Archive for July, 2013



Marx Toys: Giant Martian Landing Play Set (1977)

Martian Landing

Martian Landing-3

Martian Landing-2

Martian Landing-4

According to the article (probably from Playset Magazine) in this Hake’s listing, the Martian Landing set was originally released in 1972. Marx was in decline throughout the ’70s, and the traditional toy soldier format was displaced by Kenner in 1977. (What’s an action figure but a cross between a toy soldier and a doll?)

The idea of the set and the box art are way cooler than the finished product. It’s just a repackaging of the far superior Operation Moon Base. Pieces/molds used in Martian Landing were used in Marx’s later space-themed sets, including Star Station Seven and Galaxy Command.

(Images via eBay)

Dude, Where’s My James Bond Submarine Car?

Lotus Subcar

The kick-ass, amphibious Lotus Esprit from The Spy Who Loved Me could be yours! From RM Auctions:

No Bond car has ever done anything as outrageous as transform itself into a submarine. Used to incredible effect in the film The Spy Who Loved Me, starring Roger Moore, the white Lotus commonly tops the polls when generations of movie fans are asked to vote on their favourite film cars of all time […]

The vehicle to be offered by RM Auctions at its forthcoming London sale, 8-9 September, in Battersea Park, is the one and only fully functioning car especially designed and built for the famous underwater sequence seen on screen in the 1977 film […]

The Aston Martin from Goldfinger sold for £2.9 million in 2010. I can’t imagine the Lotus will go for less, since, you know, it’s a bloody submarine. The closest I ever got to the damn thing is pictured below.

Lotus Corgi

(Images via Lotus Esprit Turbo and Vectis Auctions)

The Great Space Coaster (1981 – 1986)

My mind is blown. It’s been more than 30 years since I’ve heard this song, and I still remember the melody and most of the lyrics. The show itself is coming back to me as I write this: three young musicians take off on a roller coaster rocket ship to hang out with their alien friends on a giant asteroid. There’s lots of singing, animated sequences, life lessons learned.

GSC VHS 1983

GSC VHS

The Great Space Coaster is not available on DVD, and won’t be any time soon, if it ever is. According to Tanslin Media, owner of the master tapes: “The problem is that the show used a lot of great music that would need to be re-licensed if the show were ever released. This is extremely expensive, so a DVD release would probably cost more to make than it would ever earn.” Tragically, the tapes are already deteriorating.

In 2012, GSC co-creator Jim Martin, who also played a number of characters (including Gary “no gnews is good gnews” Gnu), launched a campaign to preserve at least one half-hour show. His goal was $2000. He raised $3500. Follow The Great Space Coaster Facebook page for updates.

The video below is from the 1981 one-hour special, The Great Space Coaster Supershow. Check in at 11:00 to see Goriddle Gorilla (Kevin Clash) with special guest Mark Hamill. The possibility of losing something this priceless makes me sick to my stomach.

(Video via FuzzyMemoriesTV; image via eBay)

Movie Reviews: Firstborn (1984)

Firstborn

Beware: spoilers ahead.

The U.S. divorce rate peaked in 1981, as no-fault divorce became available in nearly all 50 states. A number of successful kid and teen dramas at the time reflected the new single-parent reality, including E.T., Footloose, Pretty in Pink, The Manhattan Project, The Karate Kid, The Lost Boys, Vision Quest, and The Bad News Bears.

For exactly one hour, Firstborn seriously addresses the breakdown of the nuclear family from the perspective of those it hit hardest: the kids. The last 45 minutes go up in a puff of action movie clichés and moral hysteria.

Jake (Christopher Collet, The Manhattan Project) and Brian (Corey Haim in his film debut) live with their mom (Terri Garr) in an affluent suburb on the East Coast. They go to a nice school. Jake has a nice girlfriend (Sarah Jessica Parker). He’s got typically rascally friends (Robert Downey Jr. plays one of them). He’s a star on the lacrosse team.

Firstborn

Things start to unravel when his boring, blue blood dad announces his plans to remarry, and his mom starts going out with working class Sam (played brilliantly by Peter Weller), who installs security systems and drives a big truck.

Sam tries to charm the kids into liking him. When that doesn’t work, he bribes them. Eventually, he moves in. One night, as music blares from a party downstairs, Jake comes out of his room and catches his mom and Sam snorting cocaine off the pinball machine (Sam’s one contribution to the household). Soon afterwards we learn that Sam is a drug dealer.

Mom starts to smoke and drink beer. Dishes and trash pile up around the house. Sam starts pushing the kids around. Jake begs his mother to kick him out, but she “can’t.” She tells a neighbor: “So he does not have a law degree, so what? He’s a very nice guy. He’s solid, he’s full of life, and he needs me… And right now, that’s very important to me.”

Jake, as the older brother and “man of the house,” has to take care of business himself. He steals Sam’s score, there’s a fight, Sam tries to run down Jake in his big truck, and there’s a final, unconvincing showdown back at the house.

