Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Microcollections 1: Superhero Ephemera

As I consider my collections, the ways I go about organizing them, adding to them, and appreciating them, I also realize that the large collections (primarily my comics, Bionicle, and Lovecraft) are accompanied by smaller collections, some intentional and some completely arbitrary. I thought it would be fun to have a few brief looks at some of the smaller collections in my collection of collections.

(*sigh*)

First up, superhero stuff.


 While clearing up our storage room the other day, I opened up a box I had labeled "Superhero Ephemera." Inside were these little treasures. I used to have some of them in the spaces between my comic boxes, but having rearranged those shelves to optimize space, the ephemera was relegated to a box. However, a few weeks back we visited the very strange and awesome Miracle of America Museum in Montana, a place where knick knacks and stuff were just spread over a warehouse-sized space to celebrate the innovation of the American nation. I have a few more thoughts about that, but I'll save it for another post. Inspired by this, I made a little bit of space to display some of my knick knacks, superhero style. The accumulation of this little collection is a random process. Many of the little figures, mostly fast-food toys, are things that came in bags of Bionicle that I get from thrift shops. There's toys that come from Kinder Egg-style candies, inserts from Wizard magazine, lantern rings that were given away during the "Blackest Night" event. The black Spider-Man toy in the bottom left corner has been the subject of one of my Horror from the Dollar Bin posts, a naughty little toy if ever I've seen one. There's a couple in there, the Wolverine at the front and the similar Captain America at the back, that are actually pens. And then there's the Fleischer Superman cartoons, on video cassette. There's a belt buckle, little tiny reproductions of comics, bracelets, zipper pulls, little figurines. The day after I took this picture, I got a Super Grover figure in a bag of Bionicle parts. He graces the shelf now too.

A fairly important part of my dissertation is going to be looking at exactly this sort of intrusion into the material realm of these kinds of fictional characters. Toys and knick knacks like these make up a sort of mythic background radiation. We see them at flea markets, garage sales, McDonald's, and pay them little attention. But they are important manifestations of fiction into reality, and I think that's something that's worth thinking about.

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

The Building Chronicle: A Critical Consideration of LEGO's "Bionicle" Series - Toas of Light

Before we move on to the 2004 wave, and travel back tens of thousands of years into Mata Nui's history, I'd like to offer this consideration of Takanuva, the messianic Toa of Light. Takanuva shows up at a particular juncture of the story's history because it's necessary for him to do so. There is a prophecy about him, and the prophecy is fulfilled.

But this got me wondering what would happen if he'd had to show up in different eras of the story. Or even earlier iterations of the kind of building lines that eventually led to Bionicle, and those that led from Bionicle. Here's what I came up with.






Slightly before Bionicle debuted in 2001, Lego tried the buildable figure /epic storyline tack with both Throwbots and Roboriders. Both featured robotic characters in conflict, sometimes with one another, but the set-up of both stories didn't seem to have an extended storyline in mind. So these are my suppositions of what would have happened had a Toa of Light-like figure showed up in these two stories.


As there's already a first-wave Toa of Light, I moved on to the Toa Metru era of Bionicle for the next models. Above is the Toa Metru of Light, accompanied below by his Horkida version, had he come into contact with the Hordika venom in same way that the Toa Metru do in the canonical storyline. I'm pretty happy with the Metru version of the character. There's a nice range of gold armour designed to use with this body build, so I was able to put together a consistent-looking figure.


I'm not as happy with the Hordika version. The body is pretty good, but I had to go with silver pieces, as the Horkida builds were never made compatible, really, with gold armour. I used the sparkly Kanohi Avhokii for this figure, too, to give him a definite personality distinct from all of the other models. The way I see it, once the Hordika venom begins swirling through his system, he ceases to reign in the light he can emanate.







 The Toa Inika have never been my favourite build for the Toa, but their articulation, coupled with their pseudo-firearms, makes them excellent for Tarantino-esque poses. As I was building these variations on the character, I wasn't thinking of how I could make the builds better, however, but how I could adapt Takanuva into the aesthetic of each Toa variation. I think this one captures the Inika nicely.





Of all of the builds I did for this little experiment, the Toa Mahri of Light is by far my favourite, and the only one who wasn't dismantled after I'd finished. I love his trident, his armour, everything, really. The Mahri were the wave of Bionicle in which all kinds of different body builds were being incorporated into the line, a trend continued in the Mistika, Phantoka, and Glatorian waves that followed. Though they eschew the more mechanical construction of the earlier waves and, as I've noted elsewhere, proceed from the mechanical to more biological (robot to android, perhaps), this is the wave in which poseability reached its apotheosis, at least for G1 Bionicle.


The Mistika/Phantoka wave of Bionicle actually includes an official Takanuva set, though it's a titan, and I prefer him as a Toa. I was able to go back to the dark gold armour, though if I'd been able to make his wings the same colour, that would have been great. Much of this is based on the Tahu build from this wave.






