i am still having a problem with the non-figure parts form these sets.
i don't like the crab, it looks too childish in a grown-up way.
i hate the giant manta ray, the eyes don´t seem to belong to it and the teeth are too absurd (manta rays filter plancton and are quite peaceful).
I'm having some problems too. I realized my favorite bit about Playmobil is the animals, but am not sure whether these nutty sea monsters fit the category. I do like the hydra--probably because it reminds me of the "actual" mythical monster. I hope it is better quality than the new red dragon.
Walt Disney, on the other hand, took "old" ideas and made them "new" with his fantastic presentations.
Three great and wonderful creative geniuses. Now that's quite a trio!
I re-Christian Richard "Captain Superlative" !
Disney immortalized these great folktales, while giving us "historians" a hobby in tracking down the original, unsanitized tales!
You're too right, Rasputin. Some time ago I came across an entry on Wikpedia crediting Walt Disney with the creation of the story of the kraken!
Wikipedia... I think it eventually will die a cold death or adopt a more traditional editorial structure. Check out any topic that is mildly controversial and it turns into a farce of flame wars between anonymous editors. One vocal Hindu nationalist, for instance, ravages the article about "Alexander the Great" objecting to the term "great" (though it is a 2,500 year old sobriquet) and renaming the article "Alexander of Macedon". A Greek editor than flies off the handle complaining that this fuels the Republic of Macedon's political ambitions.
Guys! Guys! Can I please read a professional historian's bland regurgitation of the details, with mention of the areas where bonafide historians disagree?