With some remolding, that Grimlock / Godzilla might have been ok. Give it a new, more Godzilla-esque dino head and some stegosaur plates and it would have been pretty interesting.
Behold, Grimnot!With some remolding, that Grimlock / Godzilla might have been ok. Give it a new, more Godzilla-esque dino head and some stegosaur plates and it would have been pretty interesting.
This would be ideal for the Korean kaiju, Yongary!Behold, Grimnot!
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I was going to say, I would have bought the Megatron M Bison if it hadn't been packed with the Optimus figure I didn't need.Hey say what you will but the Arcee X Chun-Li is fire
They were all on clearance in the US, if I recall.I still want to get the Bison-Vega/Ryu 2-pack if I can find it at a decent price. Those four were very cool redecos (even if Ken/Hot Rod was 88% the same colors) and made me want more.
I mean, that's kind of cherry picking since it's leaving out the really good Takara ones (like Shield-D-Prime) and the "just a recolor" Hasbro ones.
Really? I thought the Japanese loved baseball.I get the impression that Japanese companies just don’t play ball very well.
What color is Godzilla?
Godzilla is usually portrayed as being either charcoal gray or black in color. Godzilla being green is a stereotype that started as early as the 1956 American poster for Godzilla, King of the Monsters!. Godzilla was never depicted as green in a Japanese film until 1999's Godzilla 2000: Millennium and 2000's Godzilla vs. Megaguirus. Godzilla was green in several pieces of American media, including the Hanna-Barbera Godzilla cartoon, Marvel's Godzilla, King of the Monsters comic, and Dark Horse's various Godzilla comics. Godzilla has also been represented as green in some Japanese media, often posters, promotional stills, video games such as Godzilla-kun and Godzilla vs. 3 Giant Monsters, and animation like Get Going! Godzilland. Other media, such as the 1988 video game Godzilla: Monster of Monsters!, depict Godzilla as light blue in color.
"Actual" colors in B&W movies can be tricky-- sometimes the art direction would have odd colors because they showed better contrast or otherwise looked better on-screen.Technically, the original Godzilla suit was brown but since the film was in black and white, he turned out dark gray/black.
Apparently that's an urban myth, they had to backlight the water.They used milk to represent the Rain in Singin’ in the rain for the same reason. Water didn’t show up well on film.
"Actual" colors in B&W movies can be tricky-- sometimes the art direction would have odd colors because they showed better contrast or otherwise looked better on-screen.
So color stills (or actual costumes, props, etc.) of a B&W movie set may not be an accurate reflection of the intention.
ANYWAY wow, they sure are milking that Laser Op mold, huh?
I read that in black and white films, like "Pscho", they used melted chocolate, because it had the viscosity and dark colour on monochrome film to look like blood."Actual" colors in B&W movies can be tricky-- sometimes the art direction would have odd colors because they showed better contrast or otherwise looked better on-screen.
So color stills (or actual costumes, props, etc.) of a B&W movie set may not be an accurate reflection of the intention.
ANYWAY wow, they sure are milking that Laser Op mold, huh?