C-3PO
STAR WARS: POWER OF THE FORCE II (KENNER)
Last week’s Star Wars review was difficult for me to get into, but it was Palpatine, and I don’t much care for him. Maybe today’s will be easier, because it’s C-3PO, and I certainly find him preferable to Palpatine. My last 3PO review was almost a year ago, and there was a five year gap before that, so I guess he’s a bit infrequent here. He’s got one of the lowest review counts of all of the main OT characters, but I think that’s less about me not liking him, and more about him having less variety of looks, especially as he advances in the narrative. Kenner kept tinkering with different ideas for variants of him during their tenure with the license, and his penultimate release came from their obsession with coins, which has now become *my* obsession with coins.
THE FIGURE ITSELF
C-3PO was added to Kenner’s Star Wars: Power of the Force II line in 1998, as one of the seven figures making up the TRU-exclusive “Millennium Minted Coins” set. He’s more all-purpose than most, aside from Chewbacca, who is similarly not tied to a specific film in the Trilogy. The figure is just under 3 3/4 inches tall and he has 6 points of articulation. This 3PO represents a sort of “best-of” approach to the available molds for the character. While the original figure wasn’t *bad*, especially compared to other early line figures, he also wasn’t super accurate in terms of proportions. This one aims to be more accurate, and uses the upper half of the removable limbs 3PO (with the arms modified to stay in place) and the lower half of the one from the “Purchase of the Droids” set. The end result is the most accurate the line got, sculpturally, to how he looks in the bulk of the movies, which is actually pretty cool. Beyond that, his color work breaks from those two figures to go back to the approach of the
earliest 3POs, which is vac-metalizing for that proper chrome finish. They even went the extra mile and made his lower right leg silver, something missed on previous chromed figures. Sure, the foot’s *also* silver, when it should be gold, but it’s a cool idea, right? Well, it was at the time. Unfortunately, it’s not an idea that time has been kind to, and almost 30 years later, the gold coloring is all sorts of flaking, and really just not long for this world. There’s otherwise some pretty great paint work on the not chrome parts, with proper coloring on all the wires and the under sides of his hands. C-3PO is packed with a display stand and the requisite coin, showing him and R2 on Tatooine.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
3PO was probably the figure in this set I was most looking forward to, because of the aforementioned “best of” approach. I was quite excited to open him up when my set came in…and more than a little disappointed when he started flaking the second I took him out. It’s a shame, because he looks very cool, but I don’t dare touch him, for fear that he gets worse. As it stands, the removable limbs figure is still kind of the definitive take from this line, and this guy’s just a spare.

