GOLDEN PHARAOH
SUPER POWERS (KENNER)
“British archaeologist Ashley Halberstam was working on a dig in Giza, Egypt, when he was struck by a mystical bolt of energy that emanated from a lab run by the New Gods. This bolt of energy Transformed Halberstam, unleashing the latent energies inherent in his body and turning him into Golden Pharaoh. Golden Pharaoh uses his uncanny pyramid power for the forces of good.”
Something that’s been a fixture of my Christmases for a good long while is Kenner’s Super Powers. Somewhat unique about last year was how many Super Powers figures I got between my two Christmases, thanks to McFarlane actually really stepping up their game with their continuation. But, I’m going back to the proper Kenner stuff for the day. And what a proper Kenner thing it is, since it’s one of the two characters they made up for the line, Golden Pharaoh! Who’s Golden Pharaoh? Well, he got that little bio and…that’s actually really it, since he never made the jump to the comics outside of some tie-ins. He did get a DCUC figure, which I’ve reviewed previously, but now I’m going back to the beginning!
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Golden Pharaoh was part of Super Powers‘s third abs final assortment, released in 1986. Obviously, this was his first figure, and like his fellow Kenner creation Cyclotron from the same year, it would be his only figure until DCUC. The figure stands about 4 1/2 inches tall and has 7 points of articulation. While the general set-up of his articulation is pretty standard for the line, the positioning of his arms, coupled with the nature of his costume design with the wings and all, limits his range on the shoulders a fair bit. The neck is also rather stiff on mine, but that might also be linked to the age of the translucent plastic, and I’m certainly not gonna force it. Pharaoh’s sculpt was unique, based on Jack Kirby’s design work for the character. It’s certainly a unique look, and while the sculpt proper is a little soft in some spots, it generally works out alright. He’s got a rather basic color scheme. It’s certainly an odd of assortment of colors, and notably no actual gold (something that was ultimately addressed by the DCUC figure). I do dig the translucent purple on the torso, though. Golden Pharaoh was packed with a staff, which he can hold in his right hand. He also had a “Power Action Soaring” feature, which pops his arms upward when his legs are squeezed.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
Golden Pharaoh was, as has been the trend for the last few years, my “big” Christmas gift from my parents. He’s certainly one of the line’s more oddball offerings, and one that I don’t know that I really, truly imagined owning at the outset of collecting this line. He just seemed like one of those far away things. On his own, he’s perhaps not the most impressive, and could use maybe a bit more flair. I have to wonder how much cooler he’d have been if he’d maybe been vac metalized gold, but ultimately, he’s not a bad little figure. And here I am, three figures away from finishing up Super Powers. Which feels increasingly odd.



I think my issue here really was the idea that Kenner wanted us to buy this guy as a Hero. A bald purple and gold Pharaoh? Every thing about that screams villain in the 80s.
Yeah, he’s really got a villain vibe. He’d fit right in with the whole cluster of New Gods villains they’d done the prior year. Honestly, I always found both him and Cyclotron to be a little villain-coded, so finding out they were heroes was a bit of a shock