Sunday, 30 April 2017

mystery space boat toy

One space toy has always been a mystery to me.

I call it the space boat for want of a better name.

Its the small blue spaceship in the top left corner of this bundle of gumball toys I saw online.


I've seen the space boat on various carded sets too.

Here's one called Satellite Patrol.


Does anyone know the story of the space boat?

geek salad with manimal action

Just had some boiled eggs to boost my Sunday morning systems. Got back from taking the Moonbase mutt out for the first time since mid-March. Its a strange feeling slowly returning to normality.

I may even list some books on Amazon today, which used to be all part of my weekend routine. There's not many annuals that haven't passed through Moonbase over the years but a few characters have remained stubbornly elusive both in books and TV.

Manimal is such a one. I don't think I ever saw this on telly. I assume he's half man half animal. For some reason I'm imagining the young guy from Dallas turning into a panther. Was that the cover of the annual? Wonder what the show was like? Wonder if there were action figures or games?

Manphibian is another name that's floated up from somewhere but that could just be indigestion and I may have made it up!

Certainly the Greatest American Hero or even the Greatest American Super Hero is another character I have heard of but never seen. I know he was the guy who played Carrie's prom date in Carrie. 

I've written about his role in the horror film House but his name has gone. In my Tomart's guide there are even toys emanating from the Greatest American Hero TV show, maybe even a VW bug? Any good?

Another hero, the Last Action Hero no less starring big Arnie was a further curve-ball that swept passed me. Having got their own page in my copy of the Action Figure guidebook I've seen the action figures and Arnie's car many times at car boot sales in the past but never seen the film. Was it Arnie's finest hour?

Last but not least unless you're a Scout is Last Boy Scout. I know its a Bruce Willis actioner but beyond that nada. Probably too violent to have spawned any toys or games or? Is the movie worth its scout badges readers?

Are you well up on these characters' shows and films and their collectables readers?

canadian trade-mark for project sword

Once more here's the link to the Canadian trade mark page for PROJECT SWORD in Canada, which eagle-eyed friend and spacex toys website creator Paul Vreede found.





There are probably further research opportunities arising from this page if anyone has the inclination!

Saturday, 29 April 2017

hive decided

With A  L  I  E  N Covenant oozing its way into UK cinemas on May 12th I thought I would get into the xnomorphic vibe early  and read an Alien novel before I see it.

Fortunately I still have some old Alien paperbacks around before launching them into the Moonbase waste chute.


Looking at the old pile I realised I was confused with the titles and how they fitted into the overall Alien story arc. Female Wars? Rogue?

Familiarity is my friend when it comes to film tie-ins.

So I've made a decision. I am going to go back to the very beginning and read 
A L I E N by Alan Dean Foster.

Which would you choose readers?

bring out the Geigers! Hammer's X The Unknown is blobtastic!

Having run out of steam at the end of part 3 of Stephen King's TV series The Stand I have forsaken the Walking Dude for now.

Going on a canny suggestion I got for sick bay cinema I switched to a Hammer horror, one I hadn't seen for a good few years: X The Unknown.

Made in 1956, what a black and white gem it is, a perfect Fifties British Hammer complete in every way.

There is so much good stuff to say about X I don't where to start.

Basically its about a secretive Scottish nuclear facility, which awakens a monstrous blob.

Along with Quatermass, X The Unknown is the daddy of all blob films. It is referenced in at least two later famous American blob films, the almost contemporary The Blob starring a young Steve McQueen and the Eighties blob homage The Stuff starring the frenetic Michael Moriarty.

X The Unknown stars many fine actors, some just starting out and some mid-way through their careers. A fresh-faced Kenneth Cope meets his gloopy demise early on in the film but he would rise to fame in ITC's iconic Randall and Hopkirk [Deceased] 13 years later as the ghost detective.

Hammer stalwart Michael Ripper can always be relied on to play a convincing officer of the army or the law and in X he's the hard-working Sargeant Grimsdyke in the thick of the radio-action.

He was as essential to a successful Hammer as the frantic music and foggy sets and had roles in the seminal Quatermass 2 and the TV version of Quatermass and the Pit during the Fifties making him an important part of blob cinema's heyday.

