Poe’s note: You may have noticed I’ve started using larger photos in my reviews. I thought people might enjoy the higher resolution and detail, but if they’re proving to take too long to load or see all at once on your screen, please let me know in the comments.
Spend any time reading various toy-related blogs and forums and you encounter a lot of complaining, nitpicking and so forth. It’s easy to lose sight of the bigger picture: we finally got He-Ro! (Oh, and movie-based Ghostbusters figures.)
In 1987, Mattel’s Masters of the Universe, once master of the action figure boys’ toys aisle, was on its last legs (due as much to corporate mismanagement as any true waning of popularity). Mattel’s designers tried to inject some life back into the brand with the Powers of Grayskull concept, set in a prehistoric “Pre-Eternia” (nicknamed Preternia by fans) long before He-Man’s time, when dinosaurs roamed the earth and evil stalked the land in the form of the Snake Men.
Some of the Powers of Grayskull toys made it into stores, such as the incredibly awesome Tyrantisaurus Rex (which I owned and, later, painted red to make it into Devil Dinosaur…man, I wish I still had that thing), but none of the human figures made it to retail, including the main character, He-Ro. However, photos of these figures did appear in product catalogs, which eventually made the rounds among fans, and thus He-Ro passed into MOTU legendry.
According to the licensing guide for Powers of Grayskull, He-Ro’s real name was originally “Gray,” and as a teenager he was granted mysterious sorcerous abilities after an adventure in a cave (paging Dr. Freud!). There was also some hints among the various materials and from interviews with designers that He-Ro was intended to be He-Man’s ancestor, a role that was changed to King Grayskull in the 2002 cartoon series.
The brand managers at Mattel are slowly developing a new canon for Masters of the Universe Classics, incorporating bits and pieces from every incarnation of MOTU to date. To make his story fit–particularly when the mythos (muthos?) incorporates the very similar King Grayskull–they created a very different bio for He-Ro.
Packaging: He-Ro was shipped in a white mailer box, inside which is a standard MOTUC package. I’m quite relieved I didn’t have to pay for some insane talking cardboard castle this time around.
He-Ro is well-displayed in the package, although his staff is mostly hidden.
Design & Sculpt: I’ve added a pic of the original He-Ro prototype (from He-Man.org) and matched it to a similar shot I took of He-Ro, for comparison.
The Four Horsemen have done a great job as usual, updating He-Ro into the MOTUC style. There’s a good amount of first-time tooling here, including the gauntlets, boots, armor, and head. It’s all closely modeled on the prototype, with a few added details and a bit of streamlining here and there.
The overall look of He-Ro befits his “cosmic sorcerer” identity: he looks like something cooked up by Jack Kirby for the New Gods (particularly with that staff). I always enjoyed the recombinant genre aspects of MOTU, blending sword and sorcery and science fiction, and He-Ro is a much better example of it than He-Man himself.
There were a lot of concerns of He-Ro being “cross-eyed” based on the marketing photos, but in these production pieces it seems fine (he’s maybe a bit contemptative/dazed/high, but not cross-eyed). He has the same square jaw and “dry look” hair of the original figure, who seems to have been based on A-Team-era Dirk Benedict.
Plastic & Paint: The original He-Ro had vac-metallized golden chrome on his chest and boots. All that shininess added to the Jack Kirby-esque effect, and while a chromed version might have made a good variant, the softer gold used here was probably the right choice; the chrome would have clashed with the other MOTUC figures.
He-Ro is molded mostly in the same durable, smooth plastic we’ve seen on the rest of MOTUC. His armor is fairly pliable, but his cape is harder than previous MOTUC figures (not as bad as, say, DCUC Ares–more like Doctor Impossible).
His paint applications are a bit more varied and detailed than we’ve seen on most previous MOTUC figures, with blue on the greaves and gauntlets and red on the loinguard, with silver and gold rivets (um, ouch?). In a nod to the 2002 line, he also has that odd “Grayskull” logo on his cape. My figure’s logo has some scratches on it, and I’m not entirely sure whether it came that way or if it was my fault.
Articulation: He-Ro features ball joints at the shoulders and hips, hinge joints at the elbows, knees, ankles and abdomen, and swivels at the biceps, wrists, waist and calves. The ankles also have “rocker†side-to-side motion.
Accessories: He-Ro comes with the translucent blue “Sword of He,” which is speckled with silver. I think the idea might be that the sword is a physical manifestation of the blue energy force that, in the 2002 series pilot, the Elders transformed into it and placed themselves into the Power Sword. On the other hand, it could simply be the normal Power Sword glowing with energy.
He-Ro’s other accessory is his Power Staff, which is quite reminiscent of the Cosmic Key from the 1987 live-action movie (and came with the Gwildor figure). Each He-Ro comes with one of three colored gems–green, red, or purple. While I wouldn’t say the gem looks cheap, its shape and color does make it appear an awful lot like something you would have gotten with a MOTU figures in the 1980s–but I kind of like that retro feel, personally.
The four upper parts of the staff snap together at the top, and will stay that way with ease.
Quality Control: No problems.
Overall: I’ll admit, I was surprised we got He-Ro so early in MOTUC. I was fairly sure Mattel wasn’t all that interested in producing a figure that was so obscure; He-Ro never even made a full appearance in a mini-comic, much less a cartoon.
