NECA TMNT Secret of the Ooze Keno and Foot Soldier

Coming this fall to FOX, it’s Keno and the Fat Man!

I’ve been spending parts of the past month or so ducking in and out of any Walmart I come across in search of the Masters of the Universe Origins Turtles of Grayskull Krang. You see, it’s a store exclusive and if you know anything about toy collecting it’s that toy collectors hate store exclusives. Especially Walmart exclusives. I don’t particularly care for Walmart in general and will go out of my way to not shop there, but sometimes they use their capital advantage to make that a challenge. When you keep going into and out of stores leaving empty-handed each time it gets old which can sometimes lead to bad purchasing decisions. Or perhaps “bad” is the wrong word in this case, let’s instead say that it can lead to making unplanned purchases. And that is how I ended up with the NECA Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II – The Secret of the Ooze Keno (Foot Training) and Foot Soldier set.

Ever since NECA received permission from Viacom to sell its TMNT products at brick and mortar it has separated the cartoon and movie toy lines giving one to Target and one to Walmart. I have been fortunate in that most of the movie figures I have wanted have been made available by other means, usually via NECA direct in the form of a comic con exclusive or just a direct sale. I haven’t had to stake out Walmarts in search of product really since the Casey Jones and Raphael in Disguise two-pack from 2020. I did purchase the Shadow Warriors two-pack from Walmart, but that was a fairly low demand set. I could have bought the Casey Jones and April Farm two-pack on numerous occasions, but I didn’t see that one as being particularly essential.

I don’t know if that height is correct. Keno is 6.3″ which is fine, while the turtles are 6.5″ which maybe is a touch short?

Last summer, right around this time, NECA put up for pre-sale not one, but two TMNT movie sets as San Diego Comic Con exclusives. One of those sets, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III four-pack, I purchased. The other, Keno (Pizza Delivery) and moped I did not. NECA wanted $100 for Keno and his scooter and that just felt like too much for me. I liked the second Turtles movie well enough as a kid, but as an adult I can see it for what it is -a cash grab with bland, slapstick, humor that barely qualifies as entertainment. Still, I do have a soft spot for Keno, played by Ernie Reyes Jr. in the movie, and wouldn’t mind having him in my collection. And his pizza boy attire is how I picture him so it was my preference, but again, not at a hundred bucks.

They just like him because he always brings pizza.

When NECA unveiled the Keno and Foot two-pack a month later at Comic Con, it wasn’t really on my radar. Like I said, I picture Keno in his pizza boy attire first and foremost and not as he is depicted in this set. And even though the Foot Soldier he was bundled with was different from the ones I had, it didn’t feel like a necessity. That is, until it had been staring me in the face one too many times. Missing out on that $25 Krang motivated me to spend $60 on this set and it’s honestly a solid set of figures. Is this the Keno I wanted? No, but maybe it’s the Keno that will make me happy.

In this house, we worship Teezus.

This set depicts Keno from the scene where he and Raph decide to infiltrate the Foot Clan by getting him admitted. He basically puts on his kickboxing gear and beats a bunch of other trainees up before having to submit to a final test which Raph helps him pass. It’s probably one of the better plotted elements of the movie and I suppose it’s better than Keno’s all-denim look from a bit later in the movie. For this release, Keno is sporting a tank top, black sweats, kickboxing gloves and shoes. Everything is well-sculpted and detailed. The shirt has a nice design to it and the likeness is on point. Keno is sporting an aggressive expression like he just spin-kicked some jerk in the face and it’s done well. He comes with another portrait and it features a toothy grin. I may have preferred a more neutral expression as a secondary option, but both look pretty good so I’m not exactly upset about it. He also has a set of non-gloved gripping hands, but I don’t see the point in them. This is kickboxing Keno, baby! Plus, I watched a review of this set and the reviewer had the wrist peg break when swapping hands and I don’t want to chance it. For what it’s worth, the stability of my figure seems fine. The heads are very snug and I had to use hot water to get the other portrait on, but nothing felt fragile or too stiff with this guy.

This bag rocks.

The one thing that does stand out with Keno vs a lot of other NECA figures is the lack of paint. NECA opted to leave his flesh basically bare plastic when normally NECA paints basically everything. There is a slight sheen to the skin as a result, but it almost imparts an illusion of sweat which works for the look. Is that by design? I don’t know, but it looks fine. There is a little paint slop around the ears of both portraits. For some reason, the right ear was apparently problematic and maybe it was whatever the factory used to hold the piece in place while it was painted as there’s a line of “flesh” connecting the ear to the hair which sucks. The hands and feet are nicely painted and you can even see the bottoms of his feet when turning him over which is pretty neat. If you like this look for Keno then you should be pleased with what NECA has done.

“Ahh hah!”

