Today, I will be discussing the Disney Figural
Keyrings line by Monogram International Inc. I didn’t originally plan to
collect these “Keyrings” specifically. In fact, thanks to the flood of blind
bag toys and collectables that came surging onto the retail market in the
2010s, I don’t think I was really aware of this line until I came across
several “Figural Keyrings” secondhand at a thrift store. I can’t remember now exactly
how many the store had or which characters they were, since I wasn’t that impressed
with the figures at that time. They seemed a little too stylized for my taste.
So I can’t really explain why I decided to
purchase the Kristoff keychain pictured above. I think I must’ve felt a little sorry
for him. He did seem a bit forlorn when I found him in his used state. I’ve
always been the sensitive type, as far as my personality goes, and I don’t
think I ever really lost that childhood tendency to read emotions into
inanimate objects with faces. Seeing the first two Toy Story films probably
didn’t help with that. The fifty cent price tag on this keychain made it
appealing as well. And as a general Disney fan, I was at least aware of who
Kristoff was, even though I hadn’t seen the movie Frozen. As it turned out, I
may have had a good eye for keychain selection. According to online research I
did for this post, this specific “Kristoff Figural Keyring” is listed as an
Exclusive on the Series 5 packaging. However, I don’t know if this actually
means anything in terms of its rarity.
I found the Anna
keychain, without her packaging, some time later in a clearance bin at a Michaels
craft store. I bought her because I thought Kristoff could use some company.
Toy Story syndrome strikes again. Still, I didn’t see myself as a collector of
Disney Figural Keyrings. You have to have more than two of something to call it
a collection, or a sub-collection in this case.
Then one day, I found a Disney Figural Keyring:
Series 2 blind box on a clearance table at a Barnes and Noble bookstore.
Someone had tried to open the box, and the top was pulled up just enough for me
to see Maleficent inside. Seeing the Sleeping Beauty villain rendered in such a
cutesy style with a tiny smile amused me so much that I bought her. Ever since
then I’ve been looking at this line differently. I guess the art style used for
the figures must’ve grown on me.
Next thing you know, I’ll have crossed over to
collecting Funko’s Pocket Pop Keychains. I’ve always thought Funko Pops looked
sort of weird and creepy, with their strange proportions and their solid black
eyes. But the company tends to release characters from a lot of underrepresented
franchises that otherwise don’t get a lot of merchandise. I do own one Funko
Pop keychain already. But I only bought it because it’s the Fourth Doctor from
the original Doctor Who television series. My whole family loved watching the
original Doctor Who on PBS when I was growing up. We were Whovians before most
people in the United States
knew what Doctor Who was. But that’s a story for another day.
Signed, Treesa
Update: I later ended up with this “Maleficent
As Dragon” Disney Figural Keyring, after purchasing a blind bag on clearance
from FYE. So I now own Maleficent in both her human form, or rather her fairy
form, as well as in her dragon form.