This East German rocket truck caught my eye.
An impressive toy from the old DDR.
Do you agree?
This East German rocket truck caught my eye.
An impressive toy from the old DDR.
Do you agree?
Paint tins were essential kit back in the Sixties. No self-respecting boomer would be caught without a tin tray of watercolours.
And so it was in East Germany too. This Varia paint tray is just wonderful with those rocket and satellite illustrations.
Did you have a tin of paints readers?
This tinplate roadster caught my eye.
I love this Soviet moon rover I have in my old photo archive. There aren't any more details with it. It looks maybe metal as well as plastic to me. What do you think?
Like Wotan I've now seen Sputnik.
I watched this Russian movie on Netflix last night and I really enjoyed it. I was excited beforehand and that doesn't happen often nowadays. The last time was probably Alien Covenant.
Alien is a good cue to start discussing Sputnik. It has been called a Russian Alien but the nickname doesn't do it justice and certainly ignores the very unique character of this film. After all, being Russian, it was never going to look like an American flick.
I shan't be spoiling anything here though, as its still a film to watch. I can say that its a creature feature set in the 1980's Soviet Union. The Cold War is everywhere and time's are grim.
In fact the starkly bleak look of the Cold War interiors are as dominant a feature of the movie as the shockingly awful beast slithering its way through them.
If you have seen the TV series Chernobyl then you will know what I mean about the almost empty Soviet interiors and entire townscapes for that matter. There is a sparseness that's hard to fathom.
I suppose actually rather than Alien or Prometheus Sputnik has more in common with the American fantasy film The Shape of Water, which is located in equally industrial lab settings. Maybe the space flick Life a little too. Sputnik is no kids' film so forget ET. Its a gory movie like Alien.
Comparisons aside though, Sputnik is well worth a watch. I liked it a lot and has whet my appetite for more Soviet sci-fi. In the meantime I may return to Chernobyl and re-watch that.
Have you seen Sputnik?