That ios a good point, though. It really shoudln't be that hard to capture her, but often times, you'll see something overexaggerated. And this is usually in the type of product that uses seams and sewing. Plush toys, and something like this. There's a lot of subtlety that works better in 3-D solid form that only sculpting can do justice.
Seems like seams are the trouble here on the face. And I will say, it's random she's on a flying carpet.
It's an artist and/or sculptor's inclination to exaggerate or accentuate features in order to capture likeness, but it should usually be diffused later on. Many times these product artists (for PVCs, balloons or whatever) are only referencing cartoon representations of the characters.
I actually have one of the licensor books that MR based the Mayhem figurines from. I can tell you they didn't look at the puppets once. That's why I've been particularly hard on them. Little actual creativity or care took place with those. Book or no book this sort of thing is easy to spot. It's like looking at a several generation Xerox of an image that has lost its spark and meaning.
It appears the Piggy balloon is an original design, but one that has been derived from cartoon conceptual art and not from the puppet. Thus, a facsimile of a cartoon approximation of a…
Yeah, and what's with the flying carpet pillow anyway? He he.