He held his own in the blood-soaked colour monster flicks at the end of the decade including the pivotal Revenge of Frankenstein and his familiar country voice and trustworthy manner were real assets in the gothic triumphs of the Sixties like The Plague of the Zombies and The Reptile.

Duncan Lamont was another Hammer regular. In X The Unknown he is badly burned by the radioactive ooze early on the film. In Quatermass and the Pit he plays Sladden the driller, in many ways the catalyst for martian carnage in the second half of the film.

Leo McKern appears in X as the inspector from the Atomic Energy Commission, the nuclear police. His belief in the ideas of the resident Prof, Dean Jagger, drives us and the film forward. McKern had a similar role in the later The Day The Earth Caught Fire as the sympathetic press hack who believes in his drunken chum's mad theories, which prove ultimately to be true in one of the finest sci-fi movies ever made.

Last but not least I come to Dean Jagger. In many ways two of his roles form book ends to my cinematic tastes and also to his acting career. Dean appeared in his first film in 1929. X came mid-way really in 1956. His last roles as an old man included two memorable bad bosses in Game of Death, Bruce Lee's final film and Alligator about monsters in New York's sewers, both personal favourites of mine.

I've read that X the Unknown was intended to be a further slice of Quatermass but wrangles with Nigel Kneale , Quatermass creator, stymied it. A shame really as X has Quatermass oozing from its every pore. 

The essential ingredients for a successful British sci-fi flick like this included a remote village preferably on the coast of Scotland or Cornwall; a secret Government nuclear facility nearby, where boffins tinker with the  fabric of matter itself; an unbending rationalist authoritarian in the form of a Government mandarin or Army Colonel; a friendly journalist or scientist and above all a progressive Maverick Prof, able to see through the veils of fog and slime, test unfathomable theories and save the day.

Oops, I say above all. Above them all and usually all around the cast would be a despicable mass or masses of seething gunk hell-bent on eating all the nuclear waste it could find or at the very least all the calcium and cranial matter it could suck [think Island of Terror!].

There are so many Fifties flicks concerned with remote Government facilities, a prism of the atomic age in which they were made. I'm unsure at what point Government bases became un-hidden enough to be of little interest to British sci-fi movie makers but at least this tradition did produce some high water marks later on as well.

Edge of Darkness is for me its modern peak. Aired in the winter of 1985 on BBC2 the six episodes must have epitomised the growing nuclear dread poisoning the Eighties. I didn't see it then. That would be years later on DVD. A real gem of the genre if you haven't seen the series.

Coming right up to date I can't help thinking that X The Unknown is indeed the MUTO from the 2014 Godzilla, another of my favourites. Like X, the Massive Unidentified Terrestrial Organism is awakened by Government activity,  hidden from public view only to rise from the pit and consume its captors in its search for increased shelf-life. That is until the big G steps in!

X The Unknown spawned very few if any collectables other than those directly linked to its cinema release in 1956 i.e. lobby posters. I'm unsure if there was a press pack or promotional pamphlet.

I can't find reference to a Super 8 film release of X either but I'd be surprised if it wasn't. It did surface as a VHS in 1999 but again I'd be surprised if there wasn't any earlier video release.

Re-enacting X with toys back in the day would have been relatively easy if any kids had managed to sneak into the 'X' rated flick. I'm not sure how hard that would have been in the the winter of 1956. Eventually it will have turned up on one of the UK's three TV channels.

I said easy but I imagine toys were quite a luxury in reconstruction Fifties Britain. 

There were plenty of atomic age toys about though in the late Fifties especially die-cast versions of the very kind of government vehicles seen in X The Unknown! Land Rovers, Antenna Vans, you name it! Just check out the Corgi Rocket Age Models gift set from 1959 [picture courtesy of Vectis].


All you needed to add was slime!

Have you seen X the Unknown readers?

joe 90's blind date: jill tracy


I've often wondered if Pedigree's Joe 90 doll was based on something else.


Its what I like to call the 'Candy and Andy' lookalike affair.


