
The black striping and detailing was hand-drawn with a paint pen. The suit's crazy patterned side was brush painted using some fabric paints I bought at Wal-Mart. I made the neck tie from scratch using a thin leather strap. I added a new clasp to fasten the jacket.

I altered the jacket of Agent McGuiness's suit, reforming the lapels and stitching them to open up the chest. I spray painted them and the toe of the shoe with Testors Aluminum paint. Strips of styrene plastic was used to create the brass knuckles on the glove. The glove was a military cloth fingerless glove, dyed black. The hands came from a Lanard 12 inch figure, seeing that the detachable Dragon hands looked too small. The head was then brush painted using Valejo paints. I also sculpted the scarred side, making the facial damage and messy hair as close to what we see in the movie as I could, a compliment to makeup artist Rick Baker. The head sculpt seemed close enough to Tommy Lee Jones to get a pass, so I used sculpy to reshape his good side just a tad, sculpting a sideburn, brow, chin, and new hair to bether tweak his likeness.


The figure started off as Federal Agent Patrick McGuiness, released years ago by Dragon. Controversial as this version of Two-Face may be to fans, he is still the very first ever live action depiction of the classie villain. Visit megaphone.Here is my 12 inch custom figure of Two-Face as he appeared in the 1995 film, Batman Forever.

Which were YOUR favorites? Comment below.īecome a part of the Shasta Army on our Patreon page: We complete the history of Kenner's Batman action figures, with their lines tying into Batman Forever, Batman & Robin, and Batman Beyond, ending with us discussing our favorites of all the figures. About The History of Batman Kenner Action Figures - Part 2 (Batman Forever, Batman & Robin, Batman Beyond) Episode
