Paul’s Peg > “A Brief Retrospective on Lightsaber Toting Figures” or “Kids Have it Too Easy”

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Paul

While going through my collection of open Star Wars figures, it suddenly came to me that kids have it really great when it comes to having figures to clash lightsabers. Back in my day there were only three official Star Wars figures that had lightsabers: Obi-Wan, Luke Skywalker, and Darth Vader. You may have had multiple versions of Luke, but if you wanted to reenact a lightsaber scene that didn’t involve coloring a toothpick and putting it in the hands of a Stormtrooper, then you had to go with those three choices. These days, there’s a virtual cornucopia of lightsaber wielding figures to choose from.

vintageforceusers

Before we proceed let me pause for a moment. I’m not saying that kids couldn’t make other figures into evil or good lightsaber battlers. Kids have tons of imagination and can include other figures into their play worlds. Hell, I literally had Steelheart of the Silver Hawks marry Green Lantern at one point in my childhood for one of my “plots” and I also managed to use Encyclopedias to fill in for the Death Star trash compactor. What I’m getting at here is that there’s one thing between having fun as a kid by mixing all your figures and another where you’re trying to fit the stories you make up into the same world of the movies you’ve seen roughly a billion times.

darthmaul

Thanks to the Star Wars prequels, that kind of play world has really opened up a whole world of possibilities for kids. Love them or hate them, they did a lot in the way of having more lightsaber-battling heroes and villains. With the release of Phantom Menace, three main lightsaber wielding characters and subsequent toys came out: Darth Maul, Obi-Wan, and Qui-Gon Jin. Darth Maul in fact was an incredible addition to the Star Wars roster of characters, simple because it was the first time there was an official red lightsaber wielder in a Star Wars movie who wasn’t Darth Vader. Even better for kids was the fact that he had a double bladed staff-like lightsaber. But it didn’t end there, because there were figures of characters like Mace Windu and Adi Gallia with only the promise of more figures on the way due to the fact that Jedi were plentiful in the prequels.

With all these new Force users that featured lightsabers, you’d things would have been perfect, but no that was not the case. Now there were tons of good guys with sabers, but you still only had Darth Maul representing a saber-wielding villain. Sure there was Darth Sideous in The Phantom Menace, but he didn’t come with a lightsaber. The next prequel film, Attack of the Clones, added even more good guys, like an older Anakin Skywalker, Obi-Wan, more Jedi Council members, and some cool alien Jedi. Still, the only new lightsaber wielding bad guy was Darth Tyranus, a.k.a. Lord Dooku. Even if he could team up with the formally deceased Darth Maul and a time displaced Darth Vader, there were plenty of Jedi to overwhelm these Dark Side users in the toy world.

concepttrooper

There was a brief exception to this rule with the release of a Concept Stormtrooper from the Expanded Universe. Kids could play with a proto-Stormtrooper that actually carried a lightsaber (and a shield!), but judging by the figure’s rarity it’s price on the secondary market, it’s hard to imaging that this figure ended up in the hands of kids. Another earlier bad guy release was the Expanded Universe Emperor Palpatine from Dark Horse Comics series Dark Empire who again was extremely scarce in stores.

It wasn’t until the advent of the original Clone Wars cartoon and rise in popularity of Star Wars comic pack figures did kids get a lot more bad guys for their lightsaber fighting. General Grievous, though not a true Force user, was introduced as a multiple lightsaber wielding villain in the first Clone Wars cartoon. Also introduced in the Clone Wars was a character by the name of Asajj Ventress. The Clone Wars led right into the release of Revenge of the Sith. In ROTS no new evil force users were introduced, but it did give us the first ever on screen view of Darth Sidous/The Emperor armed with a lightsaber, which of course led to the first Emperor toy to come packaged with a lightsaber.

Also as a side note, General Grevious’s personal robot guards were seen in in both the original Clone Wars cartoons and in ROTS using weapons that could effectively block lightsaber attacks. This added a little more variety to the figures who could spar with Jedi.

generalgrievousanimated

The floodgates opened after Revenge of the Sith. While evil Force users didn’t become super common, there have been a lot more of them released through comic packs in the last few years because in Star Wars comics and the books there are evil Jedi everywhere. There were Antares Draco and Ganner Krieg, and the awesomely-cool-looking Darth Talon (who came with a distant relative of Luke Skywalker). Other sets like the Evolution three packs of figures have brought us the evil versions of characters from the video games The Force Unleashed and Knights of the Old Republic II. Darth Revan and Darth Malak from the first Knights of the Old Republic game were released on single cards, but like what happened with the concept Stormtrooper it’s doubtful a whole lot of Revins or Malaks made it into the hands of kids.

