1973 saw Corgi release one of my favourite large diecast models - the Moon Buggy from Connerys last official outing as 007, Diamonds are Forever. I remember going to see the film at the cinema and besides being rather taken with Jill St John in the bikini and the balloon wheeled Honda bikes, I was seriously impressed with Blofeldts microsub and the fabulous Moon Buggy that Bond steals from Willard Whytes development centre. The real prop was auctioned at Christies recently and Ken Adams original concept sketch for the buggy shows something very close to the Spacex Moon Buggy and Mev.
That xmas I was lucky enough to get the Corgi Moon Buggy and despite it having a totally different and odd colourscheme, the model is a brilliant representation of the vehicle.
I recently spotted a re-issue of the Corgi toy on ebay and made a mental note to pick one up at some point. Just recently, I put in a bid on what I thought was the Corgi toy, but when it arrived it turned out to be a 1:43 scale model - spacex scale - of the buggy. It came with a neat card backrop and a brilliant plastic moonscape base inside a plastic box. I rectified my mistake later and found the Corgi toy.
The Corgi re-issue is cosmetically identical, but painted exactly as the vehicle in the film. All features are present except that Bond isn't painted as well.
The 1973 catalogue also had the Corgi Comics range in it, a series of cartoon and tv based models in, which brought the fictional Lunar Bug model. This was a neat car carrying transporter in the style of Macs Car with fold out wings and repositional wheels on long arms. Even the engines are a lot like the jet turbines from the Joe 90 flying car.
That Lunar Bug is very cool! I would love to have owned that along with the Corgi Moon Buggy. The reissue Moonbuggy and the diorama Moonbuggy are also very nice.
ReplyDeleteyou can still pick them up on ebay quite reasonably
ReplyDeleteThat Diamonds Are Forever reissue is even cooler than the original! Why did you have to tell me it existed?
ReplyDeletePrior to the Lunar Bug, the arrival of a new Dinky or Corgi space-themed toy meant that a new SF television show or film was about to begin as well. (In the States we typically saw the Gerry Anderson toys before their related shows first aired.) I remember my disappointment that no new film or show was mentioned on the package for the Bug and I'd have to wait longer...
There is a slight Anderson connection to the 1968 Lunar Bug Richard. As Wote says, the silver turbines were re-used from Dinky's 1967 Joe's Car and they even turned up again in Dinky's 1975 Galactic War Chariot! That's one stubborn set of turbines!
ReplyDeleterab - the corgi reissue is well worth hunting down, just as a space toy it's excellent. it's also available with a standing jb figure in White tux!
ReplyDeleteactually Woodstock, the bug engines don't appear anywhere else - the Joe 90 car was Dinky, but those turbines do sit on the Galactic War Chariot along with lunar rover figures and Shado 2 missile launcher! what a mess.
ReplyDeleteI best stick to SWORD! It's one big galactic auto jumble out there!
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