Archive for the 'Christmas Morning' Category



Christmas Morning, 1979: Playskool’s Star Rider

Star Rider 1979

The Star Rider is the only toy I know of that tries to simulate the experience of flying a spaceship. It was pricey (about $50) and, from what I can tell, was only produced in ’79 and ’80. This 1983 article describes the Star Rider as “a young child’s riding toy now being marketed by Playskool,” but it sounds like a mistake to me. There’s nothing in the catalogs after 1980. A very rare find today.

That’s Kenner’s Imperial Troop Transporter to the right of the Falcon.

(Photo via Jack Mayfield/Flickr)

Christmas Morning, 1980: Lego Space and The Green Machine

Christmas Lego 1980

That’s the Galaxy Explorer, the centerpiece of the 1979 Lego Space line. (For stacks of Lego Space in a toy store in 1981, go here.)

Marx Toys released the Big Wheel in 1969 and the Green Machine—“a racer for guys who like a ride that’s really fast…“—in 1976. Damn thing was the Corvette of racing trikes.

JC Penney Catalog 1976

JCPenney Christmas Catalog, 1976

I’m assuming the dog on the left is a Christmas present, and the dog on the right isn’t.

(Images via j_t_d/Flickr and Wishbook)

Christmas Morning, 1981: Opening the AT-AT

Christmas AT-AT 1981

Christmas AT-AT 1981-2

Damn you, Benjamin Oderwald and Shuffle/Repeat!

(Note big brother’s Hulk socks in the second photo. What’s on his pajamas? It’s driving me nuts.)

Christmas Morning, Circa 1981: Home Video of Kid Opening Atari 2600

Kid: “Asteroids! Atari Asteroids! Except… Dad, dad, we don’t have Atari.”

Mom: “What’s Atari?”

So classic.

(Technically, it’s not a 2600. It’s an Atari Video Computer System. Relax, nerds.)

(Via The GeoffMan/YouTube)

Christmas Morning, 1978: Assembling the Millennium Falcon

Christmas Star Wars 1978

One of the best living room decor shots I’ve seen. There’s more Star Wars on the far left, just in front of the coffee table. I think one of the boxes is the 12″ C-3PO figure. (It’s actually the MPC C-3PO model kit. Thanks, Retro Art Blog!)

The kid in the photo is Scott Tipton, comics writer and co-creator of Blastoff Comics. He says:

I can’t remember a Christmas growing up when there wasn’t exactly what I wanted either under the Christmas tree or arriving as a surprise on Christmas morning. And half the time, I hadn’t even asked for it — my parents just knew. This was the thing I would want. The Mego Batman Wayne Foundation? The Star Wars Millennium Falcon? ROM the Spaceknight? There they were.

And looking back now as a grown man with bills and responsibilities of my own, I can even more than ever appreciate what that meant. We were a working-class family, no question about it. My father drove a truck for a living, and my mother worked at the school cafeteria. Some of these gifts must have meant skipped lunches for my father and careful tightening of the purse-strings by my mother. And yet every year, Christmas was an absolute joy, and not just for the presents under the tree. My parents always treated Christmas as something special — to go back to the Dickens, we “were happy, grateful, pleased with one another, and contented with the time.”

That hits me in the feelers. Scott goes on to ask everyone who can to donate to Toys for Tots, “Because every kid should have a Batmobile under the tree if they want one.” Hard to argue with that.

I didn’t forget about the giant Bat Away box. Here’s the commercial. (Stick around for the hilarious Zips shoes commercial that comes next.)

Christmas Morning, 1980: Matchbox’s Spider-Man Race and Chase, LJN’s `Computer Command’ Corvette

Christmas Spidey 1980

The kid is really stoked about his Spider-Man Race and Chase set, part of Matchbox’s Speedtrack/Powertrack line. Here it is set up and ready to go. Photo is via the comprehensive Powertrack blog.

