Modern Starman
By Hervé St-Louis
September 21, 2003 - 14:43
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Likeness
This figure is an almost replica of a Tony Harris drawing. He sports plain clothes, a rockabilly hair cut, and his signature Starman jacket. If I'm not mistaken, there is another version with a goatee.
Sculpt
As mentioned above, the sculpt favours a specific classic pose from the comic book. Here we have jack Knight, the son of the original Starman holding his cosmic rod with both hands, and looking sideway, ready to shoot cosmic energy at his opponents. His legs are wide apart. His neck and face function only when turned leftward. The left hand is over the staff, the other underneath.
Paint
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Scale
Because Starman crouches and that his legs are wide apart, he's a small guy. His upper body is much longer than his legs. Nevertheless, the figure looks good next to JSA characters such as his father, the Golden Age Starman, Wildcat, The Birds of Prey Black Canary, the Golden Age Green Lantern and the Golden Age Flash. Villain Solomon Grundy makes a great desk partner, though he towers Jack
Stability
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Articulation
Surprisingly, the figure has ten articulations at the neck, shoulders, waist, hips and knees. The wrists' articulations are limited because of the internal circuits running from the figure's palms to his chest. Once disabled, it might to twist them easily, although they look fragile. Because the circuits run inside the figure's arms, the elbows cannot have articulations. The sculpt limits the usability of the articulations
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Plastic
The plastic used on the figure is cheap. It is the hollow and breakable type. The reason for this is simple. It has been chosen to encase the internal circuitry allowing the figure to light up the cosmic rod better. Areas without the circuitry contain the traditional soft plastic used by DC Direct. You can find that type of plastic in the legs and the head, and the jacket's belt hanging in the figure's back.
Props
Starman's cosmic rod lights up when plastic pegs press against metal switches in his palms. The clear plastic upper ending of the rod, lights up and gives a low orange light. The rest of the rod is covered with gold paint. Jack comes with a pair of goggles that he can wear over his eyes or across his forehead. Aligning the rod's peg with the palms is difficult. Batteries are accessible withing the figure's back.
Packaging
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Cost
One can buy the figure at the regular DC Direct price which is higher than most other comparable action figures lines.
Availability
Though one of the oldest DC Direct action figures, one can find the regular version at several comic book retail and online stores. Several retailers and collectors are often trying to get rid of this figure so be on the look out for good deals. This is a figure that's often seen in discount bins. The variant with a goatee is rarer but does not command the high price of other rare DC Direct action figures. Copyright © 2003.Use of material in this document—including reproduction, modification, distribution, electronic transmission or republication—without prior written permission is strictly prohibited.
Update February 6 2005:
This figure has sold out from Diamond Comics, the exclusive distributor of this action figure.
Related Articles:
Golden Age Starman
Modern Starman