Cult of Personality WolfMan replacement parts
Wednesday, September 17th, 2008Originally published March 16, 2006, at GJSentinel.com.
Every now and then, model-kit nuts like me see or buy a kit and think it looks fine, but it could be better. That’s probably why a healthy aftermarket has sprung up, with garage-kit producers making replacement heads and other parts to improve on the original without making it too expensive. A case in point is the GEOmetric Design WolfMan. GEO has long been one of the best garage-kit companies around, offering wonderful Universal Studios monster kits cast in either vinyl with some resin parts or all resin. The WolfMan is among them, and he’s OK … but he’s the only near dud of the bunch. Here’s the box art:
My problem with this sculpture (if you could call it a problem) is that it seems sort of narrow up top. The shoulders are rounded, the head a tad small. Plus, the facial expression is kind of bland and the hair at the top of his head looks sort of like some 1970s Shaun Cassidy ‘do. I’m not condemning the sculptor of this kit; his name is Mike Hill and he’s an astoundingly talented artist, particularly when it comes to werewolves. This just isn’t one of his best and he told me in an Internet chat room about three years ago that part of the reason for the kit’s understated impact is that it’s what GEOmetric wanted.
Even if none of this stuff bothered you, the feet probably would. This kit’s WolfMan is standing way up on his tiptoes, making balancing the figure a challenge. I built one and he wobbles every time someone steps too heavily near the shelf.
Fortunately, Tom Parker of Cult of Personality Productions (cultofpersonality@peoplepc.com), working with sculptor Jim Maddox, recently stepped up with a new head and feet for the vinyl version of the GEO WolfMan. Here’s a buildup by Germany’s Bernd Slominski (sometimes known online as “Classic Monsters”):
Cult of Personality’s WolfMan replacement parts are made of resin and fit the 1/8 scale vinyl version of the GEOmetric kit. The replacement parts are sold separately from the kit, or you can buy both directly from Tom Parker for a great price. Price of the parts set alone is $25 postpaid, or $50 postpaid will also get you a bagged GEO kit (by “bagged”, I mean no box, no art, just the kit and you won’t need instructions to know what goes where). Just to make sure it’s clear, the kit doesn’t include a base. Bernd used one available from Resin Realities.
Here’s a comparison between the replacement parts and the originals; sorry, the photo is mine and I’m not the best photographer:
If you’re interested, send him an e-mail at cultofpersonality@peoplepc.com. Tom describes himself as “computer illiterate” and says he depends heavily on Clubhouse administrators Spock and Mark M. to help him get pictures online and other technical issues, but I know he’s comfortable enough with computers to answer e-mails quickly. He’s never kept me waiting long for a reply, and he’s never treated me poorly in … what? Probably 10 transactions in the last four years or so.
Tom is one of the more interesting people I’ve encountered since getting back into this hobby in late 2001, and it was my pleasure to finally meet him in person last year at WonderFest in Louisville, Ky. Instead of skeletons in his closets, he apparently fills them with model kits and does a pretty good business with kit lovers around the world. We traded a few e-mails recently; what follows is what Tom had to say about the WolfMan replacement parts, other replacement parts he’s marketed, and himself:
Like pretty much everyone else, I first got involved with kits back in the mid-’60s (first kit was an Aurora Batmobile purchased through the mail for 35 cents and two cookie wrappers, if memory serves).
I started selling ERTL “Star Trek” kits at conventions in the early ’80s, graduated to selling Billiken figures in the early ’90s at the Fangoria shows in NYC, then along came Chiller Theatre, which I did sporadically for the next eight or nine years until Ed Bowkley (of Diceman Creations) hooked me up at the Fall 2000 show with a table of my own, and I’ve been in the same spot ever since. Also from ’96 to 2001 I was a sales rep for a kit distributor with 45 MJ Designs and Michaels stores on my sales route (roughly 40 feet of display space in each one). This put me directly in touch with manufacturers and (more importantly) with liquidation. And in ’99 I released my first Aurora replacement head, which was Carrie Kelly (the female Robin from “Dark Knight Returns”) for the Revell Robin reissue. That was soon followed by a recast of the original Aurora Batman head and owl and a Space Ghost head for the Aurora Superman. I might as well just list them in order:
1999
• Carrie Kelly (with lasercut sunglasses and lenses) sculpted by myself, with Henry Frickel.
• Batman head and owl (recast off Aurora).
• Space Ghost sculpted by Jay Harless.
2000
• Godzilla train-car head and hand sculpted by Henry Frickel, to fit the Aurora Godzilla.
2001
• Adam West head and belt parts (portrait sculpt and belt pouches by myself, cowl by Henry Frickel). Fits the Aurora Batman.
2003
• King Kong face by Mark VanTine. Fits the Aurora Kong.
• General Urko head w/ammo cartridges and gun in holster (face sculpt by myself, gun, ammo cartridges and helmet by Henry Frickel). Fits the Addar General Ursus.
2003
• Burt Ward head by Jim Maddox. Fits the Aurora Robin.
• Rodan head by myself. Fits the Aurora Rodan.
• WolfMan head and feet by Jim Maddox. Fits the GEOmetric Design kit.
Most of the replacement heads we did based on opportunity. If Revell or Polar Lights rereleased a kit and you could get it for $10 at Toys R Us, our goal was to put out a part (or parts) to improve that kit for not much more than the cost of the plastic kit. The choices were purely what we wanted to see, hoping that others would like them too. Sometimes we got lucky. We were able to get Aurora Kong kits from PL cheap, which prompted me to pursue Mark VanTine to do the Kong sculpt for us. Fortunately for us, Mark wasn’t super busy, he liked the project and did a fantastic sculpt for a very reasonable fee. Three years later we are getting ready to pull a fourth mold on this; it is creeping up on Godzilla as our best seller ever!
The WolfMan was also a matter of timing. I was able to get a fairly large supply of these from George Stephenson when he was selling GEOmetric, and then from out of the blue, a talented sculptor named Jim Maddox contacted me about a ’60s Batman project (which became the Burt Ward head). In the course of talking to him, I found out he was a huge fan of the Universal Monsters, but more importantly, around that same time he had posted pics in the Clubhouse of a Planet of the Apes head he had done. Within a day from the time I saw the picture, I had worked out a deal with him to do a portrait head and feet. The head I chose to have him do is an iconic image from an old Famous Monsters of Filmland cover (which was based on a publicity still from “House of Dracula”).
The feet were actually from the first movie, and the main reason I even bothered with them at all is the kit feet were solid vinyl on “tiptoes” and even if you fill the vinyl parts and pin them, the figure tends to wobble on its base. Now would be a good time to add that our parts are designed for the VINYL version. Because the head features the open collar version of the make-up, you will need to cut away the collar and the front of the shirt (much easier on hollow vinyl, than solid resin, although a couple folks have done it).
…By the way, I recommend leaving about a quarter-inch of the vinyl flashing in place on each bicep before gluing it to the torso, then filling the gaps with epoxy putty to effectively broaden the shoulders. You will need to sculpt in a few folds and seams to match the kit parts, but it should be no big deal.