Man is figure 4 in the Puff Adder Series of Marvel Legends, which is this year’s first Avengers line-up.  This figure marks Simon’s second Legends figure from Hasbro (the last one was back in the Abomination Series), and his fourth overall (counting the Toy Biz version and his variant).  Thus far, they’ve all been based on different outfits, and not exactly in any particular order at that.  The figure stands 6 1/2 inches tall and he has 32 points of articulation (though that ab-crunch is largely rendered motionless by the jacket).  Wonder Man makes use of the jumpsuited-base body from Red Skull, along with the arm bands from Genis-Vell, and a new head, jacket, and turtleneck piece.  The new parts are courtesy of sculptor Paul Harding, and the head in particular is really the star piece here.  Harding has his own running project called “Marvel in the 70s”, and this piece is definitely designed to fit right in with those.  He captures that classic Perez feel, without actually being too artist-specific.  I especially love that toothy grin; perfect for the character, especially in this incarnation.  Wonder Man figures so frequently look rather dour, so this one is a very refreshing change of pace.  On my figure, his glasses are ever so slightly askew in their attachment, which appears to be a recurring thing, but it’s honestly minor, and easily fixed if one is so inclined.  The color work on this guy is quite bright and colorful, exactly as you’d hope to see for this design.  It’s largely molded colors, which keeps it pretty clean.  He gets a little bit of painted detailing for the silver on his zipper, as well as printing for the face.  The glasses are transparent, so you can make out the eyes beneath, which is definitely a cool touch.  Wonder Man is packed with two sets of hands, in fists and open gesture, as well as rocket effects to plug into the sides of his belt, and the left arm of Puff Adder.

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

I’ve been a Wonder Man fan since Busiek and Perez’s Avengers #2 hit in 1998, and I first asked my dad who the heck this Wonder Man guy was.  Once I figured out who he was, I started reading whatever I could of him, and one of my favorites was his 1986 one-shot, which features him in the Safari Jacket get-up, which quickly became my favorite of his looks.  I’ve honestly been waiting for a good figure of it since then, and it’s been a long wait.  Thankfully, this isn’t just a good figure, it’s a great figure.  Such a great figure.

Thanks to my sponsors at All Time Toys for setting me up with this figure for review.  If you’re looking for toys both old and new, please check out their website.

2 responses

    • Yeah, the earliest depictions of this jacket definitely have the buttons, though it became just a line in the middle of the jacket after a while, and there have definitely been more recent illustrations that made it a zipper. I’d imagine that with all the fights he got into, Simon probably had a few slightly different safari jackets over the years. On the hair front, Simon’s always gone back and forth on his exact shade, but it’s black often enough that I don’t really consider that an error, so much as a personal preference. His figures have always gone with black hair over grey.

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