#3710: April O’Neil

APRIL O’NEIL — SORCERESS FROM CHANNEL 6 NEWS

TURTLES OF GRAYSKULL (MATTEL)

You know, I had a pretty good run of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles reviews last month, but it sort of fell off for October.  It’s kind of the nature of the beast; I don’t actually buy *that* much TMNT stuff.  But, it’s okay, because I’ve got a new TMNT thing!  And it’s not *just* TMNT, either!  It’s also Masters of the Universe, because we’ve got another crossover bit up in here!  ….Sorry, that felt wrong and forced.  I promise not to do it again.  Anyway, I’m jumping back over to Turtles of Grayskull, Mattel’s TMNT/MOTU crossover line.  I looked at the Casey last month, and because I’m a guy that loves my pairings, I’m taking a look at their take on the other human ally (and honestly the more important one) April O’Neil!

THE FIGURE ITSELF

April O’Neil – Sorceress From Channel 6 News is part of the fourth assortment of the Turtles of Grayskull line.  She’s one of the two Turtles-centered characters in the set, the other being a revisit on Leonardo.  The figure stands about 5 1/4 inches tall and she has 28 points of articulation.  She’s my first direct interaction with the female Origins base body, which is a fair bit different from its male counterpart in build, of course, but not drastically so in terms of articulation set-up.  Honestly, it’s not bad.  While Casey relied more on just the TMNT side of things for his design, April is going more the Donnie route, and getting merged with a specific MOTU concept, in this case the Sorceress, as is detailed pretty well in the included mini-comic.  It’s a solid merging of the two designs, specifically calling on the ’80s incarnations of both in particular, so that it really feels like ’80s April taking on the ’80s Sorceress’s powers.  The sculpt captures the whole set-up pretty decently.  There’s certainly a degree of hokeyness to it, but that’s kind of exactly the aim with this whole bit.  I do find it generally a more refined sculpt than most of her male counterparts, which is cool.  The color work is very bright and generally clean.  The face looks to be printed.  Mine’s got a stray black mark under the eye, but that’s really my only issue.  I quite like the pattern on the tabard; that’s a lot of fun.  She’s packed with a pair of wings, done up in the colors to match the vintage Sorceress, which plug pretty securely into her collar piece.  She’s also got a big hammer-style version of the Sorceress’s scepter, which I really do love.

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

I knew once I snagged Casey, I wanted to get an April to go with.  So, when Casey arrived, I confidently grabbed the red-headed warrior woman of the assortment to go with him…before realizing I had *actually* grabbed a Teela, and that April was in the next assortment.  Fortunately, it wasn’t really a long wait.  April’s a solid addition to the concept.  She’s got a different approach to the crossover than Casey, but I definitely can dig it.

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.

#3651: April O’Neil

APRIL O’NEIL

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: THE MOVIE (NECA)

“Also following the city’s unprecedented crime wave is intrepid Channel 3 reporter April O’Neil, who eventually finds herself face-to-face with the Turtles when Raphael rescues her from Foot Clan ninjas.”

NECA and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles go together like…two things that sort of go together, but there are sort of complications to it, and also one of those things also goes with a bunch of other things, so it’s not really all that special when you get down to it?  Okay, admittedly not the cleanest metaphor there.  Back in 2007 when NECA did the first comic-style Turtles, Playmates had kind of a stranglehold on the license, so it was kind of a big deal.  These days, it feels like everyone has some form of the license, so NECA’s offerings are just sort of part of the pack.  Not helping matters in their favor is their reliance on exclusives for so very much of their line.  The movie-based figures started at GameStop, but transferred to Walmart, which was rather frustrating, but is now just sort of the background noise of existence.  Or something.  Anyway, back in 2022, they finally added the live-action version of the Turtles’ best human pal, April O’Neil to the line, and here I am, reviewing it.

