Wednesday, June 29, 2016

The Building Chronicle: A Critical Consideration of LEGO's "Bionicle" Series - Building Through part 3.3 - 2003

Our second-last foray into the Mask of Light-era of G1 brings us the Rahkshi. Created from strange, slug-like creatures called Kraata, the Rahkshi, at least the ones that the Toa Nuva encounter in this particular stage of their quest, are foes unlike any they've faced before. The six Rahkshi lay waste to Ta-Koro and Onu-Koro, and hand up defeat after defeat to the Toa Nuva until a new ally reveals itself. More of that next time.


Though, as with many of the villain waves, the Rahkshi are basically clones, their construction raises them up from the level of the Bohrok clones of the previous year. I noted in a prior post that the movement of the head on later waves of Toa give them far more potential for poseability and character, but that this innovation doesn't reach the Toa until the introduction of the Toa Metru in 2004. However, the Rahkshi demonstrate a rudimentary form of this articulation, and, though their bodies are, like the Matoran of this year, a bit wobbly, their ability to gaze at you, snake-like, is unnerving and cool. Of all of the models up to this point, including the large ones from previous and the current years, the Rahkshi are the ones who begin to transcend simply being representations of living creatures in a fiction, and instead start to embody those creatures.


The Rahkshi also provide some very, very cool combiner models, although the ones included in the back of the instruction manuals are not the greatest pieces.




The three combiners you see here are culled from the Japanese version of LEGO Magazine, as far as I can tell. The first two have instructions here, and are definitely a couple of my favourite combiners. The top one, made from pieces of the red and brown sets, has a very cool martial artist aesthetic, which is reflected in it's possibilities of poseablity. The second, the green and white, takes a good deal of inspiration from the mechs popularized in Manga and Anime. It's not quite as poseable, but it makes up for that in the intimidating presence that the build exudes. And, as you can see, the ability of these builds to move their heads allows much more characterization, and much more expressiveness, than their predecessors. The bottom picture, a blue/red/black combiner, appears only as a picture in the North American LEGO Magazine, one highlighting the kinds of cool creations that appear internationally in LEGO communities. No official instructions were ever released, I think, but there's a fan-made video on YouTube that demonstrates how to build this figure. As with the Matoran combiners from this year, such models can be extrapolated from pictures based on the available parts in given sets.

Next time, we'll have a look at the proto-titan sets that round out this year, and finish off this part of the story.