Here is something I acquired recently on ebay, which I thought might be fun for Moonbase readers.
Rob C
USA
Hello Folks.
It's been a while since I posted but as things just might be getting back to some sort of normality in the UK, I thought I'd briefly get back on the blogging horse!
I'm still working on my Wave Skydiver model. As many will know it's a vinyl kit, not the best material for a model, but I'm slowly persevering when I get the time, and I thought I'd share a few photos of where I'm up to with the build.
I've more or less finished paint detailing and weathering the Diver part, or as far as I want to go, and getting it ready for the decals. The next part will be the paint detailing and dirtying down on Sky 1.
I caught Watchmen again on telly last night. I saw the first hour before I had to retire. There were another 2 hours after that - till 2am!
With Rorschach's grim narrative it always reminds me of a noir movie with a hard-boiled private eye. Its a great film and I had to look up some of the actors.
The chap who plays the Comedian has such a huge smile, I knew I'd seen him before this year and there he was. He's the swashbuckling CIA cowboy in the Rock's monster flick Rampage. I know he's been in many other things but I haven't seen them.
Molock is Max Headroom I think. Is that right?
The Watchmen is a slice of eighties paranoia when the cold war was part of our little lives. The idea of retired and weary super heroes is fascinating and the film takes it further by killing them off. I don't pretend to know the background to this flick at all. I haven't read the famous comic but I do appreciate how it might sit well in DC. I find DC's own roster of older heroes really alluring and I'm drawn to the old DC universe in general. So the reboot of the Minutemen into another band of heroes in the Watchmen - the Watchmen? - is very appealing to me.
I liked Bird Man for the same reasons. Michael Keaton/ Batman is fabulous as the tired old Bird Man of the title.
Retirement for super heroes is hard.
So to borrow a phrase from the movie, who has been watching the Watchmen?
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American Postscript:
In reply to watching the Watchmen....I was unaware that there were movies made of a comic I had paid no attention to.Does each generation have its own golden age or is the idea of a golden age fixed?
For instance for me the golden age of toys were the Sixties and early Seventies - Major Matt Mason, Project SWORD, Johnny Seven and so on - but my 36 year old daughter's golden age of toys is the Eighties and early 90's when she was a kid. So Rainbow Bright, Cabbage Patch Kids and Game Boy.
So does this label of golden age simply move with each generation of toys? What about comics? Films? Kids' TV? Model kits? Do they have golden periods which are set in time and what followed was therefore forever lessened?
What do you think readers?
I saw this lot on Ebay a while ago described as possibly Marx or Giant brand vehicles and figures. Many of these you'll recognise as SpaceX. Golden Astronaut and Apollo Moon Exploring.
The vehicle I like the most is the small orange space car in the middle, which is popping up more and more these days. it seems to me. You never used to see that much it really.
The little orange baby car appears in various sets and packs and is a miniature clone of the larger Billy Blastoff space car, which some of you may have had or still have.
Do any of you have the orange car or big Billy Blastoff uncle readers?
This is like the blog legend from years ago, the wonderful 3 in 1 set that Wotan owns. Click on Mortoys and Six in One on the labels.
This set is by Spanish outfit Payva https://youtu.be/js_SxhGTP4Q seen on Todocollecion.
What do you think?
I tuned into Film 4's all day Star Trek Movie Marathon last night and caught The Wrath of Khan.
I've seen it before [sadly not at the cinema in the early 80's!] and I must say I enjoyed it a lot. The Khan character was really well acted and the eventual lethal dilemma had a great build up.
Spock's demise was touching and the return to the Kobayashi Maru scenario was clever. The Genesis planet gave lots of room for the sequel, The Search for Spock, which was on telly next but I fell asleep, no fault of the film I might add. It was nearly midnight!
Watching Star Trek I was struck by the thought, could it have ever been as big as Star Wars? Its already a big franchise but it isn't the behemoth that is the Gorge Lucas/ Disney franchise.
What does Star Wars have that Star Trek doesn't readers?