Showing posts with label Reader Top Ten. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reader Top Ten. Show all posts

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Reader Top Ten Greatest Toys of Childhood: SGB


Reader and dear friend SGB presents the blog with the final list of December's Reader Top Ten.  The subject is the top ten greatest toys of your childhood. 

SGB writes:

"For myself, my Christmas Toys growing up in the '70s into the early '80s are memorable for the countless hours of fun:


Number one is the MATTEL SPACE:1999 EAGLE


Number two is the DINKY TOYS SPACE:1999 EAGLE



Number three is the AMSCO SPACE:1999 PLAYSET



Number four is the South Bend Electronic U.S.S. ENTERPRISE -Refit [Star Trek:TMP]



Number five is the MEGO BUCK ROGERS STAR FIGHTER COMMAND CENTER & MEGO BUCK ROGERS STAR FIGHTER 



Number six is the G.I. JOE MOBILE SUPPORT VEHICLE SEARCH FOR THE RADIOACTIVE SATELLITE[with 12" G.I.Joes]



Number seven is the MATTEL BATTLESTAR GALACTICA COLONIAL VIPER


Number eight is the DINKY TOYS THUNDERBIRD 2 & 4 




Number nine is the AMSCO PLANET OF THE APES PLAYSET



Number ten is the LEGOS 365 


I intentionally left model kits off my list because the list instead would have been made up of nine science-fiction model kits plus the Mattel Eagle toy. In the '70s into the '80s I enjoyed every science-fiction model kit that I could because my friends and I loved to build model kits.

My first model that launched my interest was in the mid-'70s with the AMT STAR TREK U.S.S. ENTERPRISE[Original Series]. 


My model kits that were built back then, which I still have all stored in large plastic containers, are from Star Trek TOS, Space:1999, Star Trek:TMP, Buck Rogers In The 25th Century, Battlestar Galactica'78, Black Hole, Star Wars, Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea, 2001:A Space Odyssey, etc.

If a model kit was not being merchandised I would build them from cardboard, e.g., Space Academy's Seeker, Space Academy's Starfire, Planet Of The Apes A.N.S.A. Spaceship, Starlost's Ark, Silent Running's American Airlines Valley Forge, ArkII, Filmation's Flash Gordon's Aerial Navy Imperial Flyer (yellow), Filmation's Flash Gordon's Aerial Navy Royal Imperial Flyer(white), Thunderbirds Tracy Island, UFO's Skydiver, etc. 
 
Even though as a boy in the '70s and early '80s I had no evidence that they existed, back then I still searched for these toys. Albeit, sadly, since they never were made back then so I never found them:

JUPITER 2 and SPACEPOD 
SEAVIEW [Aurora ended production of the kit before I first saw the series in '77. However, I did get the Monogram re-release of the Aurora FLYING SUB model kit in '78.] 
PLANET OF THE APES A.N.S.A. SPACESHIP 
ARK II 
SPACE ACADEMY/STAR COMMAND 
SEEKER [from SPACE ACADEMY/JASON OF STAR COMMAND]
STARFIRE [from SPACE ACADEMY/JASON OF STAR COMMAND]
AERIAL NAVY IMPERIAL FLYER [from FLASH GORDON(1979-1981 Filmation Animated series)]
SKYDIVER [Gerry Anderson's UFO]
TRACY INTERNATIONAL ISLAND & THUNDERBIRDS [Gerry Anderson's THUNDERBIRDS]
 
Well that is all my thoughts regarding my '70s-early'80s boyhood toys, model kits and Christmas.


SGB: The toys on your list are so great -- and so beloved -- I almost don't know where to begin.  

Like you, I am an avid admirer of Space: 1999 and love the Mattel and Dinky Eagles, as well as that Amsco playset. I also love the Apes playset from Amsco, and wish that I still had one!

The South Bend U.S.S. Enterprise I found at a flea market in 2000, still in it's box, and I got it for ten dollars.  I couldn't resist opening it.  The decals are peeling today, but I still have this great ship in my home office.  As we've discussed before, the movie re-fit of the Enterprise is "our" Enterprise -- the starship of the 1970s space kid!

I also can't believe you included the G.I. Joe Mobile HQ in your top, because that was one of my favorite toys as a kid too. My late uncle Glenn gave me his HQ toy, and I took that (giant) vehicle on adventures near and far.  Great memories...

A fantastic list, and I'm so glad you shared it with us.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Reader Top Ten Greatest Toys of Childhood: Roman Martel of Roman's Movie Reviews and Musings


Blogger extraordinaire and friend, Roman Martel, of Roman’s Movie Reviews and Musings, presents his list of top ten toys of his childhood below.

