Saturday, 30 November 2013

THE CARS FROM UFO


Strakers Car
 
Fosters Car
 
I do love concept cars. I blame Matchbox for this. Oh, and the Sixties and Seventies too. They were bristling with the things! Gerry Anderson's UFO in 1970 had two of the best. What has happened to them since is even more interesting.
 
UFO fan and expert Marc Martin writes extensively on the subject on the UFO Series Home Page and has kindly given permission for it to be reprinted here. Marc adds "There was a third car as well, not mentioned in this article. Last I heard it was in was in storage at a car museum, but that was like 20 years ago, so I have no idea where it is now."

"Straker's and Foster's futuristic automobiles were originally designed by Derek Meddings for the movie DOPPELGANGER (aka JOURNEY TO THE FAR SIDE OF THE SUN), and were redressed slightly for UFO. Life-sized clay models were built by German auto manufacturer designers, and then racing car driver Alan Mann built the cars for 8500 pounds each.


The cars were constructed using beaten aluminum on top of a Mark 4 Ford Zodiac chassis (predecessor to the Granada). The gull-wing doors didn't actually work, so someone always stood off-camera to raise or lower the doors. The actors reported that the cars were very unpleasant to drive in, as there was not enough headroom and the engine exhaust fumes spilled into the interior. Also, the cars could not move very fast, so many scenes were sped up to simulate a fast-moving vehicle.

In the years since UFO was made, the cars have changed hands a number of times. Straker's car was owned by Radio One DJ Dave Lee Travis in the 1970's. In 1980, the car was bought by someone in Birmingham who had it repainted with scenes from UFO, and then let it sit in a warehouse for years. He eventually gave it away to one of his employees, who in turn has let the car rust away in his back yard. To make matters worse, he eventually built a garage next to his house which prevents the car from being removed without a crane, and has no particular interest in ever restoring or selling the car to someone else!

After UFO, Foster's car was originally sold to a film company which removed the scoops and slats and painted it red for a futuristic porn movie. It was later purchased in 1982 by film buff who made the car driveable and actually used it as his personal transportation for 18 months! It was then damaged in the front and ignored until 1993, when it was purchased by UFO fan Tony Read."


Phil Broad has also written an informative piece on his site about these two cars if you want to find out more.


Has anyone ever seen any of these cars, including the mysterious third car and are there any updates as to their whereabouts?

Super Swordcast Link Up!

Tomorrow on Celtica Radio, the SWORDCAST proudly presents a special blog link up with Secret Space Base blogger Will Schwarz. Scoop will be chatting to Will about his interests and blog in the special edition of the Swordcast.

Tune in at 8pm UK time on Sunday 1 December.

Meanwhile, check out Wills blog - The Secret Space Base and catch his own podcasts too!

END OF NOVEMBER SATURDAY QUIZ

OK folks, I know you've got mince pies to bake and plum puddings to feed but take five and have a go at this film, tv, toy and sc-fi quiz! One answer per reader in the comments, thanks. You can do it!
 
 
1. In which film do we hear about the location Spivey Point?
2. Who is Eddie Quist and what movie is he in?
3. What is Action Man or GI Joe known as in Spain?
4. Who meets Sam Shepard's General in a bar at the end of the Ed Norton movie version of The Hulk [character and actor please as one answer]?
5. Name two ferocious monsters in the original Star Wars Trilogy?
6. Which hoax is at the heart of the movie Capricorn One?
7. Which Spanish toy company issued bags of plastic Thunderbirds figures?
8. What is the name of King Kong's home?
9. Which old toy am I describing? - hand-held plastic mazes in which steel balls roll round and light up a central light tower when they reach the end. For two players each with a hand-held maze.
10. Which Actor appears in both Jaws 3D and The Long Good Friday?

MORE FUN FROM FUNMATE: FUNMATE SPACE COMMAND

 
This old Funmate SPACE COMMAND bubble carded set is neat. It appeared on Ebay about a year ago and I'd forgotten I had kept the picture. It looks like a re-hash of Apollo Moon Exploring parts, but its hard to tell exactly. The silver astronaut looks more like GIANT than LP. Anyone know? I can imagine they made excellent Xmas stocking fillers when they first came out!
 
