Mondo has some incredible 1/6 scale figures on display at San Diego Comic-Con this week, and our friends over at Toyark are inviting us to virtually visit the booth with their photo gallery.
The two upcoming horror figures on display at Mondo’s booth are the killer doll M3GAN from this year’s M3GAN, as well as John Nada from John Carpenter’s They Live.
Both figures pitch perfectly capture the characters, featuring incredible head sculpts, cloth outfits, and various accessories including Nada’s sunglasses and guns.
The M3GAN figure even comes with a “battle-damaged” alternate head.
Check out Toyark.com for many more photos from the Sdcc 2023 show floor.
Photo Credit: Toyark.com
Photo Credit: Toyark.com
The post Mondo Previews ‘M3GAN’ and ‘They Live’ Toys at San Diego Comic-Con appeared first on Bloody Disgusting!.
The two upcoming horror figures on display at Mondo’s booth are the killer doll M3GAN from this year’s M3GAN, as well as John Nada from John Carpenter’s They Live.
Both figures pitch perfectly capture the characters, featuring incredible head sculpts, cloth outfits, and various accessories including Nada’s sunglasses and guns.
The M3GAN figure even comes with a “battle-damaged” alternate head.
Check out Toyark.com for many more photos from the Sdcc 2023 show floor.
Photo Credit: Toyark.com
Photo Credit: Toyark.com
The post Mondo Previews ‘M3GAN’ and ‘They Live’ Toys at San Diego Comic-Con appeared first on Bloody Disgusting!.
- 7/21/2023
- by John Squires
- bloody-disgusting.com
One of Scream Factory's first Blu-ray releases was John Carpenter's They Live back in 2012. Flash forward eight years and the distributor will celebrate Carpenter's cult classic with even more fanfare on December 8th with a new 4K Ultra HD / Blu-ray release that comes with a limited edition Neca figure of Keith David's character Frank Armitage, along with the previous bonus features from the 2012 release and They Live music on vinyl from Sacred Bones and recorded by John Carpenter, Cody Carpenter, and Daniel Davies.
Press Release: On December 8, 2020, Scream Factory™ celebrates the politically-charged science fiction thriller They Live with a new 4K Uhd/Blu-ray™ release, as well as a Limited Edition Neca action figure and Sacred Bones 7” vinyl. Horror master John Carpenter directs this heart-pounding thriller in which aliens are systematically gaining control of the Earth by masquerading as humans and lulling the public into submission. The 2-disc...
Press Release: On December 8, 2020, Scream Factory™ celebrates the politically-charged science fiction thriller They Live with a new 4K Uhd/Blu-ray™ release, as well as a Limited Edition Neca action figure and Sacred Bones 7” vinyl. Horror master John Carpenter directs this heart-pounding thriller in which aliens are systematically gaining control of the Earth by masquerading as humans and lulling the public into submission. The 2-disc...
- 9/8/2020
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Last year, Neca released a set of two retro-style figures based on John Carpenter’s They Live, both depicting the film’s alien invaders, with an upcoming figure of Roddy Piper’s John Nada shown off at Toy Fair earlier this year. And revealed by Keith David himself on social media today, an action figure of his character from the 1988 […]...
- 9/4/2020
- by John Squires
- bloody-disgusting.com
In 1988, John Carpenter released one of his best films, a sci-fi action movie designed to comment on the sociopolitical landscape of the 1980s. Little did Carpenter know back then that the movie would only become more and more prescient over the next 30 years. Though released in 1988, They Live is a movie about right now.
I see a lot of people online complaining that they want their movies and their politics kept separate. I hope those people have never seen They Live. The two cannot be separated. The film, based on Ray Nelson’s 1963 short story “Eight O’Clock in the Morning,” is Carpenter’s shot across the bow: a howl of rage about the Lie of the American Dream disguised as a violent B-movie. To think that one can watch They Live—most movies, for that matter—divorced of any and all political context is to willfully ignore the message.
I see a lot of people online complaining that they want their movies and their politics kept separate. I hope those people have never seen They Live. The two cannot be separated. The film, based on Ray Nelson’s 1963 short story “Eight O’Clock in the Morning,” is Carpenter’s shot across the bow: a howl of rage about the Lie of the American Dream disguised as a violent B-movie. To think that one can watch They Live—most movies, for that matter—divorced of any and all political context is to willfully ignore the message.
- 7/4/2018
- by Patrick Bromley
- DailyDead
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