I've blogged about it a few times for example:


Well Pedigree Joe's still on my mind and I'm always on the lookout for anything remotely similar.

Although not a contender for an earlier Joe here's another funky little red suited mod ready to rave, the Jill Tracy doll.


Jill would go great with Joe!

She's even a Tracy!


Made by Gordy International.

Its Yonkers!


Do you like Jill Tracy?

Do you think Joe is Candy or Andy?

Friday, 28 April 2017

major matt mason mexican mystery mash-up

I see Major Mat Mason and Callisto bootlegs a lot online and from Mexico in particular. 

Planet of the Apes mash-ups are popular, although the Ninja connection is strange.


Thunderbirds hybrids come up now and then too like this with what appears to be Geoff Tracy's head.


This one though has an unfamiliar look, a sort of grumpy alien!


Anyone know who he is?

moonbase clutter alert


Part of my problem as an old collector was hoarding.

I used to buy in all sorts of stuff like these cheap vintage paperbacks and annuals.

Left over from my toy fair stall days stuff like has begun to form piles of clutter in the house, loft and shed.

Loads have now gone to charity shops, which is where some will have been bought!

These are bagged up and ready to roll too.

We're drowning in clutter at Moonbase and its got to change! 

Turns out all this dusty stuff is seriously bad for my health!

Are you a hoarder too readers?

Thursday, 27 April 2017

mystery mighty jack boat

This space boat looked familiar when I saw it on the Bay this year.


Its Japanese, by Bandai and the arrowhead decals suggest Mighty Jack. No idea what this vehicle is called. You?

It does remind me of another futuristic boat we've featured before.

The Wasser Spinne or Water Spider.

Two versions were released, one by T in a Circle [Tai Hing] and the other Yone I think.


We've covered the Wasser Spinne many times and one bloglet was in 2014:


The Mighty Jack boat at the top also nods towards the worlds of Gerry Anderson I would say. There's a look of Stingray in there and even a hint of the Project SWORD Scout 1[below] with those distinctive side engines.


Side nacelles like these were a favourite of TV21 illustrators and none moreso than the great Mike Noble who's 1966 Sea Bug used them to full effect. 

Having corresponded with Mike, both he and I are in agreement that his design could well have been the inspiration for the Scout 1 toy.

geek salad with morticia's egg fried rice

Been watching Frasier this morning before I take my meds.

I've been watching Frasier for years and have always been surprised at Kelsey Grammar's rise to mutant stardom as an X-man Beast.

Listening to the end titles sung by Kelsey his mention of tossed salad and scrambled eggs reminds me of the mistake I made last night.

Having starved over most of the Easter fortnight unable to eat much I've begun to scoff again. Various meals were forming dreams and top of the list was sweet and sour pork with egg fried rice, which I'd seen on a TV advert. I couldn't get it out of my head.

Yesterday Missus Moonbase presented me with the menu of the local Chinese takeaway, Tung Shing. Initially having been so sure about which meal I wanted to re-start my appetite the menu presented me with various culinary dilemmas. 

Was it really sweet and sour pork on the TV or was it pork in black bean sauce? Was it egg fried rice or was it egg foo young? I just didn't know but in the end made a decision, which Missus M kindly collected.

Delicious as it was I couldn't help thinking I'd got it wrong with Black Bean Sauce and Egg Fried Rice. There just wasn't the bits of plump yellow scrambled egg I saw on the telly and the pork sauce was gloopier than on the TV. The prawn toast was excellent though!

Next week I shall order the alternative, Sweet and Sour Pork with Egg Foo Young. I'm already hallucinating. But Lo, what's this, the menu also offers Egg Foo Young Pork! Oh no!

You will have to excuse these rantings readers from a normally stable space toy and monster nut. They are the weeds of inaction, the oiling of idle servoes!

Returning to Frasier again his mention of his wife Lillith reminded me of that most ancient of dilemmas, that most profound battle where lines were drawn in playgrounds across the world as sides were taken and oaths sworn.

Just who was the better vamp: Lily from the Munsters or Morticia from the Addams Family? Often this heated debate was a mere proxy for the bigger question of which show was best overall and I imagine that schoolyard argument rages on to this day!