 
Around the same time I managed to win this little bundle of space toys. Again, they are very akin to Apollo Moon Exploring, although the little orange car and the lipstick rocket are not so common. Anyone got any small space sets like these?

SEAVIEW SCRATCHBUILD BY ANDY B

Hi Woodsy
 
 
Pictured are some of my more recent small scratchbuilt models, mostly milliput, pieces of plastic and the occasional scrap of wood.
 
 
To give some idea of scale, the Lost in Space Robot is 5 and a half centimetres high. The Seaview is a complete rebuild, based on an older scratchbuild (seen on the blog once before) - with more information found on the internet, everything had to be reshaped, I even had to saw it in half and shorten the hull.
 
 
The other figure you may recognise - it has a retro sweet theme. Thought you might approve!
 
 
all the best,
Andy B.

Friday, 29 November 2013

Under Pressure

Back in the seventies, when Airfix branched out to produce a variety of toys as well as kits, a favourite of mine was the good old Water Rocket. Essentially, a Saturn V shaped syringe, it was great fun during the summer months, shooting streams of water all over the garden. But, due to the nature of water, it was really hard to press the plunger in and invariably slipped out of my hands too!
They were produced in red and blue and amazingly, I managed to find a complete and unscathed blue on recently. 40+ years on, I was surprised to see how small it actually is, about 14" long as opposed to the idea I had that it was almost 2' long when I was 7!

Its emblazoned with the Words Water rocket in the classic seventies 'Countdown' font, that was synonymous with anything spacey back in the day!

BEING ILL AND GETTING TOYS

I've been full of cold this week and feeling ill reminded me of being ill as a kid back in the Sixties. I can remember drinking gallons and gallons of fizzy golden Lucozade, which even came wrapped in orange cellophane to make it even more medicinal! Did it really make us better?


Whether I was on the settee under blankets or in bed under more blankets, Mum always fussed round me like a matron. Fluffing my pillow, tucking in my sheet, checking my temperature! I loved it really and my personal level of nursing care has never quite been the same!


Being ill also meant toys. I can remember getting a Hot Wheels redline Silhouette during one particularly nasty bout of childitus, probably the Plague' Like most kids I seemed to get everything and anything. I loved that car and drew it and its redline pals in a graph paper pad, which I can still feel now. They were great drawings for a plague victim but Alas, long gone.


The best prezzie I got was for having appendicitis. In fact, said organ nearly burst I was that ill. Almost a gonner! After the pesky thing was safely removed and I was laid up in hospital, there was only one thing my worried folks could do. Yes, buy me a toy! Not just any toy mind, but a Zeroid! The brown one with the cool blue case cum trailer. I was made up and that Zeroid aided my recovery better than any doctor ever could!
 
 
What are your memories of illness and toys readers?

GREEN HORNET BLACK BEAUTY TOY CARS

Some American crime fighters were a mixture of cop and super hero. The Green Hornet was such a one and a show I always enjoyed because Bruce Lee was Kato.  Here is Bruce auditioning for the part way back in the mid-Sixties courtesy of You Tube. The show was a hit and the Hornet produced a whole nest of cool toys on the States.
 

 
 
In the UK and the US the most popular Hornet toy of its day was the 1967 Corgi Green Hornet Black Beauty, a sleek and gorgeous die-cast car with great accessories. The Hornet learnt out of the window with his pistol poised, whilst Kato drove. The boot contained a nifty red spinner and the front grille opened to reveal a formidable red missile. It all came in Corgi's beautiful packaging and was topped with a fabulous Green Hornet roof transfer. I was always surprised it was never miniaturised for the Juniors range but nevertheless, the Corgi Black Beauty was and is for me quintessentially the Sixties. It was re-released and re-packaged for modern fans in the Naughties.

