TMNT II: The Secret of the Ooze followed the four ninjas againLeonardo, Donatello. Upon us receiving the notification of damage or a manufacturing issue, we may request photographic evidence of the parcel and/or the particular product that has the issue. When Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles first appeared in comics in 1984. Popcultcha will only accept returns, process refunds, or exchange goods if we are contacted or notified within 7 days of you receiving the goods at your nominated delivery address. If this is the case with your item, please contact Popcultcha immediately via email to or via telephone on 1300 586 291 (Aussie Hotline) or +61 3 5240 7979 (International Customers). However, sometimes items do become damaged in transit or there is some sort of manufacturing issue thereby making the goods unfit for their intended purpose.
We recognise the importance of buying mint condition collectables and do the best we possibly can to ensure they remain that way from door to door. Here at Popcultcha, we take pride in ensuring that your goods are packed carefully and arrive safely to your nominated delivery address. We don't like to brag at Popcultcha, but having been in the collectables industry for over 27 years now, we know all about mint condition collectables and the fastidious nature of collecting stuff! What's more is that most of us Popcultcha Peeps are collectors ourselves! What this means for you is that we pack your orders the way we like to receive our own orders, so we take the utmost care in ensuring your goodies get from our HQ to your home safely and securely. CLICK HERE to see more great Funko products Proudly brought to you by Popcultcha, Australia's largest and most comprehensive Funko online store. So if you feel like slammin' and jammin' to the new sweet sound, add the new TMNT II Pop! Vinyl Figures to your Funko collection today!
However, he's also sporting a new Michelangelo-themed all-over Artist Series design, and comes packaged in an exclusive Pop! Protector. Here we have the turtle who always make life a party, Michelangelo, holding a box of delicious Simply Donuts. When he learns the secret behind the Turtles' mutation, he becomes more dangerous than ever. The Secret of the Ooze was followed by a third film in 1993, and an unrelated fourth (TMNT). The film sees Shredder return to take back command of the Foot Clan, and work towards getting revenge on the Turtles. It is the sequel to the 1990 film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Cowabunga.Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze - Michelangelo Artist Series Pop! Vinyl Figure with Pop! ProtectorĪfter the release of their smash-hit debut film, everyone’s favourite heroes in a half shell returned to the big screen in 1991 with Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze. Today's kids are learning from the Turtles that the world is a sinkhole of radioactive waste, that it's more reassuring to huddle together in sewers than take your chances competing at street level, and that individuality is dangerous. Spiderman and Superman represented democratic values. The ones that stood out from a crowd, had their own opinions, were not afraid of ridicule, and symbolized a future of truth and justice. People raised on these principles run a risk of starring in videotapes of police brutality. The way you attain status in the group is by using violence to defend it against outsiders. They hang out together, act together, fight together, and have a dim collective IQ that expresses itself in phrases like "Cowabunga, dude." This is the way insecure teenage boys sometimes talk in a group, as a way of creating solidarity, masking fears of inadequacy, and forming a collective personality that is stupider than any individual member of it. The turtles are an example of the hazards of individuality.
It's as if the whole sum of a character's personality is expressed by the way he does violence. All that differentiates them, in the Nintendo game that gave them birth, is their weapons. What kind of a superhero is a reptile who lives in sewers, is led by a rat, eats cold pizza, and is the product of radioactive waste? Is this some kind of a cosmic joke on the kids, robbing them of their birthright, a sense of wonder? Or is it simply an emblem of our drab and dreary times? One disturbing thing about the turtles is that they look essentially the same. As someone who was raised on Superman, Batman, Spiderman and Wonder Woman, I think the kids are getting the short end of the stick. A recent national survey reported that 95 percent of grade school teachers could trace aggressive, antisocial classroom behavior to the Ninja Turtles - high praise.