
For my first submission to Forgotten Heroes 2025, I present The Man Who Cannot Die, The Phantom!
One of the first costumed superheroes, the Phantom debuted in 1936 and is still in syndication in newspaper strips today. He was the first hero to wear a skintight suit, and the first to have eyes with no visible pupils. There was a movie that came out in 1996 starring Billy Zane that I know I’ve seen but can’t remember anything about, and a Scifi channel miniseries that I know I haven’t seen.
The Phantom is actually a title, not a name: twenty-one generations of the Walker family have worn the suit. Since it’s passed down from generation to generation, the myth developed that the Phantom is immortal. From Wikipedia:
The Phantom was 21st in a line of crime-fighters which began in 1536, when the father of British sailor Christopher Walker was killed during a pirate attack. Swearing an oath on the skull of his father’s murderer to fight evil, Christopher began a legacy of the Phantom which would pass from father to son. Nicknames for the Phantom include “The Ghost Who Walks”, “Guardian of the Eastern Dark” and “The Man Who Cannot Die”.[6]
Unlike many other superheroes, the Phantom has no superpowers; he relies on his strength, intelligence, skill at arms (he carries two holstered handguns, a revolver and a 1911 .45 autopistol, one on each hip, and is an expert marksman with both), and the myth of his immortality to take action against the forces of evil. The 21st Phantom is married to Diana Palmer; they met while he studied in the United States and they have two children, Kit and Heloise. He has a trained wolf named Devil and a horse named Hero, and like the 20 previous Phantoms he lives in the ancient Skull Cave.

To make the Phantom, I used this Daredevil Heroclix. I cut off the billy clubs and up-gunned him by giving him twin machine pistols. The bottom parts of the clubs now look like ammo clips.


Pretty much all that was left to do was repaint him, although I removed a good part of his billy holster and filed down his horns first. (I didn’t care enough to give him a second holster, though). Looks like I missed a spot on his left toe. I’ll fix it, but I’m not taking the pictures again.


There’s quite a bit of variation in his costume colors. A quick Google search shows his signature purple suit varies between royal purple to pastel lavender, and the stripes on his briefs have been blue, red or yellow. I stuck with the blue.

The Phantom was created by Lee Falk, who died in 1999. Fun story: In 1993, I was 21 years old and working in a comic shop. I had occasion to spend a fair bit of time with a woman 17 years my senior who worked for a major advertising firm in New York. Once, while we were not doing what we usually did when we saw each other, she mentioned that I should meet her friend Lee sometime, since I was into comics. She described him as a lovely old guy. She met him while doing marketing work for King Features Syndicate, who owned, among other things, The Phantom. Yes, she meant that Lee, and no, I never met him.

Anyway, imagine my surprise when, researching this hero, I discovered that there has been a recent video game released featuring the character that looks awesome but has been described as an “experience in frustration” and a “barely functional mess”. Yikes.
One down, one more to go (possibly two)!
Excellent work Keith, simple conversion executed perfectly, and the painting elevates the conversion, vaguely remember the movie, wasn’t really memorable, but never saw the series, shame you never got to meet Lee Falk, that would have been something.
Thanks, Dave. It was a pretty perfect miniature to start from. I would lose my Forgotten Heroes credentials if I didn’t at least acknowledge that there is at least one “Not-Phantom” miniature produced by Black Army Productions. I bought it and owned it for a while, as I hoped it would scale with Pulp Figures. It doesn’t. BAP minis are very much 25mm scale, and putting him next to some Bob Murch gangsters made him look pretty unintimidating, so I sold him off.
Of course, now I have the reverse problem, as Heroclix are “heroic” 32mm…but whatever. I made him for the challenge.
Sensational conversion. Absolutely top-notch. Great swap with the billy clubs. But its the paint-job which really sells this as the Phantom. I’d have sworn that was a legitimate Phantom figure. Great work.
Thanks so much, Simon. I had a fantastic base figure from which to work. The paint job is easy (although I appreciate the compliment). I’m pretty happy with him, although I’d hardly call The Phantom a “Forgotten Hero”. I don’t think Jez will disqualify him, though. After all, I did Zangief one year…
Super stuff mate, though I’ve never read the comic’s I do remember the film and I have to say I really enjoyed it, very much in the vein of Indiana Jones, Doc Savage, and the Shadow. I’d say watch it again mate.
Smashing paintwork, as Simon said looks like a legit figure to me (can’t say fairer than that!).
Really missed to taking part this year, but I hope to re-join the fun inn 26′.
Cheers Roger.
Much appreciated, Roger. I haven’t been around much either. It took Monster May)hem) and Forgotten Heroes to lure me out of isolation. Still, you’ve been missed, my friend.
Superb work, as always, Keith. Due to moving house and serious dental surgery, there’s not been much progress on my conversion, but I still have 5 days left and it shouldn’t take too long to finish. Just got to remember where I put my paints…
Ooh! That’s a very simple yet effective bit of conversion work! The only thing I remember from the movie is the main villain going out laughing as he was consumed by some power-he-couldn’t-control or other. But when I think the Phantom, I think of either the Phantom 2040 cartoon, or, the far more badass IMO Defenders of the Earth Phantom.