THE FIGURE ITSELF

April O’Neil was released in early 2022 as a part of the Walmart-exclusive Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie line.  While Walmart had initially been taking only two-packs, April was a single release, done in NECA’s “Ultimate” styling, something that has become a little more commonplace as the line has progressed. The figure stands 7 inches tall and she has 32 points of articulation.  Compared to some of the other figures in the line, she’s a little restricted, especially the legs, due to the skirt piece.  The hair is also a little restricting on the neck, but not nearly as much as I’d expected it to be.  The sculpt, handled by Adrienne Smith and Trevor Grove, is a solid offering.  The likeness of actress Judith Hoag is quite strong on both of the included head sculpts, though I think it might be just a touch better on the more neutral expression.  Her hair in the movie is very much a remnant of that late ’80s vibe, and it’s the sort of style that’s difficult to translate.  That said, it’s not badly done here; it’s a little thick in some spots, but it generally reads the right way for her appearance in the film.  The body sculpt is respectable enough.  The proportions seem like a decent match for Hoag, and her outfit is well detailed.  I don’t really dig how the articulation is worked into some spots, especially the knees, but it’s generally not bad.  April’s paint work is certainly ambitious, with painted patterns on her shirt and skirt, as well as accenting on her hair, and a fully detailed face.  The patterning actually turns out very well, and is nice and consistent.  The faces, likewise, are very lifelike, and help the sculpt in selling Hoag’s likeness.  My only issue is that the joints on her knees and ankles are molded in her regular flesh tone and painted to match the stockings on her legs, resulting in the paint sheering off pretty much the first time those joints are used, leaving her with rather differently colored joints.  That’s a real bummer.  April is packed with the two head sculpts mentioned above, as well as three pairs of hands (gripping, relaxed, and a fist/pointing combo), her purse, a stack of frozen pizza boxes, Raph’s sai, a microphone with a posable cable, and a small black display stand.  There was also a yellow raincoat piece made available for the first batch of people to get the figure through NECA’s online store, but I obviously didn’t get one of those.

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

The NECA TMNT figures aren’t what I’d call “fun” to collect.  I got the four turtles because Jess was working at Gamestop at the time, and really only got Casey through luck and connections.  April was really the only other figure I wanted, but, again, the whole process of getting one was not thrilling.  I wound up getting her quite a while after the fact, thanks to a sealed one getting traded into All Time right as her aftermarket price was bottoming out, giving me an easy in. Yay?

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.

#3327: April O’Neil

APRIL O’NEIL

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ULTIMATES (SUPER 7)

Over the years, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles have gathered quite an entourage of allies and other associates, but the very first was April O’Neil.  Originally a computer programmer working for Baxter Stockman, April would later be re-worked into a news reporter for the first cartoon, with the live-action movies following suit.  She’s been a number of things in the various re-works over the years, but she’s always been a fixture of the franchise, no matter the form (unless it’s The Next Mutation, but I don’t wanna talk about that).  Unsurprisingly, she’s part of most of the toy coverage as well, including Super 7’s Ultimates.

THE FIGURE ITSELF

April O’Neil is part of Wave 3 of Super 7’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Ultimates line.  The line-up also included the standard Mikey, Metalhead, and Rocksteady.  April is seen here in her classic yellow jumpsuit, patterned after her vintage Playmates counterpart (who was in turn pretty consistent with April’s original animated incarnation).  The figure stands about 6 inches tall and she has 28 points of articulation.  The articulation scheme for this line is pretty consistent across the board, so April’s movement is generally pretty similar to both Casey and Ace.  The neck movement’s kind of restricted by the hair, and the elbows aren’t able to do a full 90 degrees due to the construction of the sleeves.  April’s sculpt is unique to her thus far (though repaints probably wouldn’t be the craziest concept, especially if they want to follow the vintage line’s lead), and it, like the rest of the figures I’ve looked at up to now, is taking the Playmates figure and up-scaling and adding a little more detail to it.  It’s a pretty decent sculpt; she definitely looks a fair bit like the old toy, albeit with some slightly tweaked proportions.  There are actually two different styles of head included, one based on April’s original 1988 figure, and the other based on the 1990 release, which was a little more glammed up and in-line with the original cartoon look.  They’re internally consistent enough to look like the same person, with just tweaks to the hair for the most part.  I can definitely dig the option, and I like aspects of both sculpts.  April’s color scheme is more closely patterned after the 1988 figure, since she lacks the extra orange accents of the 1990 release.  She’s got the blue striping on the jumpsuit, as well as the Turtles logo on her back, which is pretty cool.  The two heads get two slightly different color schemes for the hair, but more or less the same detailing for the face.  The cheeks are a little bit heavy on the red accenting, but otherwise the paint work’s pretty solid.  April gets a rather impressive selection of accessories, including four pairs of hands (fists, open gesture, grip, and trigger finger), a hand gun, three throwing stars, a flashlight, a microphone, two versions of the shell phone,  an opening brief case, a camera (with articulated legs and a spot for hiding her gun, just like the vintage one), a third head (patterned on the ’88 style sculpt) with a headset, and a weapons tree like her original release included.  The extra head actually winds up being my favorite of the three included; I just really dig how the headset looks.

