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Hasbro Star Wars - The Power of the Force Jabba's Dancers (Cinema Scene)

Hasbro Star Wars - The Power of the Force Jabba's Dancers (Cinema Scene) Review



Overall 5.00 of 5 (by 1 user)




Jabba's Dancers are worth scouring the galaxy for!
5 star rating

Collector of Star Wars figures, Star Wars fan, Long-time reviewer, a writer
Pros

    Nicely detailed figures, Special Edition characters

Cons
    Hard to find

AUG
19
2008
 
 
Although most of my post-1990s Star Wars acquisitions have been the familiar action figures sold individually in carded bubblepacks, my "crown jewels" are the various multi-figure sets known as Cinema Scenes.

Cinema Scenes (also known colloquially as "three-packs") are small dioramas based on scenes from the Star Wars series, usually containing three 3.75-inch action figures pre-posed on a molded and painted base with a carboard backdrop illustrated to match the specific scene being recreated in the Cinema Scene.

Over the years, Hasbro released over a dozen Cinema Scenes/Screen Scenes which span the entire saga, as well as similar two-figure sets, including the Silver Anniversary two-packs issued in 2002

Most of the Cinema Scenes depict the characters in important but not necessarily exciting "action" scenes; most tend to show such bits as the Jedi Masters in the Jedi Council or Rebel pilots in a hangar bay.

Let Us Entertain You: Jabba's Dancers 

You have to hand it to Jabba the Hutt. He might be the vilest gangster in the galaxy, and he does surround himself with scum and villainy, but he does have some redeeming qualities.

Er, two redeeming qualities: he likes good music, and he likes dancing girls. He has been known to hire such renowned groups as Figrin D'an and the Modal Nodes -- the jazz-like band that was present at Chalmun's Cantina in A New Hope -- and Max Rebo's Band, currently playing at Jabba's fortress-like palace on Tatooine.

Although the core of the group is the trio of Max Rebo, Sy Snootles, and Droopy McCool, the Band has been known to hire additional musicians, including Joh Yowza, a Yuzzum from Endor; Barquin D'an, a Bith musician (and relative of Figrin's), and three shapely backup singer-dancers, Greeata, Lyn Me, and Rystall.

Hasbro's Jabba's Dancers is one of the 10 three-figure Power of the Force Cinema Scene. Most of them feature a combination of major and bit players featured in George Lucas' 1977-83 Star Wars Trilogy, but Jabba's Dancers is one of the few that showcases background characters featured exclusively in the 1997 Special Edition reissues.

One of the reasons -- or lame rationalizations, as skeptical Star Wars fans might put it -- that Lucas altered the Original Trilogy was the chance for the director/producer to make his original vision for each film come to fruition. Lucas, it seems, was constrained by technology and production schedules and was forced to delete or abandon certain scenes he was particularly keen to see on film.

One, of course, was the encounter between Han Solo and Jabba the Hutt in A New Hope; a bigger, more elaborate musical number for Return of the Jedi was another. So when Lucasfilm began the process of creating CGI and digital cinematography hardware and software to make the current prequel trilogy, Lucas decided to test some of the new tools by revisiting the sequences he had always been unhappy with and made still-controversial changes to the "classic" trilogy.

Deep within the dimly lit halls of Jabba the Hutt's palace on Tatooine, the musical combo, the Max Rebo Band, entertains some of the galaxy's most notorious smugglers, mercenaries, and bounty hunters. Besides offering great music, the multispecies band has three of the galaxy's best back-up singers and dancers.  - from the package blurb


Jabba's Dancers, first released in 1998, features Rystall, an exotic red-spotted dancer with flame-red hair and pale skin, Greeata, a member of the Rodian species to which Greedo from A New Hope and Wald from The Phantom Menace belong, and Lyn Me, a Twi'lek (like the ill-fated green-skinned Oola and Jabba's nasty majordomo, Bib Fortuna). They are wonderfully posed, caught in mid-dance in the dark cavernous main audience chamber in Jabba's Palace.