But once in a while Mattel does (pleasantly) surprise us. Not only did He-Ro turn out to be a great SDCC exclusive, but he was also relatively easy to get via Mattycollector, taking three hours to sell out. I was lukewarm about last year’s King Grayskull; I never liked the character much, mostly because he was so similar to He-Man. He-Ro, on the other hand, is one of my favorite MOTUC figures so far.
Raven Rating:
[raven 4.5]
Richard Grayson
"Not that there's anything wrong with that…" Joking aside, wouldn't it make total sense for the House of Ro and the House of Grayskull to unite their dynasties in Prince Adam, thus reawakening the ancient Power of He? Or something like that? Since the Four Horsemen said there's a larger story playing out in the bios, I've been trying to read into them as much as possible.
Dead Man Walking
@Richard Grayson: No way man, this is entirely new. It's the "King Grayskull and He-Ro were gay" discussion. Remember, you can't spell "Gray" without gay.
@Poe: Veena was the ultimate beard, but she had a side thing with a Snakeman–ladies go crazy for the quick tongue–so it was all good.
Richard Grayson
@DeadManWalking: LOL We just had to play into the old "gay He-Man" discussion didn't we?
Poe
Nothing wrong with that. Well, unless KG's wife wasn't cool with it.
Dead Man Walking
@Richard Grayson: Given He-Ro's penchant for glittery swords, tiara's an fabulous gold outfits, I dare say if he was getting laid in Preternia, it was with a dude.
Perhaps he and the perpetually oily, bondage clad, 3/4 naked muscleman, King Grayskull had a side thing going on.
DankOne
I wasn't really big on this guy for many of the same reasons mentioned above. But upon opening this figure… I'm now a fan of He-Ro even with his Ahhnold looking mug! Nice job Mattel and great review Poe! No I gotta grab the new Toyfare!
Replicant
Great review! I'm glad He-Ro finally made it into the line! I'm also glad mine doesn't look cross-eyed, that was a worry of mine! I was hoping for the purple crystal but glad I got the green, as it matches the original prototype figure! I love the detail on He-Ro, especially the gauntlets and armor! I haven't had any problems with his sword but his staff does tend to weigh down his right arm.
Poe
Looking very closely at my sword, the blue sort of pools around the circular edges of the bottom of the hilt, so it looks like it is paint. I can't find any spot where it's coming off, though.
Still, I imagine if you found the right solvent, you could get the blue off and have the "super-rare variant!" version.
Drunken Fist
I looked closely at my He-Ro's sword, and it, too is cast in clear plastic, and painted blue. There are a couple of spots on the handle where the blue is gone. I can't believe they didn't just cast it in the appropriate color. It doesn't look too bad, though.
NoisyDvL5
@Newton
I thought that you might be right about my figure being early, it is an SDCC version.
So I opened the one I bought off Matty. It's clear with blue paint too though.
I have started stripping one of the two I have now.
Richard Grayson
Assuming He-Ro got laid on Eternia prior to his heroic death, couldn't he also be an ancestor to He-Man? It would make sense.
Thomas B
i have 3 purple gems and 2 green gems.
it seems that green is 1 out of every 2.
red and purple both seem to be 1 in 4.
my sword is cast in clear blue, however, if it was cast in plain clear i think i would be tempted to strip off the blue since i think it would look better that way but i just love clear stuff.
Newton Gimmick
Awesome review Poe. You really hit all the main points. He seems to be impossible to photograph without looking cross eyed even though he really isn't.
@Noisy: That sounds very odd. My sword looks like it's cast in translucent blue as well. Maybe you got an early figure.
And if you ever decide to make t-shirts Poe, please put this on one of them and I'll buy it:
"I’m quite relieved I didn’t have to pay for some insane talking cardboard castle this time around."
PrfktTear
I'm really excited to get my mitts on He-Ro. Despite the fact that he really has no nostalgic ties, he just looks cool. I know some fans have griped about his super fabulouslook, or say that he won't fit in with the rest of the MOTUC line. I think the fact that we're getting a figure that is that of pure MOTU legend is super cool.
NoisyDvL5
@Poe & Cade
The sword I have is molded clear and painted blue. And, at the handle, it's starting to wear off. I got a big chunk off one side of the hilt.
http://www.itsalltrue.net/reviews/motuimages/hero…
Nicholai
I got mine today. I'm looking forward to going home tonight and unboxing him.
Motorthing
Usual great review. He's still too Eternia-Fabulous for my aesthetics but what the hell – I bought one too.
Now I only have to wait the usual half year for it to crawl here and I can whine about what stone I get!
Cade
My sword is fine noisy, and I was fooling with it most of the night. I have to agree mattel made me super happy having him as the SDCC exclusive.
Poe
Hmmm…I haven't noticed it, but then, I haven't really looked. I'll check when I get home. Is it rubbing off on his hand, or off the sword in general?
I'd assumed the sword was cast in translucent blue plastic–are you saying it's cast in clear plastic and painted blue?
NoisyDvL5
Great review, Poe.
Did you have any trouble with the blue coming off on the sword? I really thought that would be a bigger issue for He-Fans (it really annoys me), but I haven't heard much about it other than my own experience.