Tuesday, 30 November 2010

One Hundred Spacemen (for 15p!)

One space toy I have not seen mentioned on the blog is a set of “100 Spacemen” produced in Hong Kong, probably around 1964. They were sold attached to a large, perhaps A3-sized sheet of card printed with a space or moonscape scene. There were about 8 different figures, most with long ray guns, but one (I took him to be an officer), with a pistol. The spacemen were in matte silver polythene, so slightly flexible, like the Airfix model soldiers. 

They were about 24mm high. The same firm produced at least one other set, “100 soldiers” which turned out to be crude copies of Airfix’s German infantry and 8th Army figures, all moulded in a dark blue-green polythene.
 
From a shaky memory, I think the spacemen sold at 2s 11d, or nearly 15p in today’s money. This made them considerably cheaper than the Airfix figures.
 
By the standards of firms like Airfix, Golden Astronaut, or the Apollo space sets (which were quite a bit later), the detailing was crude. Nevertheless, they were the first decent spacemen I had come across as a youngster, and fitted in well with other space vehicles & rockets available at the time. They were probably, in answer to a question Woodsy posed on the blog, my favourite space toys.
 
I’d love to know if any still survive. I enclose two sketches, just drawn from memory, of what they looked like. The rear view shows the “officer” figure, the front view a walking figure with typical long ray gun.
 
Andy B.

editors note: I remember these figures clearly and distinctly recall a carded set appear on ebay recently - did anyone either grab a shot from the auction or win them ? The little figures also appeared in various unbranded HK space sets in legions of gun metal colour and bronze.


Wotan


ps - fabulously evocative art once more!

Galax, El Cosmonauta

Galax, El Cosmonauta [Galax, The Cosmonaut] was a spanish comic strip, which appeared in Bravo in 1968. A contemporary of S.W.O.R.D and Anderson's TV shows, it was written by Victor Mora with drawings by Fuentes Man and features the exploits of Colonel Galax and his rocket METEOR 1. It was published during the Franco regime, which may have influenced the choice of 'Cosmonauta' rather than 'Astronauta' [Comics Compartidos]. There is also a possible link to the Spanish toy Madelman's boots [!], which you can see on this excellent spanish Madelman blog. Wonder if the fabulous METEOR 1 ship was ever made as a toy?

Glenn Field Roll Out

Mike Burrows has recently taken possesion of a C21 Zero X - words fail me.



Can I just add that if I don't get one of these under the tree this year fat boy, Rudolph is toast.

Monday, 29 November 2010

Planet Toad

My lil contribution to the Forbidden Planet pictures ... some metal figures I bought a couple of years ago. Toad

Hey, that's Leslie Nielsen in the middle! Woodsy

A Rosenthal Santa?

Here's a seasonal tale! Whilst researching the JR21 Checklist for early Rosenthal friction toys I came across three different plastic Santas. All of them were made by Merehall and our old friends, Hsi [see previously posted "model no.315"], whose logo's you can see below on the toys' bases: MM and )$( along with model numbers. The quaint colourful box art of the top toy is certainly similar to early JR friction-drive toys, so I began searching for a possible Rosenthal Santa.
And I'm pretty sure here he is! No box but the look of the scooter is very Rosenthal when compared to their Hitch Hiking Bunny. Found on Ebay, the seller kindly confirmed the look of the logo - "Yes, an M is inside a diamond shape, but I looked it over and could not find a model number anywhere . . .thanks for your interest. Roadshowfinds". The listing description was "This charming hard plastic friction toy is marked on the bottom Made in Hong Kong with a very fancy letter M. It is about 4" tall, 4" long, appears to be in good condition, only some minor surface wear, if any. Friction movement is not real strong, and I think the reindeer head is supposed to move up and down as it goes, but stays still".

To be 100% about Santa's Rosenthal roots we could do with seeing a box! Can anyone oblige?
Picture credit: roadshowfinds

Airfix Toys 1970

I do love a good toy catalogue. Its like a little time capsule from back in the day which can evoke such pleasant memories from my childhood and at the same time, real pangs of regret for all the goodies which slipped out of Santas sleigh as he landed on the neighbours roof..

Here is a leaflet from Airfix - probably 1969 or 70, with a high proportion of Cragstan products, including one of my favourite and most unusual toys, the Americus Moon Buggy. Another oddity is the Water Rocket - essentially a giant plastic syringe in the shape of a Saturn 5, which squirted water. I had one of these as a kid and although it looked great, hydrodynamics weren't taken into account during the design process and it was almost impossible to push the plunger and shoot the water when you're a seven year old kid as the hole in the end of the rocket was tiny!
Water Rocket ? Pfft. Arrowcopter - AWESOME!

Moon Race anyone ?

Diving Sub - Baking Powder a-go-go

Betta Bilda Rocket again

These werent the droids i was looking for

SPIN OUT! Groovy Packaging

A Cold Day in Hell

Sword operatives are finding it tough going as the temperature drops severely. Task Force Flights 1 through 3 are being kept busy on search and rescue missions as frozen chaos reigns supreme once more.

