When it’s come to the Turtles of Grayskull line by Mattel, I have mostly stayed in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles side of the pool. I have all four turtle boys plus Sla’ker, who is more Slash than Faker if you ask me. The one exception has been Mouse-Jaw, but the classic Masters of the Universe villain has been mashed-up with a Mouser so there’s a gray area there. Plus, if I want to build this line’s version of Metalhead I needed to get him. Today, there is really no way to color it, I just bought a MOTU character and his name is Skeletor.
As someone who has been buying and enjoying action figures since the 1980s, it’s kind of shocking to me that I have never owned a Skeletor action figure. As the chief villain of one of the most famous action figure lines to exist, it seems like the sort of thing I would have picked up somewhere along my travels. I have owned a He-Man, but just never got a Skeletor even though I’ve always enjoyed his design. I’m pretty sure I considered getting the 2000 Skeletor, but probably correctly realized that I had my fingers in too many figure lines and passed. With this Turtles of Grayskull line, I actually have yet to come across Shredder. The online images didn’t sell me on the figure, but it would be nice to have a big baddie for the display and if that can’t be Shredder, why not Skeletor?
Skeletor isn’t a whole lot different from his classic portrayal. He’s still a purple-gray body with a greenish skull face, only now he has a stylish samurai helmet. I don’t know why he’s grabbed this helmet, but it looks pretty cool on him. What really caught my eye with this figure though is the presence of the neon green. It adorns his helm, weapon, and the trim of the armor. It’s garish, but it’s the kind of thing I love because a lot of toy lines were doing this back in the day. I’m surprised Mattel didn’t take it one step further and just make the plastic glow-in-the-dark because it almost looks like it should, but that doesn’t appear to be the case. He has some snap-on armor for his forearms and a tattered black cape that’s well textured. Basically, this is a Skeletor that took one look at Shredder and said “That looks pretty cool.” He just stopped short at copying the blades and such.
The paint work is fairly sparse, but not out of line with the other figures we’ve taken a look at. It would have been nice to get a wash applied to the face to bring out the teeth, but this line doesn’t do that sort of thing. What’s present is fairly clean. The straps on the armor look solid and the silver ram skull that’s a logo of sorts for the character was applied very cleanly to the center of the helm. The shin armor is molded, silver, plastic which is an interesting choice. There is a little metallic silver in places, but the majority of the armor add-ons are black and green so it’s a little odd the shin guards didn’t go with a similar scheme. Black with green trim would have looked pretty nice.
For accessories, (not including the cape) Skeletor has two, which is one more than a lot of figures. His havoc staff has been turned into havoc nunchaku. The weapon is cast in neon green and basically the head of the staff adorns both ends. They’re connected via molded, plastic, chain links just like the nunchaku we saw with Michelangelo. The chain did not come out of the molds as cleanly with Skeletor as they did Mikey and some don’t really move at all. Some careful trimming with a blade might fix that, but it’s too bad that they couldn’t do better. The figure also doesn’t really have any weapon storage for this item. I suppose you could fake it by shoving it through the straps of his harness, but it would look rather stupid. The other accessory is a vile of mutagen, or ooze, if you prefer. It looks like a classic mutagen canister with silver ends, only much slimmer to fit into the standard MOTU Origins gripping hands. The center is transparent plastic with a blueish fill and it looks nice.
Even though Skeletor is not a turtle, his articulation is essentially the same. All of the same joints are present with the same range. The only aspect of the articulation I feel merits pointing out is the head and neck. Skeletor still uses the same double ball peg setup, but it’s fairly loose. With the cape on, which just slots over the neck, it’s not noticeable. If removed, the head becomes borderline floppy. This may be purposeful engineering to increase the range with the rather thick, plastic, cape on, but if you dislike that look then this aspect of the figure may let you down.
In the world of action figures, Skeletor is a legendary character and was obviously going to be included in this toy line. The TMNT influence on the character is fairly light though, and if the mutagen canister was taken away there really wouldn’t be anything obvious about this figure linking it to the TMNT franchise. That might bother some, or it might not. I think this is a fun, cool, look for Skeletor which is why I decided to grab it. None of the other MOTU specific characters in the standard line have tempted me at all, but this works for me. It’s odd it ended up being my very first Skeletor, but better late than never. I don’t think this is going to open the floodgates or anything. As far as other characters in this line are concerned, my wants list is pretty small and concerns only TMNT characters. That could change, and it’s possible I’ll feel compelled to add He-Man eventually just because, but that’s fine too. For MOTU fans collecting this line, Skeletor should make for a solid addition. And if you’re more of a TMNT fan like me, you may still enjoy seeing him in your collection.
By the power of pizza…here’s more Turtles of Grayskull coverage:
MOTU – Turtles of Grayskull Michelangelo
Mattel’s Masters of the Universe Origins subline, Turtles of Grayskull, has given us three of the iconic four reptilian brothers with a MOTU theme. Now, we have the fourth. The heroic captain of cowabunga Michelangelo is in the house and he’s got a new look, and a new ‘do, to show off. Like his brothers…
Keep readingMOTU – Turtles of Grayskull Deluxe Sla’ker
It’s a Tuesday, and I have a new Turtles product to talk about, so let’s make it another Turtle Tuesday! And today brings us the second in the line of deluxe Masters of the Universe Origins – Turtles of Grayskull line exclusive to Target – Sla’ker: The evil cybernetic snapping turtle! This is Slash, the…
Keep readingMOTU – Turtles of Grayskull Deluxe Mouse-Jaw
Nothing can be simple in this day and age of retail toy sales which is why the new mash-up of Masters of the Universe and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles toyline features ostensibly 3 SKUs: standard, deluxe, and deluxe with build-a-figure parts. The standard releases are, as you may have expected, released abroad and you can…
Keep reading


