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Kit Fisto — Star Wars The Black Series #112

The Black Series Kit Fisto — Red Line #112, 2020. The Nautolan Jedi Master and Council member with green lightsaber. 19 joints including butterfly shoulders. The final figure of the Red Line numbered sequence.

Overview

Red Line #112 is Kit Fisto — Kit Fisto, Nautolan Jedi Master, member of the Jedi High Council, one of the prequel trilogy’s most visually distinctive Jedi designs, and the final numbered figure in the Red Line sequence. The sequence that began at #01 with Finn on Jakku in 2015 ends here at #112 with the grinning tentacle-headed Jedi Master from the Council chamber — a character whose specific visual is one of the prequel era’s most immediately recognisable, whose smile in the arena combat sequence communicates the franchise’s most specific pleasure in the fight.

Kit Fisto is the only Black Series Kit Fisto. Green lightsaber hilt and blade. 19 joints including butterfly shoulders. MSRP $19.99.

The Character

Kit Fisto’s canonical presence across the prequel trilogy is characterised by two specific qualities: the design — the Nautolan head-tails, the wide-set green eyes, the specific smile — and the combat record. He is one of the Jedi strike team who survives the initial Geonosis arena ambush. He fights Grievous in the Clone Wars. He is one of the four Jedi who accompany Mace Windu to arrest Palpatine in ROTS, where he dies in the first exchange with the Sith Lord.

The smile is the character’s most discussed specific trait. In the Geonosis arena sequence — surrounded by battle droids, outnumbered, in a situation where survival is uncertain — Kit Fisto smiles. Not a grimace, not a battle cry: a genuine, delighted smile. The character communicates that he finds this situation appropriate rather than threatening. It is the prequel trilogy’s most economical piece of Jedi characterisation, accomplished in a single expression in a background frame.

The Nautolan Design

Kit Fisto’s species-specific design — the head-tails arranged around the skull rather than hanging from the back of the head as Twi’lek leku do, the large dark eyes, the mottled green skin — is one of the prequel Jedi Council’s most immediately alien visual choices. The figure renders the specific head-tail arrangement at production quality appropriate to the 2020 Red Line: the tentacle arrangement, the eyes, the smile that the sculpt captures in the figure’s resting expression.

The butterfly shoulder joints enable the two-handed combat stances appropriate to Kit Fisto’s specific Form I and Form IV hybrid approach — the broad, sweeping blade work of a Jedi who fights with physical momentum as much as precision.

#112 and What It Means to End Here

The Red Line numbered sequence runs from #01 to #112 across six years of production, covering five films’ worth of new trilogy characters, three animated series, video games, comics, and streaming television. It ends with a prequel Jedi Council member — Kit Fisto, the smiling Nautolan, whose smile is the specific image the sequence leaves you with.

This is not a deliberate editorial statement; it is the consequence of the 2020 production wave’s prequel concentration and Hasbro’s production timeline. But the accident is appropriate. The Red Line began with the future — TFA’s new characters, the sequel trilogy’s first faces — and closes with the past: the Jedi Council chamber, the prequel era, the Order that was. The franchise’s whole temporal arc, across 112 numbered slots.

Kit Fisto and the 2020 Prequel Jedi Wave

The final six figures of the Red Line — Plo Koon (#109), Anakin Padawan (#110), Obi-Wan Jedi Knight (#111), Kit Fisto (#112), flanked by Count Dooku (#107) and Geonosis Battle Droids (#108) — form the most concentrated prequel Jedi Council display the numbered sequence enables. Six figures from the same production wave, representing the AOTC era at the moment the Clone Wars begin and the Republic starts its slide toward Empire.

The Only Black Series Kit Fisto

One release. No Galaxy Collection update. No Archive reissue. For any prequel Jedi Council display, for any ROTS Palpatine confrontation display, for any collector who wants the smiling Nautolan Jedi in the numbered Red Line: this is the only option. It is, appropriately, the last one.

Secondary Market

Above-retail secondary market prices — the only Black Series Kit Fisto, the final numbered Red Line figure, consistent fan affection for the design and the smile. Verify the green lightsaber hilt and blade on secondary market purchases. No production variants documented.

Verdict

The final figure of the Red Line numbered sequence. Buy for the prequel Jedi Council display, the Nautolan design, or to complete the Red Line from #01 to #112.

Kit Fisto’s Smile as Franchise Statement

The specific smile — visible in the AOTC arena sequence, reproduced in the figure’s resting sculpt — is the most economically communicated piece of Jedi characterisation in the prequel films. Other Jedi fight with varying degrees of grim determination, focused intensity, or controlled fear. Kit Fisto fights with apparent delight. The smile communicates a philosophy: that the battle itself is not the threat, that the Jedi’s training has prepared them for exactly this, and that there is something right about a Jedi Master finding themselves precisely where their skills are needed.

This is not recklessness or arrogance. It is the specific quality of a practitioner who has fully internalised their practice — the smile of a craftsperson who is doing exactly what they were made to do. The figure’s sculpt captures that resting expression, which means every display configuration of Kit Fisto carries the smile.

Kit Fisto and the ROTS Palpatine Confrontation

Kit Fisto’s ROTS scene — accompanying Mace Windu, Agen Kolar, and Saesee Tiin to arrest Chancellor Palpatine — is the briefest major Jedi combat appearance in the film. All four are dead within seconds. The scene’s purpose is to demonstrate Palpatine’s specific threat level: the Jedi Master who smiled in the Geonosis arena dies without being able to mount a meaningful defence. The figure at #112 represents the version of the character before that moment — the Council member, the arena survivor, the smile intact.

The Red Line Ends with a Smile

Kit Fisto at #112 closes the Red Line with the smile — a resting expression in plastic form at the sequence’s final position. The sequence began with TFA’s urgency, the new trilogy’s uncertain faces, the franchise’s next chapter asking who these people are. It ends with a Jedi Council member who has been smiling since 2002, who smiled in the arena, and who smiles from #112 at the end of a numbered sequence that covered everything the franchise had become by 2020.

The Red Line numbered sequence: 112 figures. 2015 to 2020. Five years. The complete franchise in one line.


Part of Star Wars The Black Series | Red Line. Related: Obi-Wan Kenobi P3-111 | Plo Koon P3-109 | Mace Windu P3-82 | Jedi Order faction | Attack of the Clones.