anarky wrote:I'm not against resculpting figures, but their priorities still seem off. Your point about Tarkin is good, but how about Evazan? After 1995 Leia and R5-D4, there's not a Star Wars figure who was more screwed over with their first figure release in the modern line--which was his first figure ever. He's not an old man. He's a bar thug, and distinctive-looking one at that. He not only talks, he gets in a physical altercation where he seems badass (given that there's no way he expected an old dude to pull out a lightsaber), and is the first scene where we actually see what a lightsaber can do. Twelve years to get a figure who doesn't look like a supporting character from a Goof Troop cartoon. Meanwhile, his buddy--who doesn't say anything that anyone can understand--has gotten three distinct figures, not counting reissues. That's just wonky.
The actor, Alfie Curtis, was evidently born in July of 1930, making him around 46 when they filmed his scenes. The character has gray hair. He may not be as old as Obi-Wan or Tarkin, but he sure ain't no spring chicken.
Apart from the vintage version, Ponda Baba has the 1997 one, which was retooled for the Cantina Showdown cinema scene that same year (the same set where Dr. Evazan made his first appearance), and again in 2002 with new lower legs and a removable arm for the Walmart exclusive individual cantina bar release (and that version was re-released with Obi-Wan and blue "Zutton" in the Kmart exclusive cantina bar set). His first all-new sculpt since 1997 only came out last year (and was supposed to actually be released two waves after Dr. Evazan, before that wave was delayed). So they both have the same number of all-new sculpts in the modern line, though Ponda Baba has an extra retool (and an extra release of that retool).
anarky wrote:My bad on thinking there were no more repacks. I thought they were making some change, no matter how slight, to all the figures to get people to buy them.
I wish they were doing that, because then it would target more than just carded collectors to get them.
It's a slow day at work, so here's a list of figures released in The Vintage Collection that are either completely unchanged or only slightly different:
9. Boba Fett (The Empire Strikes Back) - first release 2008, repainted
9. Boba Fett (Return/Revenge of the Jedi) - first release 2004
10. 4-LOM - first release 2007
14. Sandtrooper - first release 2009
16. Obi-Wan Kenobi (Revenge of the Sith) - first release 2005, cloth robe included in other releases
19. Clone Commander Cody - first release 2009, incorrect upside-down belt now fixed
31. Obi-Wan Kenobi (Attack of the Clones) - first release 2008, undershirt now a lighter shade, cloth robe similar to other Jedi
42. Han Solo (Yavin Ceremony) - first release 2004 (body), 2009 (head)
43. Commander Gree - first release 2008
62. Han Solo (Trench Coat) - first release 2008 (based on 2006 figure), coat slightly different
63. B-wing Pilot (Keyan Farlander) - first release 2008, leg straps now white instead of tan
64. Leia Organa (Slave Outfit) - first release 2009
65. TIE Fighter Pilot - first release 2009
75. Qui-Gon Jinn - first release 2008
76. Obi-Wan Kenobi (The Phantom Menace) - first release 2009
There are also clones and other figures that use existing parts to one degree or another but offer something noticeably new, like paint or substantial body parts. Aside from Boba, Cody, Gree, and Leia, those figures are, by absolutely no coincidence whatsoever, some of the line's biggest pegwarmers (there's also the ROTS clone, with its shitty yellow head, and ROTS Anakin, which reused parts from the same Anakin that had been released and slightly retooled over and over for years).
anarky wrote:Then again, only one of us here bought those 1978-styled BattlePacks.

Yeah, yeah.