The Glatorian version of the Toa of Light is a little more sparse than his predecessors. Glatorian, and the whole Bara Magna storyline, smacked of post-apocalyptic society, so I wanted to make sure that the Toa of Light we had here was one that fit the setting. He's a dingy, banged-up Toa of Light, struggling through a barren wasteland to assist his fellow Glatorians.



These are two different versions of Takanuva as a Generation 2 Bionicle. I built the first at the same time I made all of the others. There's still much hope in the fan community that we might see a Toa of Light, but I suppose that will depend on where the G2 Bionicle story goes. The second model, made a few months later, was build after I received some paints for my birthday. The mask and the chest armour on the lower picture are custom paints. The paint I used matches remarkably well with the Pearl Gold colour of G2 Bionicle, so I spent some time with the hybrid Technic/CCBS system of G2 to try to put together a Toa of Light worthy of the new construction methods. I'm pretty happy with both versions.

To finish off, here's my take on Tara Knuva, a light-based hero from the Hero Factory line. These are versions of the character from the first four years of the line. I don't know much about the Hero Factory story, so I can't really give any details like that, but I stuck as close as I could to the build styles of each wave. Of all of them, I think the wave 1 figure turned out best.




 So those are my Toa(s) of Light. Hope you enjoyed them. Next week we'll move forward to 2004, though backward through history, and begin experiencing the stories of Vakama, Onewa, Nokama, Whenua, Matau, and Nuju. The revelation that the Turaga were once Toa, tens of thousands of years ago, solidifies the mythic nature of the story, and the building innovations offer us some of the more memorable models of the series.

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

The Building Chronicle: A Critical Consideration of LEGO's "Bionicle" Series - Building Through part 3.4 - 2003


As we come in for our finish of the 2003 sets, I'll apologize for the decline in quality of my pictures. 2004 will be better, I promise. One of the things the 2004 wave introduced to the series was the idea of the Titan figure - larger-scale figures that combined the action figure style builds of the Toa with more complex Technic pieces. The large sets from 2003 prefigure these Titans, but don't quite qualify.

The Mask of Light follows the exploits of two Matoran, Jaller and Takua. They are sent on a quest to find the Seventh Toa, the Toa of Light, which takes them through the varied landscapes of Mata Nui, and in and out of conflict with the Rahkshi. As with most children's movies not intended for theatrical release, Mask of Light is kind of a drab piece of storytelling, more an advertisement than a story, really. It stands in stark contrast with the series of books that comes out in its wake, those dealing with the tales of the Toa Metru, which are routinely dark and explore some interesting aspects of morality and duty. Two of the large sets of this year depict these two main characters. Takua and Pewku is a pretty neat set. The giant crab that Takua rides around the island is a neat mix of Technic elements, and its movement mechanism, small wheels concealed beneath moving, but cosmetic, legs is really great. As with the other Matoran from this wave, Takua (and Jaller) is a bit wobbly. The builds for the various Matoran throughout Generation 1 are amongst the weakest. The balance between simplicity and poseability never seems to have quite worked out, though I'd have to say that the Mahri Matoran from 2007 are probably, in my opinion, the best. The Jaller and Gukko Bird set is an odd choice, reflecting a scene from the film that lasts only moments, and the bird has no feet and/or stand on which to display it, hence, in the picture below, my choice to hang it from the bottom of the shelf.

In the picture at the top, it looks like we have three different versions of Makuta, which is sort of correct. The one in the middle is the Makuta set, and is actually quite fascinating for its identity as the only official model of the storyline's main villain that was ever released. We have combiners (such as next year's Ultimate Dume set) that portray versions of the villain, but never another specific set called "Makuta." This is odd, considering his intrinsic place in the tale. Makuta, the set, attempts to offer some more poseability, though combines it with the odd wobbly build of the Matoran from this year, making him a good model, but not a great one. The same goes for the two combiners that flank him. One is a beastial version of Makuta, a combination of the Makuta, Takua, and Jaller sets. Again, it's good, but not great. The other is Takutanuva, the end result of the battle between Makuta and the Toa of Light.

The last large set from this year is the Seventh Toa himself, Takanuva, who, you may be able to guess from the similarity of names, is actually MoL protagonist Takua reborn as a Toa. It's hard to see in the picture, but Takanuva comes with a really great vehicle that he can ride, though his actual build is still using Toa Nuva pieces from the previous year, and so is a little underwhelming. But the character himself stands as a messianic figure in the prophesies of the Matoran, so our interest in him can stem from the fact that this kind of a prophesied figure is not only brought into what really amounts to a kids story, but also incarnates, so to speak, in the material realm as a toy. Which, I suppose, if one considers the fact that I own a Jesus Christ action figure, is not so odd.

The next post will be a bit larger a consideration of the Toa of Light from a building stance, and then we'll move on to the saga of the Toa Metru, and of the City of Metru Nui, where things get a little more murky, narratively speaking.