CHEETARA
THUNDERCATS (2011)
You thought I was done with the Thundercats reviews, didn’t you? Well, so did I. But, I really don’t know how to quit buying action figures, and the more figures I have from any given line, the more reason I have to say “one more couldn’t hurt.” Back in April of last year, I looked at Lion-O, Tygra, and the Tower of Omens from the 2011 re-launch of Thundercats. Today, I look at yet another member of the team, Cheetara. No points for guessing what cat she was.
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Like Lion-O and Tygra, Cheetara was released as part of the first series of basic small-scale Thundercats figures from Bandai. The figure is about 4 inches tall and she has 17 points of articulation. After some genuinely impressive work with the articulation on Lion-O and Tygra, Cheetara is a real step down. She gains bicep swivels lacked by the other two, but at the cost of wrist and ankle movement, and on top of that, the bicep joints are really ugly. Also, instead of the nice hinged hips from the prior figures, Cheetara gets v-hips. Oh goody. My faaaaaavorite. They seem to have attempted to make up for the v-hips by adding a pair of swivel joints to each thigh. The first set of swivels are sort of the reverse ange of the v-hips, and the second is a more straight lateral cut. In theory, they’re supposed to mimic the movement of a normal t-joint, I guess, but in practice, they’re just sort of a big mess of twisting meat. And, they’re pretty hideous to boot. But hey, I’m glad they didn’t ruin the figure by giving her those no good hinged hips from the other two figures; that would have been the worst. Okay, I’ve ragged on the articulation, but what about the sculpt. Well, for one thing, it’s pretty much torn apart by all that ugly articulation. Even on its own merits, though, it seems like a step down. The head is okay, I guess, and the torso sort of tries to capture her cartoon design, but the arms and legs are just a total mess. They lack any real organic shape and seem to be out of scale with the head and torso. Her hands are the same size as her head for pete’s sake! It’s a sad state of affairs when a figure’s paint being “acceptable” is the high point of the figure, but here we are. There’s nothing really spectacular about the work, but it’s mostly pretty clean, and the colors match up well enough with the cartoon. There’s some slop in a few areas, but given the rest of this figure, it could be worse. Cheetara includes one accessory: her staff. It’s made out of soft plastic, which makes it look more like a brown spaghetti noodle than anything else. Also, since she lacks any wrist joints, she can’t really hold it very well.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
When I picked up Lion-O and Tygra two summers ago, I had also wanted to get a Cheetara, but Yesterday’s Fun didn’t have her. In the year following, they must have picked her up along the way because I got her from them last summer. She’s disappointing to say the least. I mean, I’m glad to have her, I suppose, but after being pleasantly surprised by Lion-O and Tygra, Cheetara was a sad return to form for Bandai America.