Roman writes:

“Time for another trip down memory lane, and this time with toys! Sounds like a great idea. For me there were pretty much three toy lines I was obsessed with as a kid. I was trying to figure out if I could put them in any order, but it is kinda funny, I went through phases where I focused on one of these more than others. Because of the differing sizes of these, often I didn't have much cross over between them.

When it came to fantasy worlds, it was really hard to beat the Masters of the Universe line of toys. I remember really being into these when they first came out, prior to the cartoon being aired in my neck of the woods. The box art still had that Frank Frazetta look. Not to say I didn't still enjoy it when the cartoon did come around, but I remember it being a bit sillier than the more hard core adventures I dreamed up. 


My favorite vehicle was the Battle Ram. This blue tank-like transport fired red battering rams. And the front detached to become an airborne attack fighter. I loved the odd detail of the horse head on the front and face on the battering ram, and it just looked other worldly. The great thing was, both heros and villains ended up using this sucker in my adventures. And it was fun to fire those battering rams at Castle Greyskull.



Speaking of the castle, my favorite play set was Castle Greyskull. This was just so darn cool, for so many reasons, most already covered by other folks already. I can't tell you how many times that trap door was used. The villains always fell for it.


My favorite figure was Triclops. The mini-comic he came with said he was a deadly hunter whose three different eyes made it impossible to hide from him. I loved this idea, and he quickly become the deadly assassin in my He-man adventures. I also loved the fact that his sword was longer than nearly all the others in the toy line and he held it in one hand! What a bad ass! 

Like most boys my age Transformers was HUGE. Robots in disguise, and how awesome were those disguise. And I loved the toys, the cartoon, the comics, you name it - I was into it. My best friend was a very good artist and he would spend hours drawing his favorite characters. We even caught Transformers: The Movie in theaters. That's how huge it was for us. That said, my favorite transformers came from the original line.


Megatron was too damn cool. He looked like a real gun... A GUN! He had all those attachments, and the telescopic sight became his arm cannon. Unfortunately his arms were flimsy as all hell. So most of my friends had Megatron's with broken arms. I actually didn't get him till much later, when the Transformer craze of the 80s was dying down. My cousin had a whole box of Transformers he gave to me, and Megatron was the prize at the bottom. And I made sure his arms stayed on. 


One of the first Transformers I got was Soundwave. His sleek cobalt blue color was awesome. His "batteries" became his weapons (including a rocket launcher). Best of all his "tapes" turned into a myriad of mini robots all ready to wreak havoc on the autobots. And that digitized cold voice he had in the cartoon was super cool. I remember all my friends trying our best to imitate it. Probably worried our parents there.




But the king of the Transformers was Optimus Prime. Not only was he a full blown semi-truck, but when he transformed, he looked so darn cool. And that trailer would open up into an attack base with spring loaded car. Or take that car out and you could hold a couple of the mini robots in there (like Cliffjumper or Cosmos). I remember how thrilled I was to get him for my birthday and how much I played with him. I ran into him during a move a few years ago and saw how chipped his paint was proof that he had a lot of adventures. 


And then there were the Legos. Specifically the Castle system of the 1980s. I loved these, with their knights, soldiers and bandits. I had the black knight's castle, and I remember coming up with stories for all the little guys it came with. Eventually I got the bandit's hideout and the black castle with the dragon standards. Great stuff. I turned the whole living room into a tiny kingdom of Legos. I even wrote a novella based on a huge battle I played out. My first piece of fan fiction.

But I've got to face facts here, I was a Star Wars fan the longest. Even when Transformers were all the rage (and I was a huge fan) I still loved my Star Wars figures. And even though "Jedi" was my favorite film, I had more toys from "Empire" than any other film. It is so hard to pick a top three, but here we go.



My favorite figure was my 12 inch Boba Fett. The detail in his armor and weapons caught my imagination. He had a rocket pack that fired. He had Wookie scalps! How bad ass is that? You could look through the back of his head and see in Fett vision (which just made everything look kind of blurry). While he was much bigger than the rest of the toys, I still played with him constantly, and his miniature version was always taking on the rebels and the Empire, depending on who he felt like fighting that day. 



My favorite vehicle was the Slave One. For some reason I'd always team up Fett and Bossk and they would fly around in that ship. I loved all the moving parts: the wings, the cannons, the command chair. But it also came with Han Solo in carbonite. That alone made it cool. Because when it came to the movies, Han Solo was my favorite. And anyone who could catch Solo had to be dangerous. So having that reminder of Solo in stasis was kind of like always facing that darkness in the movie. Odd, but I can tell you the freezing of Han really disturbed me as a kid.


