KIRBY
EASTMAN & LAIRD’S TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES (NECA)
It’s a rare occasion that I get to review a figure of a creator of all the cool things I love and frequently buy in action figure form. Thus far, I’ve reviewed three of them, those being George Lucas, James Cameron, and Stan Lee. Stan in particular is one of the major architects of the Marvel universe, but he was aided in that by a couple of prominent artists, chief amongst them Jack “The King” Kirby. Jack’s legal troubles with Marvel mean he hasn’t been graced with a Marvel Legend the way Stan has. While the Marvel venue doesn’t have anything, Jack had a huge influence on the larger comics creator community, and that’s lead to a lot of references and homages. During some of Jack’s legal battles, Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird offered up support in the form of “Kirby and the Warp Crystal,” a Donatello-led TMNT special where Don teams up with comic artist “Kirby,” who bears the likeness of Jack. NECA took advantage of this story to add Kirby to their line of comic-based TMNT figures, so we have a sort of Jack Kirby figure! Yay!
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Kirby is part of NECA’s Eastman and Laird’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles line of Mirage Comics-based figures. He was first offered up at Target as part of one of their Haulathon events last year, I think? I don’t know, they all blend together and I feel like there’s like 15 of them every year. Anyway, the figure stands about 6 1/4 inches tall and he has 33 points of articulation. In terms of scaling, he’s obviously meant to go with the 7-inch TMNT line from NECA, but given his smaller stature, he winds up about the same size, so you could fudge him in with your Marvel Legends
if you were so inclined. It makes him a little taller than Stan, but I feel like Jack honestly might have gotten a kick out of that. Kirby’s sculpt shares a lot of its parts with the Mirage Baxter Stockman figure, but gets a new head, as well as new forearms with rolled up sleeves (because how else is he gonna properly beat the snot out of some no good Nazi punks?). The head sculpt is a slightly stylized and cartoony take on Jack Kirby’s likeness, though certainly more of a proper likeness than the original comics
appearance (and it’s even an officially backed license, courtesy of the Rosalind Kirby Trust), and certainly captures the spirit Kirby, albeit in a more wider line appropriate styling. The paint work on Kirby is meant to emulate comic book line-work, so there’s a bit of outlining and crosshatching, which honestly works better in-person than I expected it too. Beyond that, the colors are pretty bright, clean, and eye-catching. Kirby was packed with five hands (in fists, standard gripping, and a right hand for holding a pencil), a pencil with the Warp Crystal attached, his sketchbook, the gauntlet he designed for Donnie, and a figurine of one of his creations.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
I’ve been wanting a Jack Kirby figure since I got the Legends Stan Lee back in 2020. Obviously, the Marvel angle was a long-shot, so this was kind of a nice surprise. He was not the easiest figure to get when he dropped, at least in my area. I’ve been on the lookout for one for a bit, but then one kind of snuck up on me, and a used one came in at work, which made the whole thing a lot easier, I suppose. He’s fun. Not the same style as Stan by any stretch, and I certainly still wouldn’t say no to a proper Legends figure, but this one’s still really, really cool.
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.


