WOLVERINE — PRISONER & KENUICHIO HARADA
MARVEL MINIMATES (DIAMOND SELECT TOYS)
Last week’s Marvel Minimates Flashback Friday Figure Addendum went so well, I’ve decided to keep it going. Honestly, I’ve got things mapped out far enough ahead that I would have kept it going anyway. It’s my site, and all. So, I’m going back to the very early days of the site, with a set that’s noteworthy for being the first set of Minimates I reviewed new for the site. That’s pretty nifty! Of course, it’s stuff from The Wolverine, so maybe let’s not let “nifty” take us too far. Anyway, here’s Prisoner Wolverine & Kenuichio Harada!
The Wolverine was released this summer. It was a sequel to X-Men 3, and it was one of those few times that a movie actually manages to make its predecessor better, not by making it look better by comparison, but by retroactively adding some emotion to a lackluster film. The Wolverine was not a perfect movie, but it wasn’t bad either.
Like most of the recent Marvel movies, Diamond Select Toys did a selection of figures from their Minimates line in order to tie-in with the movie. Like previous movies, this one was given a comic book store assortment, and a Toys R Us assortment. I’ll be taking a look at one of the sets from the Toys R Us assortment today.
The characters featured are, of course, Wolverine himself, and somewhat antagonist, Kenuichio Harada.
THE FIGURES THEMSELVES
Like I said above, these guys were released as part of the Toys R Us tie-in series for The Wolverine.
WOLVERINE (PRISONER)
First up is the titular character. Wolverine is depicted here in his “prisoner” look, which is what he’s wearing during the WWII era flash-backs in the film when he is a POW in Japan. There’re some important scenes that feature him with this look, so it’s not surprising to see it pop up here. It’s a bit odd to see it packed with Harada, but it’s not a huge deal. The figure is once again built on the basic Minimate body, standing about 2 ½ inches tall and featuring 14 points of articulation. He features sculpted hair and claws and a sculpted belt. I’m not 100%, but I’m fairly certain that the claws are a reuse from a previous Wolverine. The other pieces are new, although the hair piece was also used on two of the three other Wolverines in the wave. Wolvie is mostly molded in the appropriate colors, but the paint still makes up most of the detailing. It’s well done and fairly intricate. The face on this version is fairly calm, which is okay, since Wolverine kept pretty calm during the captivity scenes. The Hugh Jackman likeness is better than some of the one’s we’ve seen in the past, but not quite dead on. Wolverine includes the sword he was presented by Yashida, a display stand, and three sets of hands: one regular, one clawed, and one bone clawed. The Adamantium claws aren’t scene accurate, but I appreciate that they give people the option to choose.
KENUICHIO HARADA
Next is Japanese Hawkeye Kenuichio Harada, technically an antagonist, but an unwilling one, making him more of an anti-villain. He’s shown here in his ninja gear from the film, which is what he spends most of his screen time in, so it makes sense. Like Wolverine, he’s built on the basic Minimate body, meaning he stands about 2 ½ inches tall and has the standard 14 points of articulation, although his hair restricts the neck joint a bit. Harada has a sculpted jacket and hair, as well as wrist pieces to simulate the ends of his gloves. The hair and jacket are new pieces, although the jacket is shared with the Black Clan ninjas also in this wave. The hair seems a bit off for the character, whose hair was far less bulky in the film. It looks right in the control art on the box, but something seems to have been lost in translation. Paint wise, he’s really only got the detailing on his face, which is passable. The likeness isn’t as good as Wolverine’s, but it isn’t too bad. Harada is rounded out with his trusty bow, two arrows, an alternate masked head, and a clear display stand. The Bow and arrows appear to be reused from one of the Haweyes from last year, and the head is identical to the head on the Black Clan ninja.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
Oh boy. Hold on tight guys, it’s another tru.com story. Yeah, so I’m always uncertain as to whether my local TRU will get their exclusive wave, so I tend to order online. I’ve mentioned before that tru.com has a tendency not to put up pictures or label their sets correctly, making online ordering difficult. But it’s okay, as long as you have the proper sku code, which allows you to go directly to the corret product page. And that’s how I ordered this set and the other exclusive set from this wave. Unfortunately, I seem to be smarter than tru’s online store, as they still sent me Wolverine and Shingen in place of this set. And that’s not cool because Shingen kinda sucks. Anyway, I ended up having to drive to my local TRU and exchange it. Which is what I was trying to avoid.
Oh well, I have them now. Which is good, because Harada was my favorite character in the film and I’d be bummed to have missed out on him.
Well, I was somewhat complimentary of The Wolverine. It was still new and fresh in my mind, and Days of Future Past hadn’t come out to reset my expectations of the X-Men movies, so I was rather positive. I don’t know I’d be as positive now, but admittedly, I haven’t watched the movie since 2013, so it’s hard to truly gauge. My review’s honestly pretty much spot-on beyond that. I got the Minimates reviews down pretty quickly, as you can
see. I had personally forgotten a lot of my TRU.com-centered diatribe. Seven years without them has let me forget how frustrating dealing with them could be.



I still miss Toys R Us. To be honest I don’t think I ever bought anything from them online, I’d always just drive to Toys R Us, maybe once a month. The last thing I remember buying at my TRU before it closed down was an NES Classic, so not even a toy. I also feel like TRU closing doing coincided with me kind of dropping off entirely on Minimates, also their quality had been dropping around that time, I distinctly remember my breaking point being when they lost the butts, and the torso piece started being sculpted the same on the front and back. I used to love customizing them, I made a bunch of Doctor Who Minimates. Seems like they fell off for most people though, and now with DST closing. It’s kinda sad. Maybe I’ll have to dig out my old Minimates, probably haven’t even looked at them in at least 10 years.
I used to be huge into Minimates, if the reviews here and on Minimates Central don’t make that clear. I also fell off around the closing of TRU, for a lot of the same reasons, and also just because I had *so* many of them. They’re one of the primary things getting paired off from my collection right now.
Well, that was kind of the simultaneous best and worst part of Minimates, they were so small, it was easy to get a lot of them – too easy. And at one point they were practically near Funko Pop levels of random licenses. Heck I don’t think they’ve ever done a Funko Pop of Clint Eastwood’s Man With No Name.