20 Old Series Doctor Who Action Figures We Need To Have

One of the pure pleasures of being a Doctor Who fan during this time is that we get some really excellent action figures to play with. I have a small, but growing, collection of them, and I have yet to find any I€™ve disliked. This is in contrast to what we had during the 1980s and 1990s when Dapol, who I understand tried quite hard, were producing a line that was best described as€well, I€™ll be polite and refrain from using any of the words that come to mind. Nowadays we have figures of all eleven Doctors, including variant figures, like the Sixth Doctor€™s blue outfit and various regeneration versions. We also have all the major new series companions and a handful of old series companions. There€™s also of course tons of villains from the old and new series both, in addition to various TARDIS interiors and exteriors. Heck, you can even buy black and white versions of some of the characters! But we can do better! There€™s still some that are missing and we really need to have, especially from the old series. So here€™s a list, in no particular order, of what we need most!

20. All The Old Series Companions

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=82S3RfFMaA8 We have a surprisingly large number of old series companion figures, though almost always available in just sets. We can get plastic versions of Jo Grant, the Brigadier, Sarah Jane Smith (the older version from her TV series), K9, Leela and Peri. There€™s several versions of the latter two, which is no surprise. But here€™s a list of companions for which we don€™t have action figures: Ian, Barbra, Susan, Vicki, Steven, Sarah Kingdom, Ben, Polly, Jamie, Victoria, Zoe, Liz Shaw, old series Sara Jane, Harry, Romana (either one), Adric, Tegan, Nyssa, Turlough, Mel and Ace. Some of these are major surprises, and all represent big gaps in the toy continuity; gaps that need to be filled.

19. The Candy Man

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvsUuQmAgG0 €œThe Happiness Patrol€ was a pretty horrible story all around. It was supposed to be a critique of Margaret Thatcher€™s time in office, and you can guess how well that€™s aged. The only really good or interesting thing about the story was the presence of the villainous Candy Man. Now this isn€™t some Tony Todd kind of creature. No, this was a robot made of candy, who used candy methods to kill people. He was insane, over the top and hilarious. He also boasted a pretty good character design and would look great as a figure. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvsUuQmAgG0

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Chris Swanson is a freelance writer and blogger based in Phoenix, Arizona, where winter happens to other people. His blog is at wilybadger.wordpress.com