Hellina by Skybolt Toyz

Alrighty, folks, I’m coming off two intense weeks at work and this is my first weekend off in three weeks. I’m anxious to spend most of it unconscious, so I’m going for quick and dirty today. Wait, did someone say dirty? Ah, 90’s Indie Comic Book figures! Leather! Boobs! Whips and Swords! What’s not to like? A while back I did a handful of features on these kinds of figures, so I decided to dig back into that dusty Tote of Shame and open up another one of these chicks. This time, it’s Hellina, a character I know nothing about from a comic book that I know almost nothing about. At this point, I should remind you that this tote is full of figures that I picked out of the inventory of a closing New Jersey comic shop at about $1 a piece. Her comic was produced by Lightning Publishing, and oddly enough this is not the first time I’ve featured a joint effort between Skybolt and Lightning. Nope, that first time was the action figure of Sinthia, Princess of Hell. Sinthia was a train wreck of a figure, so this may be a bumpy ride.

skyhell1

Hellina comes carded on a landscape-style card. It’s weird and it probably drove any retailer that had to find peg space for it crazy. Not that this is a figure that would have been hanging up in Toys R Us or KBToys. The left side has some nice artwork from what I understand is the cover of Hellina #1 and the bubble is situated to the right against a cheesy backdrop of “Hellina” in a diagonal staggered pattern. The package points out that this is a “Series II” release. As was often the case with these figures, Hellina would have been produced many times over as various repaints. The figure is mounted on the tray with her accessories down near her feet.

skyhell2

The back of the card does a rather thorough job introducing you to the character as well as the creator. I now know the name of Joe Zyskowski’s wife, when they were married, their son’s name, and when he was born. It’s just possibly a little too much personal information for the back of an action figure card. The cardback also has a couple of pages reprinted from Hellina: Hellborn #1 to help get you into the mood. Farther to the right there are some promotional shots of other figures offered by Skybolt. I never saw the Double Impact figures, but various versions of the other two are in that dreaded tote, and god knows, we already looked at one of the Sinthia figures. I find the overall presentation here to be clumsy, but you can’t deny that it attracts attention. Let’s rip this baby open.

skyhell5

skyhell7

Out of the package and we’ve got a ginger chick wearing a bondage harness. The portrait is pretty weak if you’re comparing it to the character art, but at least she’s not ugly and creepy looking like Sinthia is. Her hair is sculpted so as to be swept off to the side and the paintwork on her face is certainly competent enough. Overall, I’d say she looks a little too young and innocent to make this figure work, but it’s better than what I would have expected from Skybolt’s usual efforts.

skyhell3

skyhell6

skyhell4

Moving on to below the neck, Hellina is certainly a busty girl, emphasized by the awkward way she’s standing. She appears to have suffered a spine injury because her back is arched in a way so that her torpedoes are actually pointing upward. Her top  is clad in only a sculpted and glossy-black painted harness. She’s got arm bands, bracers, and thigh-high stiletto boots, with a generous helping of spikes all around. This is not a girl you want to cuddle with unless you want to get impaled. The paintwork on the figure isn’t too bad. There’s a little bit of slop and bleeding, but the skin tones look good, as does the glossy black used for the leather outfit and the metallic silver used for the spikes. Her wings, or cape, or whatever it is, attaches to her back via a peg and holds on pretty well.

skyhell8

skyhell9

The biggest downside of this figure is the articulation. Hellina sports only five points, but it isn’t the usual five basic points one might expect. Sure, the arms rotate at the shoulders and the head turns, but instead of having the legs rotate at the hips, she has swivel cuts just above her boots in the thighs and that’s it. This coupled with her awkward pose makes the figure almost impossible to stand. I often lament the uselessness of hip cuts on these figures, but here’s a good example of why they’re there. Without them, it’s almost impossible to tweak the figure into a standing position and the thigh swivels are all but useless. She does have peg holes in her feet, but there’s no figure stand supplied. Thankfully,  I have a generous supply of generic figure stands and blue-tack.

skyhell10

In addition to her huge, tattered cape, Hellina comes with a dagger and a whip. The dagger is a nicely sculpted and painted little piece. The whip is just a length of thin plastic hose with a handle on it. She can hold either accessory in either hand.

skyhell11

And that’s Hellina. She is certainly a product of her times, both in character design and action figure execution. Unless you’re a huge fan of the comic or are compiling an extensive collection of action figures in bondage gear, I can’t really recommend her as a worthy pick-up. Sure, I’ve seen far worse, and from this very company, but I she could have turned out so much better if the license had fallen to the likes of CS Moore Studios. Now that she’s open she’s destined to sink to the bottom of one of my miscellany totes, buried forever under a pile of McFarlane and Rendition figures. The sad thing is that there are still more variants of her in that tote of comic shop dollar figures, but I’ll save those for another day…

Sinthia: Princess of Hell by Skybolt Toyz

“WHO IS SINTHIA?”

