Archive for September, 2013

1979 The Lord of the Rings Merchandise Catalog

LOTR-7

LOTR 1979

LOTR 1979-2

LOTR 1979-3

LOTR 1979-4

LOTR 1979-5

LOTR 1979-6

You can thank The Retro Art Blog for scanning and posting the whole catalog. Click on the link to see the rest. Belt buckle ($7.50) or t-shirt ($6.00)? I’m going Gollum buckle. You guys do what you want.

The introductory letter, aside from assuring us that “through unity we will overcome the forces of the Dark Lord,” mentions The Lord of the Rings Part II, scheduled for release during the spring or summer of 1981.” If only that dream had come true.

One day we should have a discussion about the separate Bakshi and Rankin/Bass productions (podcast?), and how poorly it was all handled by corporate forces.

Board Games: UFO: Game of Close Encounters (Avalon Hill, 1978)

UFO Game 1978

UFO Game 1978-2

UFO Game 1978-3

UFO Game Ad 1978

Like ‘UFO’, ‘Close Encounters’ was also immune from trademark, as it was the name of a preexisting classification system introduced by J. Allen Hynek in The UFO Experience: A Scientific Inquiry (1972). The game was published originally (as UFO) by Gamma Two and bought and redesigned by Avalon Hill, Simulations Publications’ (Dawn of the Dead board game) primary competitor.

What Carl Jung said about UFOs in 1959 (Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies) is just as relevant today:

In the threatening situation of the world today, when people are beginning to see that everything is at stake, the projection-creating fantasy soars beyond the realm of earthly organizations and powers into the heavens, into interstellar space, where the rulers of human fate, the gods, once had their abode in the planets…. Even people who would never have thought that a religious problem could be a serious matter that concerned them personally are beginning to ask themselves fundamental questions. Under these circumstances it would not be at all surprising if those sections of the community who ask themselves nothing were visited by `visions,’ by a widespread myth seriously believed in by some and rejected as absurd by others.

Jung’s interpretation was that UFOs represented a modern “savior myth“: instead of looking to the heavens for God, who we have infantilized, rationalized, and pestered into insignificance, we look to the heavens for touchable yet godlike alien beings, who validate and ennoble our crass race by condescending to visit and study us, and whose technological miracle-crafts may offer us a means of escaping our boredom with ourselves.

(Images via Board Game Geek)

Whitman Coloring Books: UFO Seeing is Believing and UFO Space Strangers (1978)

UFO 1978-2

UFO 1978

Close Encounters of the Third Kind was released in November, 1977. Luckily for kid’s book publishers and toy/game makers, ‘UFO’ can’t be trademarked.

The cover artist for the first book is Irv Gnat (front and back covers are identical). I’m not sure who did the second cover, but the Camaro (or Cobra, or whatever) is boss! I’ve got my eye out for both books.

(Images via Vintage Toy Archive and Matt Perry/Pinterest)

Auravision’s Sounds of Outer Space (1967)

sounds of outer space

Sounds of Outer Space is a cardboard record that came with a rocket model resembling the image on the record. I’d love to find out more about the model, but no luck yet. The recording is very weird, with a narrator speaking poetry over futuristic sound effects. I do love the line, “To be afraid and not care that you are afraid is the courage of which astronauts are made.”

The little information I have came from Nightcoaster and The Internet Museum of Flexi/Cardboard/Oddity Records. The video is via homersoddishe/YouTube.

***

UPDATE: Many thanks to Gordon Peterson, who identified the spaceship model as AMT’s Leif Ericson Galactic Cruiser.

Leif Ericson 1967

The photo is from Frank Henriquez, who provides a complete history of the model and record on his website. The ship was designed by Matt Jefferies, who designed the original Enterprise for Star Trek. It went through several versions and releases, including a U.F.O. Mystery Ship that glowed in the dark. As for Sounds of Outer Space,

David Penn and Scott Snell did an amazing job of identifying both the source of the music and the spoken words in the record. The lyrics are from a 1967 psychedelic rock record called “Cosmic Sounds” by The Zodiac. The music was originally used in “The Twilight Zone” and was released in “The Twilight Zone: 40th Anniversary Collection” set.

I’m listening to Cosmic Sounds right now. Like, it’s out there, man.

