Happy New Year, Toyhounds! I was going to start the year with a retrospective, but truth be told I have so many figures piled up, I decided to just jump in and get going. And I’m kicking off the year with one of my most hotly anticipated figures in a long while! It’s safe to say that I have been beyond ecstatic over Sideshow’s Clint Eastwood Legacy Collection line, as I’ve wanted quality figures based on so many of his iconic film characters for all my adult collecting life. I grew up watching Clint Eastwood and John Wayne westerns with my Dad, usually on lazy Sunday afternoons, so my love for these flicks is practically in my DNA. I’ve already checked out Sideshow’s Dirty Harry and The Preacher figures, and today we’ll be checking out The Outlaw Josey Wales!
If pressed, I’d have to say The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly is my favorite of Clint’s westerns (and I’ll get to Sideshow’s Blondie figure soon enough!), but The Outlaw Josey Wales is for sure a close second. And perhaps, on any given viewing, may edge out ahead. The first is an epic adventurous romp, while the second is more of an emotional and gut-wrenching story. It’s a tapestry of colorful characters with some fun moments here and there, but all executed against a brutal and dark landscape of Post-Civil War America with a main character who has lost everything and is fueled only by revenge. I loved this movie so much I used to use the poster image of Josey as my avatar for every forum I was ever active in and I’m thrilled that it’s used to grace one side of the shoebox-style packaging.
Josey comes out of the box all set to go, with very little fuss or muss. There’s some plastic to remove, and I had to dig his scarf out from under his jacket to make it a bit more visible. Otherwise, there’s no outfitting or rigging necessary. You can loop the braid through the shoulder, but I chose to leave it hang long. And once again, I love the work Sideshow is putting into tailoring these 19th Century wardrobes. Wales has a pair of brown trousers and a matching brown coat with some heavy stitching on the pockets and reinforced shoulders. It features the rawhide straps coming off the shoulders and the backflap, as well as the long braid hanging down from behind the right lapel. The jacket fits the figure beautifully and it looks fantastic! Under that you get a blue long sleeve shirt accessorized with a bright red scarf. The light brown boots have detailed spurs, and, oh my, is Sideshow amazing at sculpting these intricate little spurs! The jacket is cinched at the waist with a brown gun belt with a holster on each hip.
This is the third Eastwood portrait I’ve looked at here from Sideshow and every one has been an absolute banger, despite representing very different ages and periods. Here we see Clint a full decade younger than what we saw in The Preacher figure and with his unkept backwoods coif and whiskers to match. The likeness and nuances of the sculpt are outrageously good from the scar inflicted by a Jawhawker saber slash to his right cheek to the trademark squint in his eyes and the exposed teeth in his sneer. I can practically here him scowl, “You gonna pull them pistols, or whistle Dixie?” The skin tone is really well done, and I’d say only a bit of heavy handedness in the whisker paint keeps this from being up to Hot Toys quality of crazy realism. But hot damn, it looks great! As with The Preacher, the hat is permanent and I’m OK with that. He spent the majority of the film wearing it, and I don’t think it even came off at all until the last quarter or so of runtime. An extra head sans hat would have definitely bolstered the value here, but I’d probably never use it.
The underlying body feels identical to The Preacher, and I imagine that Sideshow is using the same body for all of the figures in this series. Articulation is good, with no loose jointing, but to be fair that hasn’t been a problem with Sideshow’s figures for a while. The range of movement in the upper body feels great, but the snug pants really inhibit the range of the hips. If you have a sixth-scale horse, I’m sure he’d be able to mount it, but anything wider and you risk popping some stitching in his britches. As with Preacher, you get four pairs of hands, and these include fists, relaxed hands, reaching for the guns hands, and trigger finger hands. Popping them out is easy peasy and the connecting pegs are stout and sturdy.
Josey carried four pistols in the film, and you get all four of them here. For starters, he has his matched set of Colt Walker M1874s. These are some of my favorite American pistols from the period and I even have a functional Uberti replica Walker cartridge conversion chambered in .44. Sideshow is doing a beautiful job with these sixth-scale weapons. The paint depicts the different materials used in the original as well as each and every tiny screw.
Next up, he comes with a Colt Army M1860. It’s another wonderful recreation of a beautiful weapon right down to its sleeker curves and slightly more elegant design. And yes, I still love the boxy and utilitarian designs of the Walker more!
And finally, you get a M1843 Colt Pocket Pistol, which is a lovely little depiction of this last resort weapon. In the film, he carried this in a holster concealed under the left side of his jacket, which is not included in the figure’s wardrobe, but I’m kind of glad they didn’t because the jacket would never have fit nearly as well with the added bulk under it. As it is, I’ll likely just keep this one tucked into the front of his belt, Preacher style, or just have it in one of his holsters, since I plan on displaying him with the two drawn Walkers in his hands.
So, one of my very few call outs on these figures is the amount of extras versus the cost. With four pistols, Josey comes out on top over The Preacher’s two, so that’s an improvement. But, there’s a big omission here, and that’s the the scoped Sharps rifle that he uses as the pole for his parley flag and to shoot the ferry rope. The later is one of the most memorable scenes in the film and this weapon is so damn cool, it’s a real shame that Sideshow didn’t include it. I’d say this was as egregious an oversight as The Preacher not coming with his dynamite. I was able to remedy that thanks to Ebay and I will likely do the same here, only I’ll have to settle for a Sharps rifle without the scope, so it won’t be quite the same.
And lastly, you get a generic black figure stand with a crotch cradle post to support the figure. These have the Legacy Collection logo on the bottom. Sideshow has been using this exact same base for the entire series, so at least you get some uniformity on the shelf. But yeah, for the price of these figures, something with a bit more flair would have been nice. I would have at least like to see a name plate.
I’ve been waiting a long time to own a figure like this and I am eternally grateful for the union between Eastwood and Sideshow that made it happen. And there has definitely been a running theme with these releases. What’s here is absolutely exquisite: From the tailoring of the costume to the likeness of the portrait, and detail in the accessories… I could not be happier. But at the same time, with the price on these approaching the $300 mark, the extras seem light. It wasn’t a big issue for me with Dirty Harry, as there wasn’t anything obviously missing, but both Preacher and now Josey each had that one key accessory that should have been included to help along the value. And yes, I would imagine that Sideshow paid a lot for the licensing rights, so I understand the economics at play, but couldn’t they have grabbed a Sharps from their old Brotherhood of Arms series and attach a tube to it? While The Preacher, Blondie and Dirty Harry have all sold out, Josey is currently still available through Sideshow. I hope to get to checking out The Man With No Name soon, and as I write this I have received notification from Sideshow that the Dirty Harry variant will be shipping soon!





















































































































































































































































































