#4040: Green Goblin

GREEN GOBLIN

MARVEL SUPER HEROES (TOY BIZ)

“Green Goblin is one of Spider-Man’s oldest and deadliest enemies. With his jet-powered Goblin Glider, mayhem-making pumpkin bombs and his terrifying cackling laugh, Green Goblin spreads doom, destruction and panic wherever he lies. When it comes to making Spider-Man’s life miserable, nobody does it better than Green Goblin. What makes him so terrifying and so hard to capture is the fact that there’s no rhyme or reason to Green Goblin’s crime sprees. No one, not even Spider-Man, can predict what he’ll do next!”

Last week, I discussed the rotating “nemesis” duties of Doc Ock and Green Goblin.  With Norman Osborn dead for almost 20 years by that point (and still a couple of years off from a resurrection as well), and Harry mostly retired from the role, Goblin was rather out of the spotlight when Toy Biz launched their Marvel lines in the ‘90s, hence Doc Ock serving as Spidey’s main antagonist in the debut assortment.  Even in death/retirement, you can’t totally ignore Green Goblin, though, so he made his way into the next assortment, with a figure I’m looking at today!

THE FIGURE ITSELF

Green Goblin was released in Series 2 of Toy Biz’s Marvel Super Heroes line, which hit in 1991.  This was Goblin’s fourth time in proper figure form (following his 8-inch Mego, as well as the Comic Action and Pocket Heroes figures at the smaller scale), and the first of a handful he’d get during Toy Biz’s run.  He’s in his classic attire, because at this point, there wasn’t much variation at all for the character, even across three different people occupying the mantle.  As such, it could really be Norman, Harry, or even, if you’re feeling especially obscure, Bart Hamilton.  Because somebody needs to show poor Bart some love.  The figure stands just shy of 5 inches tall and has 7 points of articulation.  On the movement front, it’s worth noting that his right shoulder’s a bit restricted by his action feature, which allows him to throw his pumpkin bomb.  You can still get it to hold poses with some doing, but it’s a little more work.  Goblin’s sculpt was totally new to him, and would remain unique to this figure….which is probably for the best.  It’s a wonky sculpt, for sure.  It’s playing more into the cartoony and exaggerated side of the character, and it ultimately trades all of the potential menace for looking weird.  He just ultimately looks goofy.   I do like the texturing on the scales for his arms and legs (though personally I do find them to end up looking a bit busy when compared to the figure from the Animated Series tie-in), but his proportions are super weird, with a very narrow (and high) waist, very wide hips, and arms that are different lengths.  His right hand is contorted into some sort of odd flipper thing, meant to hold the pumpkin bomb, but it doesn’t quite work out very practically.  There are two variations on this sculpt, in a similar fashion to Thor, with or without a lever to launch the arm action.  Mine is the one without, which looks a bit nicer.  His color work is perfectly fine.  Nothing particularly crazy, but he does all the things he’s supposed to, and the application is mostly alright, apart from some slight slop around some of the edges.  Goblin is packed with his glider and a pumpkin bomb.  They’re both nice enough pieces, but he can’t very easy hold the bomb, and there’s not really a way to balance him on the glider without it falling over.  But, for just playing around, it’s not bad.

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

The only Green Goblin in my collection in the ‘90s was the Famous Covers one, which is honestly one of that line’s stand-out pieces.  I eventually got a 5-inch Goblin early in the ‘00s, courtesy of a sale at a comic store, but that was the Animated Series one.  That one’s honestly pretty fantastic, and I had no real need to track down this one until I got more into properly completing the run.  This one’s rather new to me, as I got him late last year in a larger batch of early-run Toy Biz figures.  He’s not great, but also, I think he’s got more quirks to him than last week’s Doc Ock, so I ultimately enjoy him a bit more.  The Animated one is still the definitive take, but this one’s an interesting stepping stone to better things.

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