PACIFIC RIM SERIES 1 REVIEWS
- - Crimson Typhoon
Blessed are the monster makers.
It can't be easy to create a new monster in this day and age. Science fiction and fantasy stories, novels, movies, television shows, comics, and videogames have given us thousands of new monsters over the last century. Where once there were only ghosts, vampires, werewolves, and demons, now there are monsters of every conceivable size, shape, color, toothiness, and alignment. Heck, Japan's Ultraman and its myriad spinoffs give viewers a new monster in every single episode (with sometimes ).
So Guillermo Del Toro and his design team on Pacific Rim had their hands full creating new kaiju (Japanese for "monster") to threaten humanity. Perhaps inevitably, some of them ended up resembling existing monsters from pop culture history. In some cases this may be coincidence, in other cases deliberate homage, and in a few cases, parallel evolution.
My hunch is that's what happened with Knifehead. He bears more than a passing resemblance to a pair of vintage foes, and . The former was based loosely on the ,* while the latter has, well, a knife for a head. Del Toro describes Knifehead this way: "It's like if you took a shark and you pulled its nose way out until its head become this very sharp, pointy, blade-like shape rather than the blunt triangle that a shark normally is."** So Knifehead is like a shark whose nose got turned into a knife. I don't know, he still looks an awful lot like a goblin shark to me.
PACKAGING: The figure comes in NECA's usual clamshell packaging. The cross-sell graphics on the back are photos of the figures themselves, which I find a bit disappointing these days - I prefer to get pics from the movie, or maybe some art. The front insert features 's . It's interesting NECA used it, since it doesn't match the final design in the film (but the same is true of Crimson Typhoon's insert art).
DESIGNhis legs are pebbled, his sides have cross-hatched scales, his arms are rough and pebbled, his tail and the top of his head are smooth, and the underside of his "knife" has slanted, parallel lines. I have no idea if all these textures are accurate to the monster itself - I'd need a really good photo of a production maquette, or at least an excellent screen capture from the film, to be certain.
But for the most part, the sculpting on the main part of the body is sharp - literally. That knife-head is downright pointy, and the edge beneath it, while not paper-cut inducing, is also quite sheer.
However, the big, flat "dorsal fin" on his back has a much softer sculpt that doesn't blend well with the rest of the body. It's like a big remora just laying there. There's a chance this is intentional - it could be some kind of organ on its back that has a smoother texture. But it's definitely incongruous with the rest of the figure.
The real problem here - and it's a big problem - is the scale. According to , Knifehead is 315 feet (96 meters) tall. Gipsy Danger is only 260 feet (79 meters) tall. NECA's Randy Falk addressed the problem with making kaiju figures in a :
Some of the Kaiju are so huge they become cost prohibitive for us to produce at scale so we tried to work with Kaiju that would be close to our target pricing. The Leatherback in Series 2 is enormous, huge and heavy chunk of plastic.
Unfortunately, it appears Knifehead was still too large to do properly in-scale, since Gipsy Danger inaccurately towers over him. What puzzles me is NECA could easily have just made the Jaegers a bit smaller - say 6instead of their standard 7scale - and not only could they have saved money on production, but Knifehead would be closer to proper scale (though I think he'd still be a bit small).
The twist is that, by being smaller, Knifehead is in near-perfect scale with S.H.MonsterArts. The Godzilla in the pics is supposed to be 100 meters tall - exactly the same as Knifehead.
PLASTICfive or six years ago, I'm not sure collectors would have been as disappointed by these because it's what they would have expected from NECA. They're victims of their own success with this line.
Knifehead has a great sculpt, but the scale and articulation issues really weigh him down. Ball jointed shoulders alone would have added a raven. Still, for the nascent Pacific Rim superfan like myself, he's hard to leave on the peg.
WHERE TO BUY:* Fun fact: my submission for the MOTUC Create-a-Character Contest was also based on the goblin shark. I'd really love to show it off here, since Mecha-Shiva's art was awesome, but Mattel won't let me.
** Cohen, David. Pacific Rim: Man, Machines, and Monsters. 1st ed. San Rafael: Insight Editions, 2013. 134. Print.
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