Beautifully atmospheric artwork courtesy of Andy B.

Sword Base Personnel Marooned by Titanic Snow Drifts

Here's my absolutely duff attempt at a Moon Ranger Rescue of a snowbound SWORD Base!
I'm sure you can do so much better and even make use of the Snow Train!

Moon Rangers Needed to Clear the Snow!

It's a freezing  Monday morning in the UK and as usual, after the first real snowfalls of the Winter, society is on the brink of collapse! Sounds like a job for a fleet of S.W.O.R.D Moon Rangers to me! To cheer us up here are a few snaps from my archive. I took these in 2007 for a small DIY A4 book on toys I made for myself via one of those online photoshops, where you can create your own book! Great fun! I'm sure that technology will have advanced since '07 and some really great home-made books are possible. I saw a fabulous A3 sized one at the TV21 con comprised of  behind the scenes shots of Anderson's shows, created by super Oz collector and author Dennis Nicholson. It was auctioned for charity in the closing ceremony and one lucky bidder got something truly unique and a fan original.

Pictured top to bottom: C21 assortment, stack of Tarheel's boxed NOVA rockets, Imai die-cast Scramble Bug and Tri-ang Rovex Spacex LEM Apollo with guest LP astronaut.

Leslie Nielsen RIP

Canadian screen legend Leslie Nielsen passed away this weekend aged 84. Star of more than 100 movies, it is perhaps his comic genius in Naked Gun and Airplane he'll be most fondly remembered for. But it's his portrayal of the fresh-faced Commander Adams in the groundbreaking sci-fi movie Forbidden Planet that I'll remember him for, a film which basically kicked-off Sci Fi colour cinema and the familiar iconography we have come to love:  flying saucers, robots, mad scientists, rescue missions and scary alien creatures, in this case, the fabulous one-toed Monster from the Id. I'll never forget seeing it for the first time in the early 1970's and I shall watch it again in memory of the wonderful Leslie Nielsen. RIP.

Thursday, 25 November 2010

Edge of Impact Jet Redux

 Woodstock has requested some screengrabs from Edge of Impact to look at the red jet. Philosophic Toad has quickly fired up the dvd and brought forth the goods for us alreadly! Woodstock wondered if the jet bore a similarity to SWORD Probe Force 3 but I think personally, the resemblance is a little tenuous. It does have a look of Task Force 2 and a little of the Scout ship too though.


 
This frame is especially interesting as it shows where the jet comes from, the distinctive airframe shape come from the Saab Draken kit - most probably an Airfix one and the extra engines are lifted from the modellers staple, the Convair Hustler.


CONVAIR HUSTLER

Please Do Not Adjust Your Set

Just to let you know that I'm taking a short break from moonbase transmissions for the next few days. I'm taking a trip with my mates Bleep and Booster to visit our kith and kin.

Don't fret, Blog Jockey WOTAN will be your host.

Picture Credit: Bleep and Booster

Edge Of Impact Red Arrow Jet

I mentioned the Red Arrow earlier today in my post Through the Blue Window. I saw the jet during Chrisof's wonderful looped images shown throughout the TV21 con. Reader John Swan, who was there too, has kindly informed me that the red jet is from the Thunderbirds TV episode Edge of Impact. Courtesy of You Tube you can see it at throughout the first 8 minutes of the show. In particular you can see it turning , around 17 seconds in, on the You Tube clip above. I was keen to see more angles of the jet and establish any further similarity with SWORD Probe Force 3, which I'd begun thinking  after seeing Chrisof's fab interpretation below.
Picture Credit: Chrisof

Can anyone make a few screengrabs of the jet in Edge of Impact to show it at various angles so we can compare it more closely to PF3?

TV TIMES CHRISTMAS EXTRA 1966 from Jim

Hi Paul, running along with the UFO TV TIMES here are some scans from the 1966 one Christmas Extra. Lucky little kids who certainly deserved a nice day out. Jim Lewis

Through the Blue Window

I have always been mesmerised by the flashing lights of battery operated space toys. When I was a nipper I think it had something to do with it being Christmas when I got my new stuff. The Christmas tree lights and the space toy lights just seemed to blend together adding to the Yuletide magic. The two toys I remember clearly for having fantastic flashing lights were the Lunar Explorer and the Space Frontier Rocket, two Japanese tin toys I adored. I took them to school when you take your Chrissie presents in. They didn't half cause a commotion bumping rounds the chairs and desks in thr classroom! Thrown out or given away by my Mum I was lucky enough to get hold of them both in the 1990's.
Similarly appealing were the plastic 'windows' covering toy rockets' engines like the Probe Force 3.
The Century 21 standard came with a gorgeous translucent blue cover.
As did the rare yellow and purple variation below.
 
 JR21 XL9 orange engine window.
 
Hover cover's blue too. 
Hoover went for orange.
NASA blue.
Space Bird from Japan went for green on two versions and red too.
Those tubular engine windows appear in Sci Fi too. Here's an old russian drawing.
and finally a beautiful image from the TV21 convention by Chrisof of an Anderson Red Arrow looking a lot like a Probe Force 3!