Here we have Batman in hand. While the figure has been around for over half of the McFarlane license run, this is the second time the Hush body buck has been covered on the site (third time if you count Spawn crossover Batman despite him being on Three Jokers). While the wrists and ankles retain the ball shaped joints that make him less naturalistic, the figure still looks great in terms of superhero proportions, and I sometimes struggle on choosing either this or the Knightfall body. The latter makes for a good evergreen style Batman, but this also works if you want him to both look prominent in a Justice League display and in a Batman Family collection where he won't be the same size as Batgirl or Nightwing. Hell, that new Page Punchers Tim Drake Robin is using the Knightfall body and he comes off as a bit oversized unless he was Red Robin. Much like Cowardly Lot, his logo is printed on rather than sculpted, which looks much better both in terms of how well it fits the comic aesthetics and the proportions it has. The shade of blue is not as dark as what we see on some versions of the Knightfall body, but it isn't super bright like what Year 2 had, and the cape is not only a cloth goods material with a bendy wire running through it, but it is also double layered. The dual color aspect makes having it look naturalistic a bit hard to do for a vanilla pose, but the darker blue helps make the rest of the figure pop that bit more.
Head sculpt is the same it's mostly been for the past few years, though the eyes are know shaded to make them appear shadowy without using the black around the forehead. Despite this sharing the same articulation as Cowardly Lot, he still comes with the same neck system where the head is molded on it, and it would have been better to see either the Cowardly Lot update or the adaptor system found on the other Year Two (same one with the hook and super dynamic cape). At least the Batarangs he comes with are better scaled than what most versions of the character come with on top of not being as thick as a controller.
A common issue we see with this figure is McFarlane still reusing the same hands that came with Three Jokers, which have the ribbing reminiscent of the Keaton suit. If they gave him new hands that didn't have these, I would have been happier with how the figure turned out. As for how he scales with a Superman figure in my collection, the Crisis on Infinite Earths body has remained a consistent option for Todd, and while he is clearly not the Hush version (which I technically have as Cyborg Superman), the two still look great together, but now I'll be scratching my head on what version of Batman I'd want for my display...at least here, the shades of blue aren'y the same, and
As far as prior uses go, we have the 2023 blue and grey version with a molded chest emblem, a sculpted yet dynamic cape, and metallic colors. I kind of wanted to get this figure but I always found the colors a bit too dark than usual, while the logo's proportions seemed slightly off. The black and grey version makes me want to see the H2SH version in those colors. I like the darker colors on the King 2-pack version but I wouldn't really want to spend much money on that set. They also have a more gestural left hand as well as a fist with a Kryptonite ring.
Other reuses include the Joker War version, a sketch repaint meant to simulate dynamic comic shading in black and white, and a gold suit version that makes me think too much of those old kids toyline repaints we used to get and probably still do.
As for Hush, this figure goes as far back 2022, and one can tell because the back of the boxes and the collector cards come with lame CG renders of the toy instead of either cool comic art or custom photography. While hush normally has a black costume on display, he has sometimes worn the trenchcoat buttoned up like this. That said, despite how dynamic the sculpt is, it's a bit too cheap looking with how lacking the paint is, especially for the strap that should probably be a different color. I don't mind if your figure must come with a jacket, but make them optional accessories made of fabric so we can have them not only in more display options than one while also allowing to post a figure better. What we have looks fine, but without a wash or flexibility to make him less rigid, he ends up feeling less impressive even for the price. At least what little of the normal costume we do see is fine.
The head sculpt is another aspect I will give credit for, between the paint added to make the bandages layered and worn while also accentuating the eyes and mouth without either part of his face appearing lost in the sculpt. Articulation is the same but is mostly limited by the coat. You can pose Hush in some capacity, but doing so requires a bit of imagination given the limitations of his coat. He is knives are cool, though some guns would have kicked ass. My only guess was that this was from the era where Warner Bros demanded any DC merch not come with firearms, which I am so glad they abandoned that regulation given how that won't stop people from shooting each other. Sadly, even with the rule lifted, I already know there's no new Hush with his proper costume in the horizon...but at least he comes in Jokerized colors. Would have made more sense if he was Riddlerized given Edward Nygma was behind the events of the Hush story.
We first got these two in a so-so 2-pack in celebration of the comic's 20th anniversary. Here, I get to talk about the first version of Batman's body mold from that series, specifically the issues I have with it; the solicitation renders inaccurately gave him dual molded elbow joints while they're casting black while the entire forearm is black rather than the gloves. You can tell by the boring collector cards they came with. He also has a yelling expression like Hush does, but while the latter looks fine with his, Batman ends up looking more like he's about to bite a sandwich or is in mid-sentence. Gritted teeth head sculpts have come a long way for the most part, but I don't think most open mouth expressions are as easy to pull off with realistic figures than it is with anime characters. Oh and the Batarangs are different, Hush came with a shovel, and they shared a display base featuring the headstone of Jason Todd. I never got this set, but I was more than happy to get H2SH Batman thanks to the retooling and wired cape while waiting to get Hush for a cheaper price than $20. As usual, Batman remains a triumphant benchmark of glory among some of the best McFarlane releases, while Hush remains some of the company's duds. And it sucks that we're not getting a second stab at Tommy given this new Batman popped up and kicks ass. All the villain's good for is complimenting the Caped Crusader for pictures like this. What are you, an accessory?
Final ranking: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ and a half out of ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (Batman)
⭐⭐ out of ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (Hush)







































































