MBDFIRS EC001

The second half of the movie hinges on the premise that Garr’s character, Wendy, up to this point a good mother who has raised two smart boys and handled a marital separation with dignity, would suddenly turn into the worst person in the world. I enjoyed seeing all the actors in Firstborn, and the ’80s repartee and atmosphere is fun, but I found Garr’s transformation totally unbelievable and offensive.

The subtext is there—it’s implicit in the tagline, actually. First, women are fickle and weak-kneed by nature, so there’s always an underlying justification for men to leave them. Second, if you’re a divorced upper middle class woman and you absolutely must get remarried, hook up with a guy who has money. Working class men know how to barbecue, but they’re probably lazy, violent drug dealers who will at some point try to kill you and your children.

While it lasts, you can watch Firstborn here.

(Movie poster via www.joblo.com; stills via Cineplex)

Williams Electronics Trade Ads (1982)

Williams 1982

Williams 1982-2

Williams 1982-3

Williams 1982-4

What a brilliant display of golden age video game marketing. Almost all service businesses had cabinets by ’82, but those businesses had to choose between a whole bunch of different game manufacturers. Williams (Defender, Stargate, Joust, Robotron, Sinistar) was one of the big names.

Is dad reading the Bible in the before shot of the first ad? And who the hell is that in the blue shirt? Pat? I had a handheld or two by ’82, but nothing compared to a row of cabinets. Just hearing the attract mode noises made life so much more exciting.

Check out the lady on the left peering curiously at the kids in the grocery store. She’s thinking: “Video games in the supermarket? What a great idea! Now I can bring my kids and spend way more money!”

The third ad is my favorite. Look how bored they are with one another until the cocktail cabinets arrive. And the guys at the coin-op-less bar are so miserable not because they’re stag, but because all the games are taken.

Fourth ad: Ruffles bags haven’t changed much, I guess. See all the beautifully pristine comic books on the spinner rack? That’s Captain America #268 second from the bottom.

(Images via The Arcade Flyer Archive)

Dungeons & Dragons Club, 1980

D&D Club 1980

I found this one at the Judges Guild Game Company’s Facebook page. The note reads:

In the 70’s and 80’s, JG founded and supplied Dungeons and Dragons clubs in Decatur, Illinois high schools. This is the 1980 MacArthur D&D Club, as pictured in the yearbook.

I would pay real money for an autographed 8×10, especially if Van Halen guy signs with a silver metallic Sharpie. My crush on Kathy Kirby is immediate and all-consuming. As soon as I get my hands on a functioning flux capacitor, I’m going back in time to ask her to the prom.

Judges Guild, by the way, is a fantasy game publisher founded in 1975 by Bob Bledsaw and Bill Owen. In 1976, Bledsaw and Owen got approval from Dave Arneson to create game supplements for D&D, which were successfully introduced at Gen Con IX in August of the same year.

Over the next several years, Judges Guild released some 250 products—for use with D&D as well as RuneQuest, Traveller, and other notable games—and played an influential role in the formative years of tabletop RPGs. The Judges Guild website is here.

***

On a separate but related note, I want to thank Al at Beyond the Black Gate for saying some nice things about 2 Warps to Neptune. Al is an old school gamer and game developer who has written extensively about the genre, Judges Guild included.

Anyone interested in the hobby and its history—hell, anyone who digs fantasy art and literature—should check out his blog. Start with his two-part cliffhanger, “Evolution of an Old-School Gamer.”

Marx Toys: Wagon Train Play Set

marx wagon train

marx wagon train-2

marx wagon train-3

marx wagon train-4

marx wagon train-5

I’m not sure how I lassoed myself into posting as many of these Marx sets as I can find, but it’s too late to turn back now. Git along, little dogies.

Computer Labs, 1982: The Commodore VIC-20

Commodore VIC-20 1982

May 19, 1982. (Photo: Dave Buresh/Denver Post)

Commodore VIC-20 1982-2

December 6, 1982. (Photo: Denver Post)

(Photos via Lexibell/eBay)

The 4th of July, 1980

4th of July 1980

Bill Clearlake says of his photo of the neighbor’s kid:

This is one of those situations that came together in a couple of seconds. I had my camera around my neck, the kid ran by with an American Flag and a Popsicle. I raised the camera and took the shot.

What seemed like a second later, he was inside his house with the screen door slamming behind him.

As the neighbor’s kid goes, so goes life.

Original Micronauts Art by Ken Kelly

Repto Kelly

Membros Kelly

Hornetroid Kelly

Terraphant Kelly

If you’re a fantasy art aficionado and have $350,000 burning a hole in your pocket, head on over to eBay seller Mister Sluggworths and buy up these original Ken Kelly oils. They were commissioned by Mego in 1979 and used as card and box art for the Micronauts series 4 and 5 (1979 – 1980) alien figures and vehicles.

Above you see, from top to bottom, Repto, Membros, the Hornetroid, and the Terraphant. Also for sale are Centaurus, Kronos, and Lobros. That’s 7 out of 8 of the original commissions being sold as a lot. Antron is the only one missing.

(Images via Mister Sluggworths/eBay)


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