It’s never reassuring when an action figure package needs to ask and answer a question about the identity of the main character. And yet, Skybolt Toyz was so confident you’d have no idea who the hell this character is that they ask the question for you right on the upper corner of the cardback. In fact, not only does the card explain that Sinthia is the 18 year old (hot and bratty) daughter of Lucifer himself, but tosses in a couple of pages from the 1997 premier issue, published by Indie Comic Press, Lighting. Yep, Lightning knew how to lure horny teens to the world of comics with panel after panel of a half-naked buxom blonde demon on a quest to find true love on Earth. How is it the CW hasn’t optioned this series yet?

I’ve only ever seen two issues of Sinthia. In fact, I’ve seen more variant covers then actual installment, and trying to research just how much staying power this comic had beyond Issue #2 suggests that Skybolt may have produced more action figures of Sinthia than Lightning produced actual comics. But enough preamble, let’s look at the package…

Sinthia comes on a massive, colorful card that recreates the standard cover of Issue #1. The front features full panel art of Sinthia and her self-proclaimed guardian demon, Mhor-Duke. I wholeheartedly approve of this idea of using cover art of the premier issue as the cardback for the figure. It’s cool. The figure itself comes on a tray with her sword and scabbard each mounted separately beside her. I do like the way the card art just serves as a backdrop for the figure inside the bubble. However, the bubble is unnecessarily large and only serves to make it look like she should have come with more accessories. The back panel of the card also shows some of the other figures available from other forgotten comics. Let’s go ahead and get Sinthia out of the package, because I think this is going to be a rough ride.

Woof! Ok, so props to the sculptor for delivering a figure that from the neck down personifies your average comic reading nerdling’s wet dream. But before we get to that let’s just check out the head. I can almost see what they were going for here before it all derailed. The eyes are kind of angled right, I suppose the hair is ok, but everything else went horribly wrong. I think it’s the nose and eyebrows… or maybe everything else.

Sinthia stands roughly 6-inches tall and her costume strikes me more as a heroine from Dungeons & Dragons than she does a Princess of Hell. She’s got a red and gold one piece that’s slit in the front all the way down to below her naval, where it terminates into an asstacular thong. She’s certainly not shy about showing off the goods, but then she is some kind of half-demon princess. She’s got shoulder armor, arm bracers with blades on her left arm, knee high boots, and a dagger sculpted to her left thigh. I really have no problems with the body sculpt and paintwork at all. For what she is they did a fairly good job.

Sinthia has a huge rubbery plastic belt that hangs around her waist and features a peg so you can attach her red and yellow checked scabbard. Unfortunately, the way the belt is sculpted it looks like the weight is drawing it down on the side without the scabbard attached. It hangs from the belt just fine, but it looks rather awkward. A little coaxing can get the belt off entirely, or you can try to reposition it so it fits a little better. In addition to the functional scabbard, you get her sword. I’m sorry, her Hell Sword! It’s a fairly simple piece with a silver blade and yellow hilt, which fits into her left hand. I have to throw in some kudos any time a figure in this scale has a functional scabbard.

Sinthia features all of five points of articulation. She has rotating cuts at her neck, shoulders and hips. The neck and shoulder cuts are fairly useful, but there’s not much point to the hip cuts. If you try to sit her down, her legs spread way apart (har har!) and they pretty much have to be in one specific position if she’s going to stand. Speaking of standing, Sinthia has pegs holes in the bottoms of her feet, but no stand.

Are there still fans of this comic? Were there enough fans of this comic to warrant not only one action figure, but tons of repainted variants? Who can tell? She’s more of a slightly poseable statue than an action figure, and if it weren’t for her unfortunate head sculpt, she wouldn’t be all bad. If nothing else, I can definitely see a lot of potential here for customizers and the landscape of Ebay is certainly littered with Sinthia in all her many versions, but that’s probably where she’s best off remaining. If you’re looking for a sexy vixen figure for your desktop, you can do