What do you think readers?

I was often torn as I liked both shows. My sister even looked like Morticia but my Mum had a mallen streak like Lily so I was reminded of both every day! 

I'm not sure if I had any toys or games from the shows as a kid in the Sixties - did you? - but over the years I've acquired a few collectables. My favourites have been a Polar Lights re-issue of the Addams Family House, which I built up and relived the glory days with back in the late 1990's and an old Addams Family card game card signed by Wednesday aka Lisa Loring.

My favourite collectable was an early cartoon book by the Addams Family creator Charles 'Chas' Addams. If ever there existed an illustrator who captured perfectly my own sense of ghoulish humour it was Chas. By illustrating the everyday goings-on of the Addamses he more or less invented the goth way of life. 

Apart from Wednesday's autograph I sold the rest of this cache on my toy stall at fairs in the early Noughties. As usual I regret it!

My final observation before I inhale more modern miracle gas is about Marilyn in the Munsters. I always thought it was clever to cast a 'normal' character amongst the ghouls and monsters, something the Addams Family didn't have. 

Marilyn was like Batman. Neither of them had the powers of their peers yet held their own in a crazy world full of fiends. Their plainness made them all the more endearing I feel and was part of their popularity. 

We could all be Marilyn or Batman if we wanted don't you think?

Saturn Probe is Go!

Nasa Cassini Probe is diving between the planet and its bejewelled rings today, before crashing into the atmosphere, one final time. The imagery of the Saturn system has been amazingly beautiful, can't wait to see what this grand finale will reveal!

https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov

kevin's polar lights spindrift model


Inspired by the recent reruns of Land of the Giants, I bought the Polar Lights kit and built it (adding internal lighting). It's not a bad little model.

Kevin D

Wednesday, 26 April 2017

geek salad with king steroids

Continuing my recovery with a mixture of steroids, light gardening and sick bay cinema here at Moonbase readers.

*

I've been enjoying a mini-fest of Miguel Ferrar. You'll recall Miguel as the OCP VP in Robocop. He always played a good baddy: rough, raffish, brash and unhinged.

Last week I saw Miguel in Stephen King's The Night Flier, a neat story about a vampire with a pilot's licence. Why turn into a bat when you can fly a plane!

Miguel plays a desperate journalist who's also a pilot. He becomes obsessed with the monster, the Night Flier and follows him in his plane to dark remote airfields across America. Things don't go well and many flights are cancelled!

I really enjoyed this film. Miguel was convincing and the vampire was dentally memorable. Stephen King has that canny knack of mixing everyday American life with monsters who loiter just off the page and he did it many times over.

*

My latest Miguel Ferrer outing is another King story, which I've neither read nor seen on the screen: The Stand. Its on You Tube in 3 or 4 parts. I'm about to start part 2 and I like the basic storyline a lot, a a new twisted leader emerging from a plague-ravaged world.

Anyone else seen the series?

*

Sadly Miguel died in January, just five years older than me. 
RIP.


Another actor who plays unhinged characters well is Gary Busey, whom I caught this week on a DVD of Hider in the House.

A grimly fascinating tale of a psychopath, one Mr. Busey, who manages to build a hidden room in the attic of a huge American villa before the swish owners move in! From the comfort of his cubby hole Busey becomes unhealthily interested with the lady of the house played by yummy mommy Mimi Rogers.

Its a scary notion that there maybe secret rooms in houses, where someone else is living. I will check my loft this week for odd lights glowing behind air grilles!

It reminded me a bit of the much older Black Christmas, the king of all 'hider' flicks.

Hider in the House had a tortuous journey in the cinema, being hardly shown anywhere when it was released. Even more unlucky was Gary himself, who suffered brain damage in a terrible motorcycle accident shorty after. It's good to know he recovered to play that lazy shambling style he has in many more films including memorable stints in Lethal Weapon and Under Siege.

*

This morning I was reminded of a bit of my own juvenile geekery when I saw Amok Time on the box. Its that famous episode of Star trek where Spock suffers the Pon Fa, burns with the blood fever and gets married.

On the way to the church he has to fight Kirk with a large crescent axe.