One of the coolest things about these Expanded Universe figures is that many of the good and bad guys/gals can be more fluid in the toy world, meaning they aren’t grounded as deeply in set plots as their film counterparts. I’m sure there are a lot of kids that read comic books, but there are probably a lot of kids whose first exposure to characters like Darth Talon is in the comic pack. These figures can fight along side or against characters from wholly different eras much easier than say a match up between Darth Maul and Luke Skywalker. Another example is that we still haven’t seen Asajj Ventress die on screen, whereas the end of Darth Maul is pretty much set unless you kick up your imagination a few more notches.

It’s a good time to be a kid into Star Wars when it comes to a variety of characters and it can only get better. There’s more CGI Clone Wars episodes next year and then there’s the eventual live action Star Wars TV series, not to mention more figures from the Expanded Universe to provide plenty of new fodder for lightsaber wielding heroes and villains for kids… or they can just color a bunch of toothpicks.

darksidefigures

I just want everyone to note that:

1. I realize the lightsaber colors on the above pic are all wrong. I… lost the sabers that went to the EU characters in the move.

2. They are standing on G.I. Joe stands. I’ve got way more sitting around that will ever have Joes on at one time, so why not use them for Star Wars figures?

Paul is a layabout by day and a freelance writer by night. His former work can be seen on the toy collecting blog ToyBender.com. His current writing can be found in guest posts around the web and at the entertainment website The Robots Pajamas.com.

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Posted: June 2, 2009 in Paul's Peg

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This item has 11 comments (now closed):

  1. Philip Reed

    06.02.2009 8.32

    I always gave Boba Fett a lightsaber because of the one stashed in the action figure’s pants. At least, I always thought it looked like he had a lightsaber.

    There’s a comic out there somewhere in which a cloned Maul fights Vader. It’s a pretty short story but I can’t remember which book it’s in.

  2. googum

    06.02.2009 9.03

    Phillip,
    It was an issue of Star Wars Tales, but I don’t recall what number. In the opening editorial, a batch of old and new action figures are shown for planning purposes…
    Nice post, Paul. But I’m a 6-inch collector (give or take) and would kill for several dozen in-scale lightsabers. And phasers.

  3. Drunken Fist

    06.02.2009 9.45

    Only had Darth Vader, Han Solo, and Jabba the Hutt when I was a kid, as far as SW figures were concerned, so there weren’t too many lightsaber battles among my toys. Sometimes I wanted Skeletor to have a lightsaber to fight He-Man, though, and I had a thin neon pink bendy straw I always used for that. :) I crinkled the end of it up to fit in his hand, then put some tape on it for stability. Worked pretty well!

  4. Monte

    06.02.2009 10.19

    Great timing with this post, for my purposes at least; I just converted to Star Wars fandom a couple weeks ago.

    Phantom Menace = very underrated.

    I would kill my mother for eight-inch Star Wars figures with Sigma-style articulation…

  5. clark

    06.02.2009 11.14

    I was lucky because my mom bought colored toothpicks, so no extra work on my part was required.

  6. Philip Reed

    06.02.2009 11.29

    I remember using colored toothpicks as lightsabers. But then, I also remember trying to build a skiff out of a cereal box and a hell of a lot of paper, glue, and markers.

  7. Esbat

    06.02.2009 16.41

    Can’t wait for that “Old Wounds” Maul to come out.

  8. Newton Gimmick

    06.02.2009 16.42

    I hate the new “flared” lightsabers. They look silly.

  9. Poe

    06.02.2009 16.56

    Now that I think of it, yeah, I did use those translucent “sword” cocktail toothpicks often found in bars and whatnot as ersatz lightsabers (not that I was hanging around in bars at age 6–I’m pretty sure you could buy those at grocery stores).

  10. Andrew

    06.02.2009 18.17

    Yeah, you can buy cocktail sword tooth picks at grocery stores.

  11. Ant

    06.02.2009 20.47

    i, too used the old toothpick saber, but i stuck it in the base of a Lego Technic piece adn stuck it in the hands of a character who had a large grip.

    “because there were figures of characters like Mace Windu and Adi Gallia with only the promise of more figures on the way due to the fact that Jedi were plentiful in the prequels”

    – on that topic, I remeber when that film came out, and, like you mention there were figures of Windu and Gallia, and later on there were figs of people like Ki Adi Munidi (my fav), Plo Koon, etc. the thing to note about these characters were that the sabers that came with them were all crazy colours. Mundi was my fav because he was like a non-main character jedi, my first, and his saber was a dark purple. i think adi gallia’s one was pink, Plo Koon’s was orange, Sasee Tiin’s was yellow, think, etc. the thing about that is that kids at that time were given a whole bunch of varied saber colours, which was interesting and cool. then Episode 2 came out and rendered ALL of those colours as non-canon, and only blue, green and purple remained for the good guys.