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

I’ve been desperately trying to get an April and a Casey in one consistent style since this whole collector-oriented Turtles lines thing started.  I struck out with NECA in both styles, and by the time I’d finally settled on the Super 7 version of Casey, April had kind of come and gone from most places.  Fortunately, back in the fall of last year, All Time got an almost complete run of the Super 7 Turtles, loose, which gave me easy access to an April to go along with Casey.  She’s not quite as much fun as Casey, but I like her more than I’d expected.

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.

#0582: April O’Neil

APRIL O’NEIL

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES MINIMATES

 

AprilOneilMM1A while back, I reviewed the majority of the first series of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Minimates. I picked up that set from K-Mart, so it didn’t include a few of the figures that showed up in other assortments. Of the three figures not represented there, two were “Mutagen” variants of the Turtles, so I didn’t feel an undying need to track them down. However, I was missing out on April O’Neil, who’s a rather important piece of the Turtles mythos. I finally got around to tracking her down, so let’s have a look at the figure, shall we?

THE FIGURE ITSELF

AprilOneilMM2April is part of the first series of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Minimates. As I noted above, she wasn’t part of the K-Mart assortment, however, she was in both the Toys R Us and specialty assortments. At TRU, she was packed with Raphael, while she was packed alone in a blind bag for the specialty assortment. For posterity, it should be noted that my figure is from the specialty release, so she doesn’t have the TRU’s keychain piece. The figure stands roughly 2 ½ inches tall and features the usual 14 points of articulation. Just like the rest of the line, April is based on her appearance in the current Nickolodeon cartoon. She’s probably got one of the more unique looks from the show (what with having to keep her appearance “modern” and all), but it retains a lot of the character’s signature traits. April is built on the standard Minimate body, with an add-on piece for her hair. The hair is new to this figure, and it does a very nice job of translating April’s show appearance to the ‘mate form. It’s simple, but effective. The rest of the design is handled via paint, which is….mixed at best. The detail lines are generally pretty good. They’re sharp and relatively clean and do a good job of conveying what April’s supposed to look like. The real trouble, like with so many of the other figures in this series, lies with the base paint. The colors themselves are all fine, but the application is pretty bad. Most of the edges are seriously wavy and uneven, and many spots, such as the eyes and lips, don’t stay within the detail lines. The worst paint is definitely on the hair piece, where the head band is merely hovering in the general area of the sculpted piece, with incredibly uneven edges. It’s pretty bad. April includes a fan and a clear display stand. A sword or something would have been nice, but these are both acceptable pieces.

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

I ended up buying April loose from Luke’s Toy Store, while ordering a bunch of other figures. I’ve been meaning to get her for several months now, but kept putting it off. In my defense, she’s hardly the most exciting figure in the line. I’m glad I finally got her, as she’s a key piece of the collection, but I can’t say my less than excited opinion of the figure has really changed. She’s an okay figure, but she’s more heavily hit by the bad paint than others in the line due to her design already being a slightly boring one. At the very least, I think it’s worth noting that April’s design does work a little better in ‘mate form than it does in any other figure form, so the figure has that going for it.