When I saw this as kid I was so excited as we had the very same 'weapon' in the garden shed! A lawn edger! I had it out whirling round the lawn before you could say T'Pau's A Singer.

It looked like this and I've not seen one for years. Maybe they're all on Vulcan!


*

More geek salad to be tossed soon.

ew's star wars display

Hi Woodsy, 

Here is a picture of part of my Star Wars collection... I hope that it could be useful for your blog..

My best regards
 ew

Tuesday, 25 April 2017

mystery art deco space toys

I keep seeing this strange plastic space belt online.

No idea what it is. It says KRJ on it.

Its sort of art deco.


It sort of reminds me of this space car I see now and then too.

Again, no real idea what this is. 

Something atomic / art deco from the Fifties?


Can anyone help ID these toys and are they related?

the meanderings of a mould free mind

Its an amazing thing medicine. Having been ill for ages I'm not quite sure how I would have begun to get better without it. Makes you realise just how exposed early man must have been to ailments and injury. I bet Neanderthals didn't live that long at all.

After two months of gradual respiratory decline peaking with near-hospitalisation last Friday I was finally diagnosed by our GP, a severe allergic reaction to something resulting in sudden onset asthma. Whether its long term I don't know but hopefully a man in a white coat will tell me one day. I'm just glad to be breathing fully again and letting the air in. Shortness of breath all day and night is a scary thing and I sympathise with anyone who suffers from it.

As for now that amazing thing medicine is working wonders and a crash course of steroid tablets over five days is blasting away the inflammation on my windpipe and reducing all the nasty symptoms like wheezing, shortness of breath, cracked voice, coughing and gagging.

The Godzilla breath pills are backed up by a steroid inhaler and a Ventolin inhaler. I may be on the Ventolin for a long time but I hope not. Last Friday I enjoyed it via a masked nebuliser, which was like breathing alpine air for the first time in months! I think that was the start of my recovery.

Currently on sick leave I'm enjoying doing not much at all. I need to get my strength back if I'm to get back to work soon so I'm taking it steady and with fully inflated lungs doing a few household chores. Missus Moonbase has done everything for ages and deserves a Project SWORD Supremo badge for starters!

Its a funny thing an allergic reaction. I've wondered what I could have done to trigger one: something I ate, something I drank, something I touched or breathed in? The docs don't know yet.

We have had a doggy friend staying more than usual but he's been here off and on for ten years so I don't think its dog hair. The most likely allergen is mould in my opinion. Mould either at home or elsewhere.

I say at home as we do have a few patches of the stuff on one wall, which we were in the process of dealing with with the installation of a Drymaster unit, which we probably will do soon as our home has been classed as partly damp.

A more likely culprit is the huge pile of wet leaves we shifted in the garden or clearing out our mouldy shed.

We cleared out our mouldy shed in February. I had had a bad cold in January and maybe the two things didn't gel. The shed was stuffed with old furniture, pictures, books, jigsaws, toys, ornaments, videos and cassettes.

This is worrying as part of this is as a result of my collecting and in part Missus Moonbase too when she had the collectors bug. I fear we have strayed into that evil twin of collecting, namely hoarding. 

I personally think its easy to let collecting turn into hoarding. My reluctance to throw away old stuff is a daily thing. Deep down I think it may have something to do with the fact that most of my childhood possessions were thrown away when we moved house in 1977. Who knows.

We do have a hoarding problem at Moonbase. There's old stuff piled up in the loft, spare room and our other shed. Its out of the way but its there brooding like Smaug on his dusty mounds.

One day we will have to tackle it but the mouldy shed, culprit or not, has put me off. When we do face the dust devil in the future we'll be wearing masks that for sure and we may need some help. There'll be masks for everyone!

For now I am happy to be away from allergens if that's at all possible and look forward to full breaths of clean air again every day.

It would make a good Ridley Scottesque film title, A L L E R G E N. I just don't want to be in it!

Have you any experience with hoarding stuff and or allergens readers? 

Acme toy company: Vintage toy shop report by Tony K



Toys in Time:

Once in a while I feel the need to escape the madness of modern life and find peace of mind amongst old toys. 