My favorite play set was The Death Star hands down. Others have already explored why this was so cool. But I vividly remember getting this toy. My parents got a gift card to a local toy store, enough to purchase a bike (it would be my first bike ever). But they also had a toy section in the back. And back there, they had the mother load of Star Wars toys, all discounted (because GI-Joe and Transformers were the hot toys at that time). And there it was, the Death Star. I'd seen it in those little catalogues that came with Star Wars vehicles and play sets, and I always dreamed of having one. My parents tried hard to point me toward a bike, any bike. But nothing doing. They had the Death Star, unopened, and on sale. It would be mine, oh yes. And once I had it, I got back into Star Wars full bore. 

Honorable mention: the Millennium Falcon and Imperial Attack Base (which had exploding base, and an awesome rotating turret to mow down rebel soldiers.

So there you are, long winded as usual, but it was fun trip down memory lane.”

Roman: I loved reading your list, and totally dig all your choices.  I think I am a few years older than you, so although I always wanted Transformers and He-Man toys, I felt pressure to “grow up” and not buy them.  What a mistake!!!! 

Now Star Wars toys, on the other hand, I was all over!  I also love that Death Star playset (it made my top ten list), and I have one for Joel, which he loves.  That’s just a great toy, and has held up beautifully.

Great list!

Reader Top Ten Greatest Toys of Childhood: Bruce Nims

Reader and friend, Bruce Nims, starts us off this Saturday morning with his list of the top ten greatest toys of his childhood.

Bruce writes:

"As always, it is a pleasure to be speaking with you and another interesting top 10 list.  Here is my top 10 list of toys I played with a boy.  As always, these are in no particular order:



1. Starbird -- Based upon what other readers have submitted this was an extremely popular toy and probably my overall favorite.  Because of a lack of organization between my parents and my uncle, I ended up with 2 of these for Christmas and it was pure heaven.  Once of the most beautiful space ships toys of the era with really interesting sound affects (the engine sound would change pitch as you pointed the nose up or down).  The front part was detachable as were the vertical stabilizers (which were actually small fighter craft.).  You could remove the main engine and attach to the front section and make a much smaller craft.  The detail on the toy was really well done (for example, there were landing rocket vents on the ventral side of the wings).


2. Big Trak  - Programmable futuristic tank with a laser cannon.  What more do you want!  A lot of fun and I spent countless hours to program this thing to navigate throughout my house shooting at imaginary targets.  A lot of fun.



3.Millennium Falcon – An excellent version of one the most interesting looking space ships in movie history.



4.X-wing  -- Who didn't want one of these?  I never understood the light in the nose cone as that was not a weapon.  It would have been much cooler if there was a little LED light at the end of each of the 4 laser cannons, but that was probably asking too much.



5.TIE fighter - Another great toy, but like the Xwing, the LED light made no sense.  There should have been twin LED lights in the front to emulate the twin laser cannons of the actual ship.  J



6.Eagle One -  A lot has been said about this toy by others and I agree with it all.  An amazingly detailed toy.  The thing I like about this more than any other toy on this list is that the proportions and scale seems a lot more realistic.  (The Star Wars toys were obviously squished to fit a certain size package but still work with the figures for instance).  The eagle one and the figures felt just right.  Only downside is that this thing was huge (at least for a small boy).



7.Ramagon – A tinker toys knock off but I preferred these because they allowed for more interesting shapes, looked futuristic and had snap in panels so you could make enclosures.  I really loved these things.



8.Micronauts Rocket Tubes – Another futuristic toy that I just loved and spend many hours playing though truth be told, there really wasn't much you would do with it.  The aircars could go forward or backwards there were not enough track (tube?) sections to have much variety.  Just the whole thing just looked cool as hell and those cars moved pretty damn fast.

  

9. Shogun Warriors Mazinga – A giant robot with a laser sword and a hand that shot rockets (and shot them FAR).  Nothing more needs to be said.  Just awesome
  


10. Super Joe Avenger Pursuit Craft – From what I understand this was supposed to be a spin off from the GI Joe line of toys.  Super Joe was about 8 inches tall, instead of 12 inch tall normal GI Joe figures of the time, which allowed for more interesting vehicles such as this one, the Avenger Pursuit Craft.  I think these toys were only made a couple of years and I don't know if any other vehicles were made.  This was a VTOL designed vehicle (the wing would pivot to allow the engines to point down) that could land on land or sea and had several different modes.  It also had a nice storage compartment in the back to hold all of Super Joe's gear.



