Disneys Black Hole, the vintage 1979 Star Wars competitor, was by all accounts a box office flop. The tale of a giant mile long spaceship discovered after being lost at the edge of a massive black hole, predates current discoveries and knowledge about the strange anomalies which exist in the outer cosmos. Disney cooked up a melodramatic and generally silly concoction with all the classic elements of mad scientist, weird science, subjugated humanoids and a band of interfering busybodies intent on thwarting the maniacs plans to enter the black hole. Most of the film is standard disney fare, cartoonish sets and wooden acting, punctuated by a pair of clownish, gaily coloured robots in a pale imitation of Lucas' creations. Where it completely deviates from the standard Disney fairground ride is by the introduction of the villains robotic henchman, Maximillian. Easily one of the most menacing and impressive robots to grace the screen, Max is silent and crimson armoured, hovering on the periphery and occasionally swooping down to glower sadistically with his single red eye. For most of the film Max is held in check by Dr Hans Rheinhardt, whos harsh words restrain the robot from intimidating the crew of the Palomino, a deep space probe. Eventually, things get out of hand and Maximillian uses one of his many arms to spectacularly shred the Palominos commander with a drilllike blade. The film rapidly goes into surreal overdrive from there as the Cygnus, the main ship plunges into the singularity and Dr Rheinardt is seen in a rather strange scene, apparently fused into Maxs armoured body as the two watch over the fiery pits of hell.
Meanwhile, a series of toys and models appeared, a huge model of the Cygnus appeared from MPC together with a passable model of Vincent and rather good version of Maximillian with articulated arms (all six of them) and a 'hovering' display stand. Action figures to beat the stiff Star Wars offering appeared, Mego made them fully articulated and poseable, although not desperately different in appearance amongst the human characters, apart from Ernest Borgnines paunch. The Sentry and S.T.A.R figures, were excellent though, taking cues from Megos Micronauts range. Vincent was suitably silly with huge cartoon eyes and a head unit which would never completely retract into the body. Maximillian was presented, but is a very static fashion, with unmoveable silver arms and the only points of articulation being his neck and repulsor 'flippers'.
In a further appearance by the robots and with another connection to the Micronauts range, came the italian magnemo figures, made by Gig-Italy.
these larger figures, on average about 5 inches high, were well constructed and highly detailed. The limbs were held in place by strong magnets, like Baron Karza et al.
Nabisco prepared a range of pencil holder cereal premiums and more recently, a Max necklace and jewellery has been created. CS from Canada kindly sent me a shot of his Kubrick, 3 inch model of Maximillian, which manages to finally capture the air of menace this iconic machine posseses. It remains to be see what the remake of the film will make of this fine design.
STOP PRESS: Arto has just sent me this photo of a special Danish promotion for the Black Hole, a vintage Vincent Bottle Opener and Max Keyring! Behold!
These cool transparent items were made in Denmark as a special nordic promotion and did not appear anywhere else.
Excellent coverage of Maximillian Wotan! Strongly agree that the formidable design and silent performance of this robot exceeded the movie. Fingers crossed for a remake!
ReplyDeleteMy much younger self sent away cereal box-tops from Nabisco Shreddies to recieve that MEGO Maximillian you have pictured there! Upon opening the long awaited mailer box...the sheer dissapointment that his arms were not articulated caused me to place a curse on MEGO. They closed soon after; sorry everybody.
NO WONDER I NEVER GOT CAPTAIN S.T A R!
ReplyDeleteI always viewed TBH as Disney updated and retelling of it's 1954 classic 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea, that said it was a very awesome visual treat, mind my first screening was in a 70MM wide-screen Dolby-THX cinema !
ReplyDeleteHad the MPC model of both Max and Vincent but never any of the toys in any scale, upon refection definitely my mistake not acquiring such.
This brings back memories. I remember coming across and buying the MPC kits of Max, Vincent and the Cygnus spaceship from Croppers toy and model shop while on holiday in Scarborough way back in summer 1980. One of those bits of amazing good luck that happen now and again as I never saw them anywhere else after that! The models are now sadly long gone. The Cygnus was pretty large as I recall, but was all grey plastic with no transparent parts. I suppose with all that glass on the 'real' ship they could never have replicated that on the model anyway.
ReplyDeleteThe film prop model of the Cygnus is quite a story...enrmously expensive brass rod construction and they really blew it up for the end sequence :(
ReplyDeleteIf you google images of Maximillian from the set, he is HUGE
About those Danish promo material. I have a Robot Sentry keyring. I don't remember how I got it but it's original from 1979. :)
ReplyDeleteSend us a picture of the robot sentry keyring to share in the blog if you want, email address for me Woodsy, at the bottom of the page.
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