Spiderman Race and Chase

In the photos below, from the same blog, Spidey and the Hulk (the Green Guy had his own set) promote their products at the New York Toy Fair in the late ’70s. Pat Dennis, the designer and developer of Matchbox’s new racing system, lends a hand with the technical details.

Toy Fair 1977-1978

Toy Fair 1977-1978-2

Toy Fair 1977-1978-3

In the next photo, we’re joined by another happy kid, and a happy (but tired) dad. I love that the first kid’s expression hasn’t changed. The Christmas morning photos come from Melissa Wilkins/Flickr.

Christmas Spidey 1980-2

There’s an Empire Strikes Back figure on the couch, a Microscope Lab Set, Mouse Trap, and LJN’s programmable (like the Big Trak) 255 Computer Command Corvette. I remembered it when I saw the box.

LJN Corvette 1980

LJN Corvette 1980-2

Christmas Morning, 1978: Home Video of Kids Opening Star Wars Toys

 

Pure gold. You will not believe it. I emitted an audible gasp at 0:45.

(Via Konas2002/YouTube)

Christmas Morning, 1978: Shogun Warriors

Christmas Shogun 1978

Let’s kick off the Christmas season with some giant, exceedingly dangerous robot toys, shall we? John Reese—snug in his Snoopy shirt, maroon cords, and Adidas casuals—is showing off Great Mazinga. Lots of orange shag carpeting. Lots of wood. Bucolic painting hanging over the floral print couch. Possibly an urn filled with somebody’s ashes next to the lamp.

Christmas Shogun 1978-2

Next: Raydeen. From Shamus Young, who writes the blog Twenty Sided:

On the left is Pat, who got the Shogun that launches a big plastic fist. I got the one that shoots missiles out of his hand. When I say ‘missiles’, I’m not talking about a blinky light, or a sound effect, or a bit of missile-shaped foam. I’m talking about real, pointy bits of plastic that can be aimed at the eyeballs of children for fun and excitement. Good times.

Speaking of missiles, one of them appears to be missing. Better check the dog!

Christmas Shogun 1978-3

Here Dragun and Mazinga guard Darren Bryant, who’s captaining the forces of good from his inflatable Six Million Dollar Man Mission Control Center. In the background, Commissioner Gordon reaches for the Batphone.

Check out a 1976 – 1978 Shogun Warriors commercial here.

* * *

I’ve got a couple of pretty incredible Christmas morning submissions already. Feel free to send yours to 2warpstoneptune@gmail.com.

The countdown is on…

Christmas Morning, 1980: The Empire Strikes Back

Christmas Morning Star Wars

Christmas Morning Star Wars-2

Christmas Morning Star Wars-3

Christmas Morning Star Wars-4

Would you let your parents dress you up in these atrocious outfits if you knew loot like this waited beneath the tree? Yes. Yes you would.

In the first shot, unboxed, we’ve got two Tauntauns (Solid Belly), the Falcon, Darth Vader’s Star Destroyer, and a Darth Vader Collector’s Case. Among the heap of boxes behind the kids, I see the Snowspeeder, the Twin Pod Cloud Car (I think that’s a second one on the far left), and the Cloud City Playset (a Sears exclusive). Only one of the toys is from the original Star Wars line: Darth Vader’s TIE Fighter. You can see it better in the third photo.

Our furniture looked like this. We had those TV trays. My dad had those moccasins.

Christmas Morning, 1978: Everything! (Part One)

Mikey Christmas 1978

Are you serious? There’s an entire layer of toys that’s covered by other toys!

The Spider-Man comic on the right, underneath the Death Star, is Peter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man #27, a Bronze Age key. It marks the first time Frank Miller drew Daredevil.

The ship on the left, above the Radio-Control Racer, is a Star Bird Avenger. Right next to it is the Star Bird Command Base, seen below via John Kenneth Muir.

Star Bird Command Base

The red box under the tree is Tin Can Alley, a shooting game from Ideal. The rifle emitted a light pulse that, if aimed correctly, would knock over the cans on the “range.”

(First image via WEBmikey/Flickr)

(Video via tvdays/YouTube)


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