The Lego minifig version is basically a pink minifig head with a softer plastic body formed around it. It has nice snake-like tentacles and a leering, evil demeanour. The Kinder version has grippers on its shorter arms, to hold weapons and accessories from the figure range and a seriously peed off expression.
What I like about the figures is their simlarity to the Kelloggs Crater Critters from 1970, especially the tripedal King Crater, who does look much more benign, if not completely spaced!
But a possibly more interesting reference point is Kraang's resemblance to Terence Cuneo's beautiful painted illustrations for Well's 'War of the Worlds' which appeared in 'Tell Me Why' Magazine in a brief serialisation in 1970. Cuneo took the text literally and produced a wonderfully glaring, inimical Martian, 'glistening like wet leather', perched on the edge of a pit. The paintings stuck with me as a boy and unsettled me slightly with their realism. The Martians and the industrial looking tripods are for me, the definitive take on Wells creation.
Having just watched the 2019 War of the Worlds BBC mini series, I'm on a bit of a WOW jag! I've just reread the Wells original story and the Osprey guide.
ReplyDeleteI hadn't seen the Cuneo art before, but I still haven't seen what I consider the definitive interpretation!
I'm toying with the idea of making a diorama of the Natural History Museum - with a Martian on display in a tank of formaldehyde!
The BBC series was abit of a letdown. It was filmed largely in Liverpool and Merseyside and looked great, but the Martians and the storyline were rubbish. I love Georhe Pals interpretation of the fighting machines, which for 1956 were well ahead of their time. The Spielberg version was just another Tom Cruise overacts vehicle, although the heatray was excellent in its rendition, the martians appearing from below ground was more far fetched than the original story! Geoff Waynes musical and attendant visuals is brilliant, but I still love the Cuneo art above all. I’d love to see your visualisation of the martians Looey, go for it, sounds amazing!
ReplyDeleteBtw - watching an Alan Bennet documentary the orher night and your dad was featured, taking photos on Brighton Pier of Peter Cook and the crew!
They remind of the creature in It Conquered The World! Lovely stuff, like those jigglers you own.
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