As for the Foot Soldier, he’s a mix of old and new. For the sequel, Golden Harvest and New Line Cinema wanted to get it out fast and cheap as basically everyone viewed TMNT as a fad destined to blow up unexpectedly and without warning. They also wanted to tone down the violence which meant they no longer needed a bunch of stunt guys and martial artists to play-fight the good guys. They mostly just wanted them to do pratfalls and get hit with sausages. As a result, the background extras were just random people which lead to some, how should we say, unathletic looking Foot ninja. This guy is reflective of that as he’s basically the plus-sized version of a Foot ninja. He has a new, bigger, head and a new, wider, torso. Both look fine, but the figure is reusing the old arms, hips, and legs from the standard Foot which makes him look pretty goofy. He really needs some meatier thighs, at least, because as-is he looks like a kit-bash of mismatched parts. He does have a gritty, dirty, brown, wash applied to him as the Foot were kind of dirty in that movie. Maybe it was because they were residing in a dusty junkyard? Or maybe it was just old, well-worn, costumes no one wanted to replace or wash.

What does he expect to do with those dinky little things?

The Foot doesn’t come with much, just extra hands and a set of weapons. The hands are fists, gripping, and these style posed hands. The fists and gripping hands are the same as what has been included with other Foot releases. The style posed hands are new to me. My Foot ninja came from the SDCC set from way back so I’m not sure if these were added for the two-pack releases, but I think they’re new. For “weapons,” he has two, black, sticks. The movie was looking to tone-down the violence so swords and axes were out. Instead, guys would have sticks be they long ones or these little, stubby, ones. Even Leonardo uses something similar at one point. It’s bizarre, but a fun inclusion. Like past Foot Soldiers, he has a soft goods, elastic, belt over the sculpted one which serves as weapon storage. There’s also another canister of ooze, maybe because it was a chubby Foot ninja who caught it during the showdown at the TGRI building? It’s the same canister most are likely used to at this point.

Looks like he passed.

As for Keno, in addition to the extra head and hands he has some pretty neat accessories. Well, one is neat. The one that isn’t is the handful of various bells that Raph helped him remove from a training dummy during his final test. It’s just a lump of painted, sculpted, plastic and it’s possible to get him to cradle them as he did in the movie even though his gloved hands are fisted. I kind of wish he had his “Is this enough?” expression to pair with it, but I doubt I’d use it anyway. The other, more impressive, accessory is the punching bag. It’s a big hunk of red plastic with a fake brand name stamped on it. It’s connected to real chain which can hang on the included stand, which is a metal hook with a plastic base. It works well, and the sculpt of the bag is very convincing both up close and from a distance to the point where it feels surreal to touch it and find it’s not a miniature punching bag.

They can handle the basics, but don’t go too crazy with the posing.

The articulation is usually secondary for NECA, and that’s mostly true here. We’ll do Keno first. He has a double-ball peg for a head which works pretty well. His mullet will get in the way a bit, but not as much as you may have thought. The shoulders are simple hinged pegs while the elbows are the same. There’s no biceps swivel, and instead the elbow pivots. Wrists rotate and hinge horizontally for all hands in the set. There is a diaphragm joint of some kind, but the overlay for the shirt makes it hard to utilize. You can force some posing out of it, and I suppose a really determined person could heat the shirt if they don’t care about warping it, but I wouldn’t advise doing so. The waist has a ball joint as well and the hips are ball and socket joints that can facilitate splits and kick forward a full 90 degrees. There is a thigh twist and the knees are double-jointed. The ankles hinge forward and back and possess a solid ankle rocker. He’ll be able to do some decent kicks and he can stand on one foot if you’re patient. I just wish the diaphragm joint worked better to get some really nice looking kicking poses. This is where I personally would prefer to see the torso sculpted with a joint in the middle rather than an overlay, but I get why NECA does what it does.

Shredder may need to start paying his guys better if he wants to attract better ninja.

The Foot ninja is basically the same as the other Foot. Even the hips still use the old peg and hinge engineering. There’s no added articulation, nor is any lost, with the new head and torso. I will say, while Keno’s joints are all nice and tight, the Foot ninja has some pretty loose ankles. Not terribly, at least not yet, but some simple stances were more troublesome than they should be as he’d just fall forward. Hopefully he doesn’t worsen over time.

The Secret of the Ooze section of my Detolf is pretty jam-packed. Thank goodness I passed on the third Super Shredder.

On an individual basis, this Keno figure and his included stuff is pretty damn nice. Yeah, I’d like a little more articulation out of him and it’s not my preferred look for the character, but the execution is plenty good and the punching bag is awesome. As a two-pack, it’s a little less spectacular because the Foot ninja is nothing special. NECA didn’t go all-in on making this guy look great by reusing too many old parts. It’s a bit of a bummer because people may have wanted a couple of stocky looking Foot Soldiers in their display if the figure were better. These parts have been used and reused so much that NECA surely has made plenty of money off of the tools that it’s a shame it didn’t spend to update them. They probably could have kept the arms, it’s the hips and thighs mainly. And since the figure essentially costs $30, it’s a tough sell. Basically, if you’re like me and skipped the SDCC Keno, then this is your only option to add the character to your TMNT II display. It’s not the Keno I wanted, but at least he’s damn good for what he is so I don’t regret my purchase and it’s still better than paying $100 for the character. Now, if say a $70 or $80 version of the Keno and bike two-pack shows up I may feel differently.

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