cardinal biggles said:
JacksonArcher said:
This sucks. Playmates' figures and toys ... generally, were awful. Art Asylum finally were producing figures and toys of genuine quality and I was very hopeful (and to an extent even expecting) that they would get awarded the license for this film -- apparently not.
Oh well. Who knows, maybe they can produce some decent sculpts, but I'm extremely skeptical...
Not to stereotype anyone, but, well... I'm going to stereotype people.
I
miss the old Galoob and Playmates lines. Yes, the likenesses were awful. Yes, the Playmates figures all looked like bowlegged cowboys when you tried to sit them down. But they were TOYS! You could PLAY WITH THEM! You know, PLAY, that thing people used to do with toys before they became 30-year-old fanboys?
Art Asylum makes wonderful figures. I'm not disputing that. But they don't make toys, they make poseable statues. Their stuff is not meant to be played with, it's meant to be put on your shelf and lovingly admired.
For all their faults, Playmates made toys that were meant to be played with, and there was a significant kids' audience during the line's TNG heyday.
I want to see kids interested in Trek again. I want to see kids chase each other around the backyard with their toy phasers. I want them to have Kirk and Spock chase the bad guy up a huge mountain of throw pillows and sofa cushions stacked on the living room floor. I don't see kids doing that with anything made by AA.
That's not to say there couldn't be separate lines here -- one for the fanboys and one for the kids -- but ultimately I vote for toys for the kiddies, because THEY'RE the next generation (pun sort of intended) of Trekkies this film is hoping to create.