 
Fans in the States got the equally cool Aurora Black Beauty slot car in 1967 too, although the packaging wasn't in the same league as Corgi's. Polar Lights re-issued it in a new box for modern fans years later.
 
 
ASC of Japan came up with their own unlicensed tinplate Black Beauty, the Secret Service Action Car. The front grille is completely different and it would appear that only the car itself had any reference to the Green Hornet in the form of two transfers.
 
I had thought that countries like Argentina and Mexico would have had their own versions of the car but I've been unable to find any. I will have to consult my old Toy Collector Green Hornet magazine when I dig it out of the loft. There maybe some more info in the Model and Toy Collector Green Hornet issue. Maybe you have that one readers?

 
What are your Green Hornet toy and TV memories readers? 
 
 
[pictures: Vectis, various]


Thursday, 28 November 2013

EAGLEMOSS BATBOAT

The year was 1966 and Batmania was at its height.  A new Batman film, based on the phenomenally successful TV series was released. This time the dynamic duo  would face not one but four Bat Villains – this meant Batman and Robin needed even more crime fighting vehicles – Enter the  Batcycle, Batcopter and the great looking high speed, Batboat.


This is the model of the Batboat from the Eaglemoss line, and I have to say I think it’s a superb rendition.

Full of tiny detail, I’d say it was almost as good as their TV Batmobile from issue 2. 


The only thing that's missing is a couple of Batman and Robin figures.


The aft of the boat, showing the gas turbine exhaust.


The bow of the boat. The model is around 4" long so focusing is a bit of a problem from this angle but you can make out the intakes and the fittings.


The lenticular backdrop shows the decoy buoy and the Penguin's submarine.



Finally, a couple of  photos showing the Corgi model and the Eaglemoss versions.

Holy Thatsgottobeworthatenner, Batman! 

TIM MEE GALAXY LASER TEAM AND FRIENDS

I'm forever stumbling across these Tim Mee plastic figures  online, the Galaxy Laser Team. I didn't have any as a kid and have never seen them in the flesh.
They seem to have been endlessly recycled and repackaged although the distinctive designs stay the same. 
They get renamed too and these STAR PATROL set mention an X-Wing, perhaps giving away their origins in the vast world of Star Wars knockoffs.
 They got bigger too as in these giant sized STAR BATTLE figures.
 and appeared all over the world.
The designs do remind me of certain characters. The green martian with his rifle recalls this proto-Chewbacca drawn by John Schoenherr.

and the lady stood next to the console recalls all those comms officers in space shows like Uhura in Star Trek. 
The guy with the helmet has got to be Magneto!
and the warrior turtle is a deadringer for Gamera!
 
What do I know! Do you know anything about these Tim Mee figures readers?
 
 
PS. see the cool SECRET FUN BLOG for more info on these figures.
 
 
PSPS. there's some really beautiful pictures of Tim Mee's space figures on this flickr gallery

Wednesday, 27 November 2013

SEVENTIES AMERICAN COP SHOWS

I'm currently enjoying re-runs of old American cop shows like Kojak and Cagney and Lacey. I'd forgotten how much I used to enjoy them back in Seventies and I had definitely forgotten how well they were made.


The sets are excellent, the characterisation is interesting, the plots are exciting and the acting is great. And the cars, sheer class. I can't decide though if this is pure nostalgia on my part? They really do seem so much better than anything modern.
 
 
I didn't really have any toys relating to them apart from the odd board game and annual. There were so many cool cop shows back then - Harry O, Ironside, Hawii Five-O, but if I had to name my top five, then they would be:
 
1. Kojak
2. The Streets of San Francisco
2. Cannon
4. Cagney and Lacey
5. Starsky and Hutch
 
 
What do think readers? What are your faves? Were they really any good? Did you have any toys relating to the shows?

PROBE FORCE 2 INSPIRATION?

I've always like the one man rocket ship Probe Force 2 design.


I'm not sure what inspired that design. The only thing I can find that has one or two characteristics found on PF 2 is this spacecraft seen briefly in the Fireball XL5 story featured in the 1966 TV21 International Extra, which as we know  also carried other articles featuring Sword (and Spacex) designs.