 As usual, the quality of the 3.75-inch figures is excellent; every costume and physical detail is carefully replicated, and the base and backdrop add both support and detailing to this mini-diorama based on the "Jedi Rocks" musical interlude from the Special Edition of  Return of the Jedi.

Greeata, a Rodian who is also a capable kloo horn player, joined the band at the same time as its lead singer, Sy Snootles. Rystáll, an exotic near-human raised by a pair of Ortolan musicians, was a slave under the crime lord Xizor until Lando Calrissian won her by defeating the lord in a sabacc tournament. Lando freed her and Rystáll's travels eventually brought her to Tatooine.- From the package blurb 

For collectors, Hasbro's packaging design makes it easy to both store and display the figures. The clear plastic "window" lets one see the figures, plastic base, and cardboard backdrop without having to take Jabba's Dancers out of the box.

  • Accessories:
    Base
    Cardboard Background

This obviously makes displaying multiple Cinema Scenes in limited shelf space possible; I simply stack them in chronological order -- with the exception of the newer Scene Packs, which have smaller boxes -- in two groups of 6 (with Death Star Escape strategically placed on the CD tower between them). I only have to dust the box tops and fronts, without having to worry about figures coming off their bases or losing tiny blasters and lightsabers.

The third singer is a Twi'lek named Lyn Me, recognized by herpeople as the greatest dancer out of all the Twi'lek clans. Together the trio of singers/dancers helped the band secure a lucrative, extended contract playing in Jabba's court until a visit from the Jedi Luke Skywalker caused the Hutt's criminal empire to come crashing down. - From the package blurb 

For small children, however, Jabba's Dancers may not be the best gift. First, they can only be found at such online stores as Entertainment Earth or Brian's Toys; their limited availability means they can be pretty expensive, so a mom or dad might want to consider getting their young Jedi trainees something a bit more fun to play with (such as a Hasbro Electronic Lightsaber). Second, from a small child's point of view -- particularly a boy's -- Jabba's babes have no fun-to-play-with extras like the aforementioned tiny blasters and lightsabers. Rystall, Greeata, and Lyn Me just dance and look pretty (or as pretty as their species perceive them to be), unlike, say, Emperor Palpatine, Darth Vader and Luke Skywalker in "Final Jedi Duel.

 

I_thumb_up Hasbro Star Wars - The Power of the Force Jabba's Dancers... is recommended by Fardreamer

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I_comment_shdw24 Comments about Fardreamer’s Review



MotherGrizzly wrote on Aug 25, 2008 at 9:30PM


I bought this cinema pack "back in the day" and it is still one of my favorites! Awesome review.


PattyTherre wrote on Aug 20, 2008 at 9:41PM


Another quality review from my high quality friend!


Meri wrote on Aug 20, 2008 at 7:21AM


Another great review from you :)


GeorgeChabot wrote on Aug 19, 2008 at 11:25PM


Nice job, bud. ;>


Fardreamer wrote on Aug 19, 2008 at 3:00PM


In response to SpokaneMan's comment from Aug 19, 2008 at 1:08PM:

Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it!


Fardreamer wrote on Aug 19, 2008 at 1:58PM


In response to LisaCarey's comment from Aug 19, 2008 at 1:46PM:

Oops. This reply showed up twice. Odd thing. the Internet is.


Fardreamer wrote on Aug 19, 2008 at 1:58PM


In response to LisaCarey's comment from Aug 19, 2008 at 1:46PM:

You're the only woman who has ever said they'd get that slave girl outfit. Remind me to do a review of the Princess Leia figure!


LisaCarey wrote on Aug 19, 2008 at 1:46PM


I always wanted that skimpy little halter top outfit that Carrie Fisher wore in the Jabba scene. :-)


SpokaneMan wrote on Aug 19, 2008 at 1:08PM


Another fine review my man! :)