The Art of John Berkey: UFO TV Guide Cover (1978)

tv guide berkey 1978

tv guide berkey 1978-2

‘Visions of Lunar Life’: 2009 NASA Art Contest Winners

NASA 2009

Life and Work on the Moon
by Pratham Karnik
Walt Whitman High School, Rockville, MD

NASA 2009-2

The Worlds First Civilization on the Moon
by Josh Kim
Kent Mountain View Academy, Auburn, WA

NASA 2009-3

Coexisting in Harmony
by Sarah Han
Vision 21 Art and Design Portfolio School, Los Angeles, CA

NASA 2009-4

Moon Base
by Jan Fahlbusch
Arendell Parrott Academy, NC

NASA 2009-5

Amid the Stars
by Kristen Fahy
Hopatcong High School, NJ

Damn good stuff from the high school division—better than the university division, in my opinion. See all the winners here. The Nasa Art Contest was discontinued in 2012 due to—guess what?—lack of funding.

Odyssey #8 (August, 1981)

Odyssey #8 FC

Odyssey #8 IFC

Odyssey #8 pg. 3

Odyssey #8 pg. 12

Odyssey #8 pg. 13

Odyssey #8 pg. 14

Odyssey #8 pg. 15

Odyssey #8 pg. 16

Odyssey #8 pg. 17

Odyssey #8 pg. 18

Odyssey #8 pg. 19

Odyssey #8 pg. 30

Odyssey, “The Young People’s Magazine of Astronomy and Outer Space,” ran from 1975 through 1991. Originally published by AstroMedia Corp., the magazine was sold to Kalmback publishing in 1985. I don’t have any issues from the later period, but I’ve seen some for sale, and it looks like the format changed slightly. I bought a good run from ’81 and ’82 and plan to post selections from each issue.

Kids used to be excited about space travel and the stars. Consequently, they were excited about science. Funny how that works. The magazine is excellent quality, even if some of the science is outdated. Above you’ll find an article on Voyager’s Golden Records, and instructions on how to build a Jupiter Theater (if anyone gets it done, send me some pics and I’ll show them off.)

A number of regular features are below. The first two feature Odyssey‘s robot mascot, Ulysses. The third is even better: kid art depicting space themes. The theme for this issue is “Future in Space.” Along with the letters printed at the beginning of the issue, the drawings were sent to President Reagan, who was threatening to cut NASA’s budget at the time.

The blurbs accompanying the art are brilliant. Talk to me, Christina Chin: “I would like to see the United States launch a shuttle to other worlds and galaxies and find beings that live there.”

Amen.

Or how about John-Charles Panosh’s “Norris 3,” an asteroid colony orbiting Jupiter? Pretty cool. Do you think it’s named after Chuck Norris?

The back cover is a surreal ad for TSR’s Escape from New York board game. In fact, every issue of my run has a TSR ad on the back cover.

Odyssey #8 pg. a

Odyssey #8 pg. 26

Odyssey #8 pg. 27

Odyssey #8 pg. 28

Odyssey #8 pg. 29

Odyssey #8 BC

Arcade Cabinets: Lunar Lander (Atari, 1979)

Lunar Lander Marquee

Lunar Lander Marquee-2

Lunar Lander Screenshot

Lunar Lander Control Panel

Lunar Lander Cab-3

Lunar Lander Side Art

Lunar Lander Side Art-2

Lunar Lander Flyer

Lunar Lander Flyer-2

(Images via eBay, Wikipedia, Stiggy’s Blog, KLOV forums, Pinball Rebel, and The Arcade Flyer Archive)

Disneyland’s Mission to Mars, 1984/1985

MIssion to Mars 1984

MIssion to Mars 1984-2

I wish I could find more shots of the mural. There was a beauty in the Starcade as well.

Before it was Mission to Mars it was Flight to the Moon. Before that it was Rocket to the Moon. Now it’s Redd Rockett’s Pizza Court. Today’s Tomorrowland does not make me excited about the future, although it’s still lots of fun. I went a couple of weeks ago and got to ride the refurbished Star Tours. It makes good use of 3D, and there are a number of different flight scenarios you can end up with (I got Hoth!).

Can I do a whole week of outer space-themed posts? We’ll see.

(Images via ATIS547/Flickr)

Photos of Apollo 16 on TV, 1972

Apollo 16

Apollo 16-2

Apollo 16-3

Apollo 16-4

Apollo 16-5

Apollo 16-7

Apollo 16-6

Not very long ago, we took pictures of our TV screens to preserve images we deemed historical or noteworthy. Film was the only way to do it, and our parents didn’t waste it, because it cost money to buy and develop. All of the photos above look to be of the same TV (Sharp is the model), and they mark the mission from liftoff to post-splashdown.

I wonder how many pictures are taken by Americans today compared to 1972. I saw some kids taking “selfies” yesterday—non-stop, for about 30 minutes.  Half a million times as many? A million? More?

(Photos via eBay)


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