Written by Jonathan Wojcik
KENNER'S SWAMP THING
It's becoming not only a Halloween of anime, manga and cartoons this year, but one of heavier than usual nostalgia for my childhood. Maybe it's because I turn 36(!!!!!!) this year, which feels like the number at which I'm supposed to be "too old" for this and people are going to question what business someone my age has talking about toys and cartoons, but I'm pretty sure half the people getting angry about toys and cartoons over on Youtube still have several years on me. Move aside, GRAMPS! It's time for a spry under-40 whippsernapper to shine!
So, where was I? Okay, take everything you know about me from this website, imagine me being even more excited about all of those things when I was seven years old, and then imagine how that seven year old would feel one holiday morning, the other holiday I mean, when they unwrapped the following object with no prior context or precedent:
My mind. Was BLOWN. I had never seen these toys on shelves. I had never seen advertisements for them. My mom had stumbled upon this one all by its lonesome, and she knew me well enough to know this would be the prize gift of the year. Of everything I'd been given that day, this was the one I chose to take with me on our obligatory visits with every surviving relative in town.
But who was "Skin Man???" And what the hell was a "Fangbat Biomask?!" The back of the package should have had more answers, but instead, it only had more tantalizing mysteries than ever...if there was ONLY one thing that could have been more exciting in that very moment to that very child than a "Skinman with Fangbat Biomask," it was his friends and his foes, but more on that in a moment. Just who is this "Skin Man" guy? And WHAT is a "Biomask!?"
There was, in fact, never any use of the term "Biomask" in the entire series. This was only a catchy term the toy line invented to dramatize an admittedly pretty cheap action feature, and that's a shame, because the idea of a bunch of villains donning some sort of living, organic monster heads sounded and still sounds pretty killer.
Skinman's bat form wasn't quite as interesting in the TV show, either. What stands out to me the most about the action figure is that he has a GIGANTIC bat face on his shoulders, and that's also where his wings are attached. Toon Skinman just goes full anthropomorphic Chiropteran, with the wings integrated into his arms, though he's still one of the coolest and most realistically detailed bat monsters I had ever seen at the time.
As to why his "human" form looks like someone tried to recreate their sphynx cat as a homemade candle, that's...never explained. Like at all. The action packaging actually calls him a "zombie," but in the show, he's just kind of a creepy wrinkly man that happens to live in the swamp and hates Swamp Thing with the rest of his freak friends, WHOM are as follows:
![](../toys/swampthing-drdeemo.jpg)
DOCTOR DEEMO
So this character, by modern standards, is kind of a little insensitive. "Voodoo" is a highly distorted and highly misunderstood concept, as is the idea of a "witch doctor," but that's what this guy is supposed to be; a "witch doctor" who'se got snakke scales, venomous fangs and a voodoo doll he carries around of Swamp Thing. I'm not sure he ever does any sympathetic magic with it or not; if so, I never saw the episode. All I do remember is him complaining about Swamp Thing's various superpowers while using the doll to demonstrate them - each only $6.99 at Toys R' Us, kids!. Man, Deemo, way to be a corporate shill!
The only real reason to get the action figure is, of cours, the SERPENT BIOMASK, a menacing red affair whose huge fangs and detailed, fleshy grey mouth was much more biologically accurate and interesting than any other snake toy I probably ever had, though what's really interesting is the fact that they gave it centipede legs. Or are those supposed to be protruding bones? Like the hood of a cobra, but without the skin? It's pretty radical looking, in any case.
![](../toys/swampthing-antonarcane.jpg)
ANTON ARCANE
Those of you already familiar with Swamp Thing know that this is his arch nemesis from the comics and live-action materials, and a complex character with a rich fictional history we won't get into here, because I didn't know any of that as a kid and didn't care. I knew him only as the cackling jerk of a Saturday Morning toy commercial, who in this continuity acquires wrinkly, purple Nosferatu flesh when he gets splashed with his own experimental chemicals, so I guess that's what's wrong with Skinman and Deemo. His action figure gave him an equally vampiric-looking purple spider Biomask, but my VHS tape only had the first episode or so, and he never takes his spider form before the final credits roll. Having never caught the series on television, I'd never find out what his spider body looked like in the series until...actually, just now.
It was admittedly as cool as main superheroes ever got in my childhood experience, and I did find him almost as intriguing as his enemies, but I still didn't love him as much as I loved the mere accessory to his action figure: the "MONSTER TRAP" that never appeared in the cartoon and wasn't even billed as a "character" for the toy line, but became one of my single favorite "action figures" of all time the moment I held it in slightly smaller hands.
![](../toys/swampthing-swamptrap.jpg)
THE SWAMP TRAP PLAYSET
I say Monster Trap was the only carnivorous plant toy I had for a long time, and that's still true of you're thinking in terms of individual figures. The Swamp Trap Playset, however, incorporated a giant Venus Fly Trap right into its landscape, so of course I had to beg for that. The purpose of it however was supposedly to tear off biomasks, and in the cartoon, it could "cure" mutation by engulfing the mutant in question and spitting them back out. Speaking of which...
![](../toys/swampthing-transducer.jpg)
THE TRANSDUCER PLAYSET
So "biomasks" didn't exist in the cartoon, but the "transducer" did; a casket-like machine that would bathe a subject in mutagenic slime to transform them into the monster self.
But, I'm sure the VERY first thing you noticed about the Transducer was the very first thing I noticed at seven years old.
![](../toys/swampthing-weedkiller.jpg)
WEED KILLER
Here he is, Weed Killer. The coolest looking "human" in the whole line with his bright orange jumpsuit, toxic blue skin and eerie, wide-eyed gas mask, which glows in the dark by the way. All of the eyes on all of the villains and their biomasks could glow in the dark. They had no right not to.
Weed Killer's mutant form comes courtesy the "BOGSUCKER" Biomask. The what? Excuse me? Is that even an animal?!
And one day, when it came time to make an e-mail address for the first time in my life, "BOGSUCKER" was for whatever reason the first thing that came to my mind, but the "sucker" part made it sound perhaps all too easily like it could have been some sort of obscure slang for something unspeakably unhygenic, so Bogleech was born, and after years of using it as my first-ever email address I'd come to think it had such a nice ring to it that it became the name of my first-ever webpage. This is it. This is the actual "bog leech." Actually just a smelly blue man who wears a gas mask all day, every day and also hates plants because plants sometimes punch him in the face.
MORE HALLOWEEN FEATURES:
![](https://bogleech.com/halloween/maggotback.png)
![](https://bogleech.com/halloween/milburnmains.png)
![](https://bogleech.com/halloween/maggotnext.png)