#3417: Franklin Richards & Valeria Richards

FRANKLIN RICHARDS & VALERIA RICHARDS

MARVEL LEGENDS (HASBRO)

“Genius children of Fantastic Four’s Reed and Sue Richards, Franklin and Valeria Richards explore the wonders of the multiverse with their Moloid friend Turg as part of Marvel’s First Family”

Comics, by there very nature as a serialized medium with only so much space to tell in a given installment and slower pace of release relative to the real world, are almost always required to move at their own pace.  For long-spanning universes, such as Marvel and DC, this requires the use of a sliding timeline, where things happen at a different pace in-universe.  Marvel, in particular, likes to have milestone moments to showcase the characters are moving forward.  One of the biggest ones for them, especially in their earlier years, was Franklin Richards, the son of Mr. Fantastic and the Invisible Woman.  Reed and Sue began in Fantastic Four as simply dating, then got married, and eventually had Franklin, all under the tenure of their creators Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, in their first decade of existence.  Franklin is a rare character that was born within the narrative, who has actually gotten to grow up in-universe, going from infant, to toddler, to child, to teenager.  Sure, it took him 50 years to get to being a teenager, but, still.  Along the way, Reed and Sue had a second child, Val, who, like her brother, has also gotten to grow up, albeit at a slightly faster pace.  The two of them aren’t exactly ripe for toy coverage, but they’re not entirely without it either, which is how I can be talking about them right now.

THE FIGURES THEMSELVES

Franklin Richards and Valeria Richards are a Fan Channel-exclusive Marvel Legends two-pack, capitalizing on the increased profile of the characters following Dan Slott’s revival run for the FF.  The two of them are based on their more modernized teen looks, with outfits to match the rest of the team as we saw them in the Super Skrull Series.  Or other versions of the team as well, since they actually kept these suits past the main team ditching them as the run progressed.

FRANKLIN RICHARDS

Franklin’s had a surprising number of figures, in that the number he’s had before this one isn’t zero.  In fact, this isn’t even Franklin’s first time as a Marvel Legend, since he was included in Toy Biz’s FF boxed set back in 2004.  It’s the first time Hasbro’s tackled him, though, so there’s that.  The figure stands 6 1/4 inches tall and he has 34 points of articulation.  Franklin is based on the Amazing Fantasy Spidey body, which is honestly a fantastic base body that hasn’t gotten much play thus far.  It’s perhaps a bit too tall and too muscular to *really* be spot-on for Franklin, even as a teenager, but a proper base body would have required a completely new sculpt, and Franklin’s not the sort of character that really warrants that.  So, I guess we’re just making do with this one.  Franklin gets a new head sculpt, based on his post-teen-angst-driven-dying-of-his-hair look (which, per Dan Slot, was done so that Franklin wouldn’t get confused with Johnny in long shots of the team), which is a very different look for him, but it’s also his current one, so I can dig it.  It looks the part, based on the art, and adapted to the usual Legends stylings.  His color work is pretty closely matched to the modern FF costumes, which is proper for his design.  The actual painting is one the limited side for the uniform, but what’s there is cleanly handled.  He’s got the standard printed face as well, which works pretty well.  Franklin is packed with two sets of hands, in fists and gripping, plus the two beakers we got with Lizard and Beast, as well as a pair of blast and a pair of smoking effects, which are compatible with the tops of the beakers.

VALERIA RICHARDS

While Franklin’s had his share of figures, Val has thus far been without any at all.  Admittedly, she was a baby and a toddler for a good while, so not quite as toyetic.  But she’s got one now, and that’s what really matters, right?  The figure stands about 5 3/4 inches tall and she has 29 points of articulation.  Val is built on the Spider-Girl base body, which, like we saw with Franklin, does seem maybe a touch too mature for Val.  Again, though, she’d need a totally unique base, so we’re again working with what we’ve got.  It’s a good base body, at least, so it’s not the worst thing ever.  Val gets a new head sculpt, which, like Franklin, is a good approximation of the art, while also fitting her in with the rest of the line.  There’s also a familial resemblance between her and Franklin, which is certainly appropriate.  Val’s color work is pretty similar to Franklin’s, with the expected change-ups for the head and hair, of course.  Val is packed with three sets of hands, in fists and two styles of gripping, as well as the data pad from the AIM Supreme, and her teammate Turg the Moloid.  Turg is re-using the base and dome from What If…? Scott Lang.  I was a little bummed to see she didn’t get her goggles, as they were a pretty key part of her look (and they differentiated her from Sue in much the same way that Franklin’s hair differentiated him from Johnny).

THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION

I’ve had this odd sort of fascination with Franklin Richards figures since I was a kid.  I guess maybe I just really connected with him at the time?  I don’t know.  I do know that one of the first comics runs that I actually actively kept up with was Waid and Wieringo’s Fantastic Four, and Franklin and Val are both pretty important to that run.  I also really enjoyed how Slott worked them into his run.  This pack is perhaps not a star piece of the collection or anything, but they’re a fun way of getting two pretty important supporting players, and I’m definitely down for that.

Thanks to my sponsors over at All Time Toys for setting me up with these figures to review.  If you’re looking for cool toys both old and new, please check out their website and their eBay storefront.