11.  Colecovision (yeah, I'm cheating but I really need more than 10 here).  – This was the most powerful game system of its generation by a long short.  The arcade ports where the best ports you could get (in fact, some of the ports were better than the arcade gameplay wise).  It can with Donkey Kong packed it.  It was expandable and one of the expansion modules would let you play Atari 2600 games.  Another of the expansion modules was a true roller ball controller."

Bruce: I love your list, and our lists share at least three items in common (Big Trak, the Eagle, and the Star Bird).  All of your choices are excellent, but I was most thrilled to see that Super Joe plane/vehicle.  I have never seen one of those toys, but as a kid I loved the Super Joe toy line. I had the villain ("The Intruder?") and Joe with his light-up chest pack.  However, I didn't even know that vehicles were made for those figures.  

I also had a dear friend in my home town who had the Colecovision, which -- by the time it came out -- rather significantly outclassed my Atari 2600.  I still remember playing Zaxxon and Donkey Kong on the Colecovision at his house...

I also had the Rocket Tubes. They were a birthday gift from my Aunt Patty and Uncle Bob, and I loved them. I've been wanting to get a set of those for Joel, but I'm always afraid to pull the trigger on E-Bay, because I don't know if the toy will still work once I get it here.  There would be nothing worse than assembling it together, and then finding out that it's non-functional.  We had that happen not too long ago with a Terminator 2 Bio Flesh Regenerator...

Anyway, this is such an awesome list.  We must have had very similar childhoods because I had eight of the eleven toys on your list, and positively played them OUT!

Friday, December 13, 2013

Reader Top Ten Greatest Toys From Childhood: Duanne Walton


My friend, and regular reader Duanne Walton presents a list of one type and brand of toy.  And it’s a great list of one, as you’ll see:

“This isn't a top ten list because there's only one answer for me - and not subject to change. 
 
Star Wars action figures.

I didn't even get into Star Wars when it first came out. My taste in Sci-Fi was very selective. If some unusually large creature didn't cause large amounts of property damage, I had no interest. 



But C-3PO did catch my interest. A golden robot that spoke with an English accent? What a concept! I saw his figure in the store and my folks got him for me. I remember the time I had unsticking his arms and legs so they could move. I was scared I'd break them off! 

Of course I figured he'd need his little buddy to keep him company. And then, I figured I needed the Jawa to keep them both in line. 



At this time, I read the Star Wars Storybook and became hooked. Now I had to have everything! I started collecting in earnest. I got the Death Star for Christmas and moved all my figures in. Of course, I eventually used all the pegs that held the figures in place, so I put everyone where I could. The Death Star became quite crowded. 

I started having my own Star Wars adventures. Of course, they were nowhere near the level of the movies. Mostly, the plots consisted of rescuing someone from Darth Vader, rescuing Han from the Cantina gang (as I dubbed the four aliens) or the bounty hunters. The trash compactor regularly overflowed and the trash monster got loose.


It became clear that I'd never get every toy that Kenner came out with (my parents never ceased to remind me), so I focused on the action figures. I eventually stopped my adventures with them and just focused on collecting them. I got the original collector's cases and two Darth Vader collector's cases and placed them all in them. I occasionally displayed them at the Morris (Illinois) Library, much to the delight of the kids. One guy offered me a lousy fifty dollars for them, and I declined. 

No other action figure line held my interest. But when no new Star Wars figures were in, I'd read the files on the backs of the G.I. Joe figures. That appealed to me: giving them names and backstories. I did end up buying Destro. I only got figures from other lines if the characters appealed to me. 
 
The line finally did run its' course. I collected all of them except for three: the original Snaggletooth (the tall one in the blue suit), Luke as a Stormtrooper (from the first movie, coming out in the last wave of figures), and Yak Face (Who was never released in the U.S.). I put them away, only taking them out for the occasional library display. But I knew they'd be worth a lot. 

Two decades and several hard knocks later found me spending most of the summer of 2005 unemployed. I had to sell my collection sooner than I expected. Most dealers were unprepared to see a nearly complete collection in such good condition - and most were unprepared to buy them. 
 
Finally, a collectibles store in Chicago bought half of them for less than their worth (that's the first thing I was told: you will almost never get what the price guides say they're worth). The rest I sold to a lady at an antique mall. It felt very strange having to sell them, like I was losing a large chunk of my life. I do wonder sometimes where they ended up and if they've been as well cared for as when I had them. 
 
I've only collected two other action figure lines as closely: Batman the Animated Series and Doctor Who. But I'll always remember where it started: not so long ago, in a galaxy not so far away.

Duanne: I loved reading your reminiscences about Star Wars action figures, and how your love for them developed and grew over time.  I suspect that many kids of our generation could tell a love story that is similar in nature. 

I remember in the early days, when not all the playsets were available yet, I had a land speeder, the Cantina Aliens, and a few other figures.  So my “game” became the adventures of Sheriff Snaggletooth and Deputy Hammerhead at Mos Eisley.  It sounds silly, I’m sure, but I loved playing that game, and having Snaggletooth arrest Greedo and Walrus Man (the bad guys).

I’m sorry to hear about the necessity of selling your collection.  I have had spells where I too needed to sell some toys, and as I’ve written before, I intend to divest myself of large chunks of my collection soon, to help save for retirement.

Great memories, Duanne.  I really enjoyed reading this.

Reader Top Ten Greatest Toys of Childhood: Nowhere


A regular reader who goes by the handle “Nowhere” provides us our first reader top ten toys of childhood for this Friday (the 13th!)

Nowhere writes:



1: LEGO - My number one choice and very non-specific. It's the one toy that stayed with me all my childhood and changed with my interests over the years to become just about anything I wanted it to be. LEGO was very basic with relatively few specialized parts when I got my first set (the early, clunky, all-blue Lunar Lander set) but even before the more sophisticated parts started showing up by the 80's we managed to make an amazing amount of things out of those blocks.



2: Dinky - Just Dinky in general as they made an amazing array of great toys. Well built, fairly accurate, they all did something (eg. fire missiles, drop bombs with caps in them, motorized propellers, functional swing-wings and retractable landing gear etc.) Being an aircraft nut I had many planes and helicopters but also had the blue Space 1999 Eagle Transporter and the Starship Enterprise. Always wanted the Klingon D-9 Battlecruiser too but never got one.



3: Corgi -  See Dinky. One that I owned was the Spy Who Loved me submarine Lotus Esprit but I coveted my neighbor's 007 Aston Martin DB-7.


4: Matchbox - I always preferred them over Hot Wheels as they included cars that were fairly unknown in North America as well as a range of aircraft and ships. They played well with Hot Wheels cars and accessories though! 



5: Estes model rockets. Especially once you got your hands on the D size motors! I used to put powdered water colour paint in the parachute compartment so that when the chute ejection charge fired there would be a cloud of red to make the high point easier to see.



6: Kenner large Star Wars vehicles - Already pointed out by others but worth another mention. These toys were really nice. Accurate and well made, all with some active feature. Only ever had Luke's landspeeder and the T-47 snowspeeder myself but a friend owned that awesome Millenium Falcon. The "hovering" feature of the landspeeder (accomplished by springs and tiny wheels) was surprisingly convincing.



7: Kenner small Star Wars vehicles - I still have most of a Millenium Falcon from this series. Die cast and plastic construction. The Y-Wing I had came with a droppable bomb and rotating turret, the X-Wing's foils worked. Much cheaper than the full scale ones so most kids I knew had many more of these little guys.



8: Skydiver action figure. I have not been able to find out who made this but it was a doll a little bit smaller than Barbie/Ken decked out in an Evel Knievelish-looking daredevil jumpsuit and equipped with a big nylon parachute. If you packed the chute up as per the instructions and threw it as high as possible the chute would open and it would descend gently to the ground every time.



9: The original big GI Joe.  I had one with the deep sea diver outfit and "Kung-Fu Grip!" One thing I liked about this era of Joe was that he was not given a particular character or story so you made up all your own when it was time to play. I was in Junior High by the time GI Joe was revived with the smaller figures and the TV show.


10: The little 60mm telescope my Dad owned but seldom used after we moved away from the seaside when I was five. it let me see the Sea Of Tranquility, the phases of Venus, the rings of Saturn, the moons of Jupiter and more despite the shaky tripod.”


Nowhere: I also had a lot of Dinky and Corgi toys as a kid…and I loved them too.  I also like that you included the little Star Wars ships from metal.  I had the small, Die-cast Star Destroyer, and I remember that the under-side docking bay door could slide open.  Inside was a tiny – and I mean tiny -- Blockade Runner.  I loved that toy (and wish I still owned it...).

Tarzan Binge: Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes (1984)

First things first. Director Hugh Hudson's cinematic follow-up to his Oscar-winning  Chariots of Fire  (1981),  Greystoke: The Legen...