IRON FIST & LUKE CAGE
MARVEL LEGENDS (HASBRO)
In the ’70s, Marvel attempted to jump on a number of different popularity trains, and amongst them were Kung-Fu and Blaxploitation, resulting in the creation of Iron Fist and Luke Cage, two wholly separate and unrelated characters, at least at their start. However, as the decade moved on, both of the characters struggled on their own. Marvel’s solution was to roll them both into the same book, creating the “Heroes for Hire” (pluralizing the title already previously granted to Cage on his own). It was quite a successful move, and the characters have remained linked ever since. The pairing’s been the source of quite a bit of toy coverage, including, most recently, Marvel Legends‘ celebration of Marvel’s 85th anniversary.
THE FIGURES THEMSELVES
Iron Fist and Luke Cage a two-pack Marvel Legends release, under the “Celebrating 85 Years” banner. Interestingly, despite the pairing of the characters, this is the first time the two of them have been released together in two-pack form in the whole run of the line. The closest we’ve gotten before this was the con-exclusive Netflix-based boxed set and the Amazon-exclusive comics boxed set that were both released to tie-in with Defenders, but those obviously through in the other characters as well. Heck, prior to this, the singles of the characters had never even been in the same assortment!
IRON FIST
The second of Marvel’s Kung-Fu heroes, following Shang-Chi, Danny Rand aka Iron Fist is no stranger to Legends, getting his first and second figures both under Toy Biz’s run. Under Hasbro, he’s had three figures, all of them in more recent costumes. This one, however, returns to his original ’70s garb, which we haven’t seen since Toy Biz. The figure stands 6 1/4 inches tall and he has 38 points of articulation. Iron Fist uses the “Renew Your Vows” Spidey base body as a starting point, with two new heads, and a new upper and lower torso, and belt piece, all courtesy of sculptor Paul Harding. The base body has a great range of motion, which makes for all sorts of great kung-fu posing. The new parts vibe
really well with the pre-existing pieces. The new heads give us both calm and screaming options, which are both really strong, and they’ve even both got posable ties on the back of the mask. The color work on this figure uses a lot of molded coloring, with a bit of paint work. It’s clean, concise, and bold, and it very definitely works with the mold. The figure is packed with four pairs of hands (fists, flat, and two different open palm gestures) and two different chi effect pieces.
LUKE CAGE
Luke actually just got the Legends treatment rather recently, with a ’70s based figure in the Mindless Ones assortment from the end of last year. Of course, with a ’70s figure released that recently, that does sort of mean this one had to be a different look, so they’ve opted for a more modern Luke. It’s not a terrible choice, but it does mean that the two figures don’t necessarily have the same vibe, since Danny’s very ’70s and Luke is…not. The figure stands 7 inches tall and he has 34 points of articulation. Luke is sporting an all-new sculpt courtesy of Rene Aldrete. The body sculpt feels like it’s begging for re-use down the line, since it’s just a pretty basic t-shirt and jeans get-up. There’s a ton of great texture work present, which really sells the more civilian aspect of Luke’s modern look. It’s topped off by two new heads, which,
much like Iron Fist, have calm and screaming expressions. It’s a good mix, and seems to have a touch more character than the head we got from the ’70s Luke last year. Color work for this figure is especially reliant on molded colors, which works surprisingly well. There’s a little paint, mostly on the face and belt, which is handled very cleanly. Luke is packed with two sets of hands, one in fists, the other in a gripping/open gesture combo. The fists have brass knuckles, which read “LUKE” and “CAGE.” They’re fun, but I’m also a bit surprised there’s not also standard fists without them. It makes continuity between the poses a little confusing, since they’re not really set up for mix-and-matching the same way.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
I’ve been wanting an updated classic Iron Fist for quite a while, like even before we got the Luke Cage. Then we got the Luke Cage, and I only wanted the Iron Fist update even more. After getting Luke on his own, I wasn’t thrilled by the prospect of having to buy a two pack with yet another Luke to get the matching Iron Fist. I still find it a little odd that they’d release them so close together, but not just do the full ’70s style two-pack. But, whatever the case, this set’s a strong one. The two figures may not quite match up as a pair, but they’re individually really strong figures. Iron Fist winds up as the star piece for me, but I found myself liking the Luke a lot more than I’d expected to.
Thanks to my sponsors over at All Time Toys for setting me up with this figure to review. If you’re looking for cool toys both old and new, please check out their website and their eBay storefront.




I kind of wish they’d released the 70s cage in this two pack and the modern Luke standalone. It almost makes me wonder if that was the original idea but who knows
I wonder that myself. My only guess is that they didn’t think modern Luke would sell as well on his own compared to the ’70s version, hence the mix and match