If this comes with a Keaton headsculpt, it'll almost certainly be the battle-damaged version from the end, due to the design of the figure.
The head/cowl is a large piece that sits on top of the cape, sandwiching it between the sculpt and the body of the figure.
If the Keaton sculpt was a normal version with a standard neck, then there would be no way to have the cape stay on the figure (and there'd be no Bat-emblem either, since it's part of the cowl). This is the design of both the figure and the original costume - hence no good way for him to remove his mask (he had to tear it off at the end).
However, a battle-damaged version can still have the cowl sit on top, with just the bottom of the torn headpiece - hence, the cape and the emblem would still be intact.
There's really no other way to design an alternative headsculpt.
Oh, I thought you meant this.
View attachment 123583
If Anton Furst says the belt is brass, then it's brass. End of story.
If this comes with a Keaton headsculpt, it'll almost certainly be the battle-damaged version from the end, due to the design of the figure.
The head/cowl is a large piece that sits on top of the cape, sandwiching it between the sculpt and the body of the figure.
If the Keaton sculpt was a normal version with a standard neck, then there would be no way to have the cape stay on the figure (and there'd be no Bat-emblem either, since it's part of the cowl). This is the design of both the figure and the original costume - hence no good way for him to remove his mask (he had to tear it off at the end).
However, a battle-damaged version can still have the cowl sit on top, with just the bottom of the torn headpiece - hence, the cape and the emblem would still be intact.
There's really no other way to design an alternative headsculpt.
Enter your email address to join: