Archive Page 138

1980 J.C. Penney Christmas Catalog: Galactic Attack Dome, Buck Rogers Toys, Star Trek Toys, and Star Birds

First things first. On the bottom left of the first page you’ll see a caption, CONSUMER INFORMATION ABOUT ADVENTURE TOYS. The text underneath reads:

The active, imaginative play that adventure toys stimulate provides children with a socially acceptable way of releasing tension. These toys take children into a pretend world and yet help them to express their feelings about the real world and to act out adult roles. It is the child who controls the action with these toys. This helps the child feel less dependent.

Fascinating. How much bloody tension could we have needed to release? It’s like we were all one empty Ding Dong box away from turning into Macaulay Culkin in that movie where he plays crazy evil kid who tries to throw Elijah Wood off a cliff. The line about the pretend world somehow bringing us closer to the real world is bullshit, but it’s sophisticated bullshit. Sure, the pretend worlds of Beethoven and Shakespeare express feelings about the real world, but the Galactic Attack Dome does not, even though it’s bloody fantastic and I’m seriously bitter that I never got a crack at it. The Navarone set is a beauty too, and a Marx classic.

I don’t remember these Buck Rogers Toys, but I watched the trashy series with my dad, who suffered through the silliness for glimpses of Erin Gray in her skin tight spacesuits (yum). The Star Trek stuff looks so antiseptic, doesn’t it? How do you turn such a cerebral show into a line of action toys? I guess that’s why they didn’t last. The Star Birds were spaceships that, like, made noises and stuff. The Retroist talks about them here.

(All images via WishbookWeb. Click to enlarge.)

A Portrait of Young Geeks Playing D&D

Bridgeport, Connecticut, 1985, via bander.bramblegrub.

If you haven’t noticed yet, I’m collecting these shots. Even if you’re not into D&D, I think they say something about the time, about who we were and are.

Space Mountain Theme Music (Original) and Commercial (1977)

Obviously I’ve got a thing for Space Mountain. It opened at Disneyland in 1977, just 2 damn days after Star Wars came out. The Starcade opened on the same day. That’s destiny for you.

The original music was changed in 1996 (listen here) and again when the ride was completely refurbished in 2003 (listen to the current soundtrack here).

Before the remodel, people waiting in line at a certain section could actually look in to the ride area and see, dimly, the rockets whooshing by. It was too dark to make out much more (that made it even more awesome), but I remember an infamous asteroid that shot across the sky occasionally. All the kids would point it out every time it went by. It looked exactly like a giant chocolate chip cookie.

Thanks to SoundsOfDisneyland and SoCalCoaster521 for the videos.

All Denim, All the Time: Billy Hufsey

Sleeveless Jean Jacket

Oh my God. The sleeveless jean jacket worn as a shirt.

(Image via ZTAMS)

Movies We Watched Over and Over Again on Friday and Saturday Nights While the Cool Kids Were Out Partying

All images via www.movieposter.com.

1981 Montgomery Ward Christmas Catalog: Insane Laughing Heads and the Green Weenie

“The Laffun Heads… spit water at you, stick out their tongues, roll their eyes and convulse into about 20 seconds of insane laughter!” That’s not freaky at all. But at least they don’t have hands with which to strangle and/or stab you to death in your sleep. Shogun Warriors, protect me!

“Squeeze the Green Weenie” has got to be the best “toy” ever cataloged: “Eyes will pop and tongue will wag. Sure to be a popular diversion at your next party. The Green Weenie is about 6½ inches long…”

A 12 inch version appeared in 1979, but the divorce rate in the American suburbs instantly tripled, so it was banned by a Moral Majority-led coalition and eventually airdropped en masse over the annual Russian Women’s Bureau Conference.

(Images via the glorious and iconic WishbookWeb. Click to enlarge.)

Mall Shots

These exquisite shots are via Frederick Barr’s Flickr (modern_fred). The last two are particularly spacy and enigmatic. Barr also has a number of absolutely killer sci-fi photosets, including toys in space, kaiju eiga, anderson is go (images from the shows of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson), fantasy worlds of irwin allen (I’m a huge fan of Allen’s stuff, especially Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea), to boldly go—you get the picture. Now go check them out.

Quick Movie Reviews: Masters of the Universe (1987)

MOTU Poster

MOTU Poster-2

MOTU Poster-3

I thought Masters of the Universe would be lame enough to be kind of fun, and I was almost right. It has a distinctly Howard the Duck flavor, meaning that it was doomed from the beginning to be an epic flop.

First of all, the cartoon ran from ’83 to ’85, and the movie didn’t come out until ’87, so most of the kids who liked the cartoon had moved on to something that wasn’t about a pink-shirted prince who, when thrusting his “power sword” in the air and chanting “I have the power,” turned into a half naked he-man who rode a tiger. Second, the movie has almost nothing to do with the cartoon. Third, despite a relatively big budget ($22,000,000; Aliens was made for $18,500,000) that went primarily towards some cool sets by Moebius and some passable effects, Masters of the Universe is unwaveringly asinine.

Frank Langella as Skeletor is really the only high point, although Dolph Lundgren’s hair is pretty awesome. Courteney Cox has zero charisma (sinus supremus!) in her first feature film role, and it took me the entire movie to figure out that her love interest, played by Robert Duncan McNeill, was Tom Paris in Star Trek: Voyager.

(Poster images via movieposter.com and Sci-Fi Movie Posters)

Puente Hills Mall Photos, 1975 – 1992

Bibliop/Flickr

The Puente Hills Mall opened in 1974. This photo is from ’75. You can just see a Bob’s Big Boy on the upper right. The mall parking lot was used for the exterior shots of Twin Pines Mall in Back to the Future (1985).

Metro Transportation Library and Archive/Flickr

Bus token promotion, February 25, 1984.

Metro Transportation Library and Archive/Flickr

A wider shot of the same scene. I count 3 shoe stores (Florsheim is behind the tree).

retenir-/Flickr

The Puente Hills Theater AMC 6, 1992. The 6 (and the 4, not shown) was a mecca for ’80s kids and teenagers. The colors of the marquees are burned into my memory.

Space Mountain Concept Art

videocrab/Flickr

starberryshyne/Flickr

starberryshyne/Flickr

starberryshyne/Flickr

videocrab/Flickr


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