ACME Toy Company in Erdington is one such haven of vintage calm. The shop has a classic TARDIS design... small on the outside and surprisingly big on the inside... and more importantly for me, it's crammed wall-to-wall with old toys from bygone times. 

The TARDIS effect doesn't just stop with the dimensions of the shop, but also extends to its ability to transform a ten minute visit, into two hours worth of nostalgic chat with the keepers of this cosy vintage toy time capsule. 

Thanks to Pete and Colin for allowing me to snap and share a few pics of this rare old place.

Tony K

Monday, 24 April 2017

modmart's captain scarlet missiles

After a first step out into the big wide world yesterday afternoon for a few hours I was happy to breathe fresh air and be among family and friends.

By early evening I wuz bushwacked, back on my sick bay sofa watching You Tube. By the way, thanks for all the hot tips about films to watch guys. All noted for the cinema of the settee for the week ahead!

Late last night I decided to watch some old short videos made by fellow collector and all-round Gerry Anderson expert Modmart.

My recent acquisition of what are probably Century 21/ JR21 Toys SPC missiles and a suitcase got me researching which other Century 21 Toys vehicles had missiles.

Having watched Modmart's excellent footage of his comprehensive collection it would appear that besides the three Project SWORD Scouts, which I have [picture: Ferryman] .......


.... the only other C21/ JR21 toys with similar white red-tipped missiles are the three Captain Scarlet vehicles issued by the company.

These are the Spectrum Patrol Car, Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle and the Angel Aircraft, shown below from Modmart's film and none of which I actually own. 


As far as I know these Captain Scarlet toys were all available worldwide in the late Sixties.

You can watch Modmart talk about these three vehicles yourself and its well worth a look:


It still seems odd that C21/JR21 bothered to produce two different sizes and shapes for what were essentially the same missile. 

The Project SWORD Scouts had the longer ones with the longer bottom plug [below left] whilst the the Captain Scarlet vehicles had the shorter one with the shorter bottom plug [picture: Arto].


Having tried both types of missile in my SWORD Scouts successfully I am still perplexed as to why the two types were manufactured.

Any ideas?

secret sam and a penn plax frogman: christmas 1969 magic


Another Yuletide gem on the public video library that is You Tube.

You can search for a Christmas morning in virtually any year!

This is the Brennan Family Christmas 1969. So like my own family's its uncanny!

There's Secret Sam, Wizard of Oz and Penn Plax Aquarium divers.

Courtesy of Hank Brennan.

What else can you see?

Sunday, 23 April 2017

lp spacimens aliens



I've never seen this particular backing card for LP aliens before.

Saw it in Ebay earlier in the year.

Looks like a vending machine set.

SPACIMENS!

ha ha.

Have you any LP aliens on cards or in boxes readers?

spring loaded mystery: the size of century 21 toys missiles


Before I fell ill I made a bid on these bits and bats on the Bay. 

I won!

I was after the three white red-tipped missiles, which eagle-eyed Bill B recognised straight away as Century 21.

Not sure what the rest of the stuff is.

I had thought the missiles were the correct ones for my three Project SWORD Scouts, which currently have longer versions inserted in them.

It turns out that these three new shorter missiles are the perfect fit for my small Scouts spring-loaded holes but were actually issued for other larger Century 21 toys like the plastic Spectrum Patrol Car!

It does seem odd that the small Project SWORD Scouts were released with longer missiles** when the shorter ones are a better fit, at least on my toys.

What's your experience?

Have you any Century 21 toys' missiles and did you get them with the original toy?

** Arto pointed out this very thing on the blog back in 2016
http://projectswordtoys.blogspot.co.uk/2016/05/century-21-toys-scout-1-and-spc-plastic.html


Postscript:

I think Bill B's eagle eyes have come up trumps again!

The small beige suitcase does indeed look like the one found in the Century 21 Toys SPC.

This makes sense as the missiles fit the SPC as well.

Captain Scarlet Dun dun dun dundun! [TV show theme show and high five to Bill!]

Here's a full set of C21 Toys SPC accessories featured on the blog in 2015 [courtesy of Jim Lewis]