#3980: Cable

CABLE

X-FORCE (TOY BIZ)

“Cable is the touch, no-nonsense leader of X-Force. A half-man, half-machine cyborg, Cable uses his bio-mechanical eye, arm and leg to see and do things impossible for anyone else-including other mutants. When the fighting gets tough, Cable knows from bitter experience, only two things can save X-Force-teamwork, and his own high-tech weaponry!”

Welcome everyone to a brand new year here at The Figure in Question!  I’m back and refreshed from my Christmas break…well, I’m back from my Christmas break, at the very least.

Waaaaaaaaaay back last year (or, you know, like, three weeks ago), a faithful reader brought up to me that, for all my Toy Biz Marvel reviews, somehow I hadn’t reviewed a single Cable figure from their run.  Which is, quite frankly, insane, because they made, like, a lot of  Cable figures.  So, the first thing I’m doing in my return to Toy Biz for the new year is fix this glaring Cable-shaped hole in my Toy Biz reviewing, and take a look at their first go at the guy.  Here he is!

THE FIGURE ITSELF

Cable was released in the very first series of Toy Biz’s X-Force line, which spun out of their X-Men line during its second year.  As the central character in the comics, obviously Cable needed a spot in the debut line-up.  This would also wind up as his very first action figure, and a pretty quick turn around for a guy who’d only shown in the comics two years prior.  The figure stands just over 5 inches tall and he has 7 points of articulation.  His articulation scheme is…well, they were sort of working out the basics here, and he hits *fairly* close, but for whatever reason, his left shoulder is a hinge that just goes outward, rather than offering any forward and back.  It’s an odd set-up, but there it is.  He was an all-new sculpt, based on his more solidified look from X-Force proper, albeit as solidified as any of Liefeld’s designs ever really got.  The X-Force line wound up advancing in technical sculpting at a quicker pace than X-Man, but this first round was still definitely more like the Marvel Super Heroes and earlier X-Men than anything Toy Biz did later.  This Cable is definitely a little thinner, stretched out, and softer on the details than later figures would be.  Given Liefeld’s love of crosshatching, he feels downright squeaky clean.  His color work is kind of the same vibe as the sculpt, being quite clean, and broad, and sort of going soft on a lot of the details.  It does what it needs to generally, though.  There were two variations to the paint.  Originally, the boots and leg straps were a lighter grey, and his yellow eye glowed in the dark, but later versions darkened the boots and leg straps, and dropped the gimmick on the eye.  Neither is all that notable on its own, but rather is more evident if you happen to have the both right in front of you.  Both versions included the same very large gun, which can be held in the left hand, and has a rotating barrel that makes a clicking sound when you spin it.

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

By the time I got into collecting, this version of Cable was long gone from shelves, so I didn’t have this one as a kid.  The initial release somehow found its way into my collection over the years…twice.  Like, I don’t even know how.  I don’t remember buying him either time, but I wound up with two of them, so, you know, that’s fun, I guess.  I wound up getting the color variant through some good old fashioned bartering.  My granddad hoarded all sorts of old tech in his basement, and a guy wanted to take some of it for cosplay and set building, so he traded me, amongst other things, two Toy Biz figures, which happened to include the Cable variant, which I didn’t already have.  This figure’s goofy for sure.  Definitely not Toy Biz’s strongest take on the guy, which is kind of a shame, since it’s sort of his most distinctive look.  He does have a certain charm to him, so I’ll give him that.

4 responses

  1. This was my first Cable and it was the earlier variant. The hinged arm did always kind of bug me, but I guess they figured with the shoulder pads he wouldn’t be getting much forward and backward movement, and they didn’t want the gun arm really wide out like the chopping arm? Another thing I always though was odd was how the peg on his gun and the hole in his hand have a flat side, so he can’t really hold other weapons besides what he came with. I also had the 10″ version of this guy, who has much more conventional articulation articulation and his head seems less narrow, but they didn’t quite nail the one thing the 5″ guy gets absolutely perfect – the sculpt of Cable’s hair. The paint tends to be a little sloppy on it, but the sculpt is like, 1:1 how Liefeld drew Cable’s hair initially. Now I have both versions opened, plus the blue and yellow repaint that came in some special store multipack, and a carded early glow in the dark one with a Cable trading card in the package where he’s in practically the same outfit. And he’s not even my favorite Cable Toy Biz did. I now have all of them, pre-Legends, thirteen at 5″, three at 10″(I especially love the one on the space Wolverine body), the little Metal Guy, and the goofy projector. I’m not even sure why I gravitated towards Cable so much as a kid, I guess it was his general Terminator vibe

    • I think the arm articulation and odd shape of the handle may both be due to a fear that the gun of ridiculous size might cause balancing issues? I don’t know. You’re absolutely right that this figure gets the Liefeld Cable hair down right. That blue and yellow repaint was in an FAO Schwarz 4-pack, with repaints of Deadpool, Fitzroy, and Forge. I have the Deadpool, but none of the others. I need to track them down.

      • Okay, I couldn’t remember where that repaint was from, I bought him off eBay a few years back and he came in a plain white box in a plastic baggie. He’s a neat variant in a still familiar color scheme for Cable.

Leave a comment