When Marvel got rolling on the film Deadpool & Wolverine I think it did so with a veil of secrecy. This was going to be the first Marvel movie where Wolverine would be in a costume similar to what he’s worn in the comics for years. When X-Men first arrived back in 2000, the thought process back then with most superhero movies was that you couldn’t get a casual audience to take seriously a bunch of people running around in yellow spandex. Even Batman couldn’t be in gray and blue he had to go full black. As it would turn out, the whole notion of superhero squads in uniforms is a pretty far-fetched idea all by itself so who really cares how loud those threads get? The downside of this secrecy though meant that companies looking to produce merch for the movie may have had their hands tied. Or maybe they’re just cheap? When Wolverine did show up in plastic it was somewhat incomplete. The Hasbro figure came with a masked and unmasked portrait, but the truth of the matter is the masked portrait never really worked well because he never wore the mask with the sleeves in the movie. Other companies seemed reluctant to pay Hugh Jackman for his likeness which is how we got the S.H.Figuarts release that only had masked portraits plus the sleeved look. Where could someone go who wanted something more all-encompassing? Diamond Select appeared poised to release such a figure, but they went belly-up before that could happen. Enter the third parties!
Wolverine had a lot of looks in Deadpool & Wolverine with the vast majority of them being a fun sequence of cameos early in the film. For the most part though, he had three distinct looks: unmasked, unmasked without sleeves, and masked without sleeves. He also did end up completely shirtless with the mask in place, but for an action figure that’s a little more involved. For a company wanting to hit those three main looks though you basically need two heads in the box plus two sets of arms. Throw in some clawed and unclawed hands and you have yourself a pretty complete release. Unfortunately, that’s been hard to come by and while I love the unmasked portrait of the Legends release, the figure itself is pretty mediocre. It is being re-released this spring with bare arms, but that just solves one problem. The far better figure release was the S.H.Figuarts one, but as I noted already, it only had masked portraits and featured sleeves. In other words, this is a Wolverine we never saw on film. And if Bandai came back around with an updated one, how eager would I be to spend $80-$100 on an all new figure when it’s really the arms I take issue with?
When it comes to third parties, I’m often reluctant to purchase. Many are essentially bootlegs of someone else’s work. They may be good quality, but it’s still essentially stolen property. Manipple Studios has come onto my radar a few times and with them it’s usually parts sold on their own that are intended to work with an official release. They’re filling a void the official companies don’t want to and as far as I know they’re sculpting their own parts. I could be wrong and the arms I purchased off of AliExpress could be cast from an official release, but if so I’m not aware of it. These things are available though and for around $20 shipped to the US. Sure, that seems like a lot for two plastic arms, but considering the actual figure retails for $85 maybe it’s not so bad? I also got my Wolverine figure on steep discount so there’s some surplus value here that I could spend on an extra set of arms and after getting them in over the weekend how do I feel about them?
Pretty damn good. The arms are just that – arms. The gloves are part of the sculpt and painted while the flesh is bare plastic. It has some warmth to it though and isn’t waxy or shiny and works with the figure considering it too is a lot of bare plastic. And they are straight replacements so swapping them is fairly easy. Bandai uses a shoulder ball peg which can be popped out without the need for heat – maybe. My figure’s right arm came out just fine while the left was more stubborn. It first came apart on me at the bicep, and then when I did try heat the black portion popped out. Once I did get the arm itself extracted it wasn’t particularly trying to get the new arm in place, it just took slightly more effort than the right arm. The hands pop onto the new wrist pegs effortlessly and they may even have slightly better range than the stock ball hinges. The elbows are double-jointed and there’s a bicep swivel so you’re not losing any functionality and the paint between the forearms and the gloves appears to be pretty spot-on. It gets this figure to where I want it to be and now I have a Wolverine that looks like he did onscreen, minus the grime and battle damage. If you prefer a more comic inspired look, Manipple also includes extra shoulder parts with a peg hole in them in case you want to use the shoulder pads from the stock figure. I don’t so I didn’t bother, but it’s a fun thought.
And that’s all there really is to it. If you want, for about twenty bucks you can get the arms the figure probably should have come with to start and improve the look of your $85 Wolverine figure, or whatever you paid for it. It’s still available in some places and often for less than MSRP while the arms on AliExpress seem to fluctuate in price from about $18-$22. The quality on the new parts is good and the look hopefully speaks for itself. Obviously if you’re happy with the sleeved look of the figure then this isn’t for you, but if you wanted something more evocative of what was in the movie then this gets the job done and is cheaper than buying a whole new figure.
For my original review of this SHF Wolverine see below as well as some other Deadpool & Wolverine figure reviews:
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