Geobra missed the chance here to have klickies with legs capable of moving independently of one another! The 'male' end could have clipped into the 'female' and held together with friction (or a spring of some sort, like the 'poppers' you get on clothing), but allowing each leg to move on its own (OK the figures would have to walk 'goose step' like Russian soldiers, but the gymnasts could have many realistic poses...). Instead they glued/welded them together... opportunity missed.
Thinking about this, I wondered if wrenching the legs as if you were trying to make the figure goose-step might work? I tried it on the only swimsuit klicky I have two of. I gripped his
hips firmly and
twisted back and forth a few times, then the connector broke- job done! No external damage at all. My klicky had two-piece legs (grey top half, light skintone lower half), so I was careful not to put any strain on the lower half or the place where the two halves join. It might be easier to do this by gripping the hips with two pairs of well-padded pliers.
How about joining the legs back together? Here's my method (used to repair many toys over the years). It
does involve a rubber band!
1. Drill a small hole in one part using a small drill bit (I used a 2mm diameter bit, slightly smaller than the screw I used) and taking care not to go right through. There was a hole there already, which made it easier to get it in the right place. You might even be able to use the existing hole without drilling.
2. Screw a screw into this hole, then cut off the head with pliers (file the end smooth if you wish). You could do this with a nail ('Round Wire' type) or even a piece of wire paper-clip. Glue the nail or wire in place if the hole is too big.
3. Drill another hole in the other leg (same size hole if using a nail or wire, slightly bigger hole if using a screw).
4. Put some glue in the second hole, fit legs into place (check the feet point forward!) and wrap a rubber band around until glue has set.
5. If you have glued both ends of the nail/wire the legs will now be fixed. If you used a screw, the legs should rotate independently (the screw moves in the first hole, unscrewing slightly as you move the legs) and your figure can do gymnastics, join the Russian army or kick his mates in the b*m!
Can you tell which is which? One has been dismembered and reassembled, the other is intacta.
The one on the right is the one I took apart and reassembled!