Skip to main content

The Incredibles ' Jack-Jack Parr

Jack Jack Parr is the youngest member of the super-powered Parr family, aka The Incredibles. Initially thougt to have no powers, he is soon revealed to have an unknown number of superpowers and may well be the most versatile of the Parr children.

The toy is a fastfood promo vinyl figure I got second-hand. Very cute and well made although it is more of a statue rather then an action figure having no articulation at all. Also, it is not the same scale as the other figures in the collection, being substantially bigger.











posted from Bloggeroid

Comments

  1. Might be for the three and under crowd. Beautiful sculptor nicely rendered in digital.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

BBI Elite Force M1 Abrams

Just a quickie today, still got a ton of work to finish. It's a BBI Elite Force 1:18 M1 Abrams MBT! A coworker decided to streamline his collection and sold me this tank and two humvees. More pics soon when I get a chance to pose them with my G.I. Joes.  

The Nightmare Before Christmas: Doctor Finkelstein

Doctor Finkelstein is a resident of Halloween Town. He is the mad scientist and the "father" of Sally. He is described as a pale-as-a-sheet mad scientist with a duckbill-like mouth and a hinged skullcap that he can open up to reveal his brain. Doctor Finklestein lives in a large observatory with his living rag doll creation Sally and his hunchbacked assistant Igor. James Whale's Frankenstein is quoted in Finklestein's line "I made you with my own hands" which is ironic as Finklestein's body appears to be largely if not entirely artificial. Unlike Frankenstein who takes no responsibility for his creations and disowns them almost as soon as they are completed (much like the original Dr. Frankenstein), Finklestein takes full responsibility over Sally and acts as an over-protective father and in some ways an overbearing husband (thus explaining Sally's attempts to run away) by keeping her under lock and key under the pretext of shelterin...

Migrating to Facebook

After a tragedy in the family and a slow return to my hobbies, I've realized that I've been posting more on Facebook. It's easier, faster and the audience response is faster. So, posting here might be spasmodic at best for the time being. Bear with me as I decide what to do with my blogs, thanks!