Coincidence? I guess we'll never know.  


CHRISTMAS WITH THE CARS

Hard to believe but yes, its Christmas in a month! Where did the year go? I dunno but I'm slowly getting my head round the festive season being upon us once more. It officially started to day as I got my first Christmas card [thanks Ed the Iceman!], so I can safely talk about the run up to the Big Day.
 
 
Some of the best toys I ever got at Crimbo were die-cast cars and the plastic tracks to race them on. It didn't really matter what make they were as long as they were fast. They all competed against each other - Matchbox Superfast and Whizzwheels, Corgi Rockets and of course, Mattel's redline Hot Wheels. I had a good smattering of them all back in the Sixties.
 
 
Although I was very democratic in who got to race, there were firsts amongst equals, my top gear as pictured:
 
 
 
There is something quintessentially Nineteen Sixties about these die-cast cars for me and a bevvy of them lying around are guaranteed to take me back to childhood. Of course, die-cast speed kings needed tracks and accessories. Never have Christmas dining room chairs been so completely transformed as when die-caster Kids clamped all manner of red and orange tracks onto them, which then flowed out across the carpet, round the dog and over the cat! My own fave track accessories were the Corgi Rockets circuit Assembly, with its unique plastic cone-shaped stands and the iconic Skypark tower:
 
 
What are your Christmas die-cast memories readers?

Tuesday, 26 November 2013

PROJECT SWORD IN TV21

As the NEC Memorabilia event isn't really a vintage toy fair any more I didn't expect to see any Project SWORD or SpaceX toys. And I didn't. There were some great old items around though, especially on Jim Stevenson's stall, which never fails to amaze, including an HG Toys Alien Chase Target Set and a 007 Thunderball Rifle Toy.
 
 
There were lots of comics too and I was pleased that my usual supplier of TV21's was standing, along with his trusty record player. Checking my wants list, I found two which I need as part of my SWORD strip collection. My daughter settled the bill, which was an added bonus too, as its an early birthday prezzie. I have about another 30 TV21's to go!
 
 
Is any one else trying to collect the Project SWORD strips in TV21?

Monday, 25 November 2013

ARE YOU THE DAN DARE TYPE?

Taking a break from the famous British fictional hero, Dr Who , here's a chance to find out whether you could be good enough to be another famous British sci-fi hero, Dan Dare.


The test and overview taken from the Eagle comic dated 28th September 1963. 


Here's the questions and answers.


Well, are you the Dan Dare type?

MEMORABILIA COMIC CON BIRMINGHAM NEC 2013

On Saturday I went to the Memorabilia Comic Con event at the NEC in Birmingham, England. I went with family and friends and a grand day was had by all. Since first going in 1999 the event has changed a lot. The current owners, MCM, have found new ways to pull in the crowds: robot wars battles, glamour girls and hundreds of minor celebrities.

The biggest change for me and my pal Mark has been the rise of Manga and Anime over the last 15 years to the point where it has completely taken over the event. As a result there are many more young people attending than ever before, most of whom are dressed up as a Pokemon or Sailor Moon.


I go for the old toys and comics, which can still be found in between all the modern mush. Here are a few snaps and a bit of film from the day.

Dr. Who photography booth


Bumblebee Transformer car

Gremlin and friends

Battlestar Galactica

Model - unknown to me

Model - unknown to me

Millennium Falcon with LED lights


Femtrooper- Judge Dredd discussion

Landspeeder under armed guard

Captain Scarlet cushions

Thunderbirds canvas

Interesting old toy stall

one of a number of vintage Dr. Who games, Peter Pan Dalek Great Escape

More vintage Dr.Who toys and games and more!

Filming for the TV show Toy Hunter and the sale of a rare Ideal Batman Helmet, Cape and Utility Belt

My Daughter and I meeting Toy Hunter aka Jordan Hembrough of the USA


Same time next year I reckon!