I
first featured the Amsco Cardboard Adventure Sets of the 1970s here on my blog
way back on September 29, 2005. But,
every now and then -- especially if the toy is Space: 1999 related -- I enjoy
hauling out a collectible a second time.
So
today, I’m once again featuring the Space: 1999 Cardboard Adventure Playset,
with some new photographs I just snapped.
A little background: In
the early-to-mid 1970s, Amsco and Milton Bradley cooperated to produce four cardboard
play-sets (for Marvel Comics, Planet of the Apes, The Waltons
and Space:1999
). These giant Amsco dioramas were packaged in large, attractive and colorful
rectangular boxes, were produced from "durable" cardboard, and were advertised
as "fun to assemble,"
The kit you see pictured comes from Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's outer space epic, Space:1999 (1975 -1977) and is a diorama of the lunar installation, Moonbase Alpha.
The kit you see pictured comes from Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's outer space epic, Space:1999 (1975 -1977) and is a diorama of the lunar installation, Moonbase Alpha.
As you can see, there's
a landing pad, a cross-section of Moonbase Alpha's interior, including Main
Mission Tower, a yellow moon-buggy, and plenty of cardboard representations of
characters and aliens. Also, the set comes
with two Eagle spacecraft and two nuclear charges, the latter for detonating asteroids.
The heroes in the Space:1999 set are made in the likenesses of Martin Landau's Commander John Koenig, Barbara Bain's Helena Russell, Barry Morse's Professor Victor Bergman and even Clifton Jones' David Kano. Unfortunately, the set was produced pre-Maya, so there's no Catherine Schell figure here.
One thing I enjoy about
this particular set is that some effort was made towards accuracy in terms of the figure personalities (if not the Moonbase interiors). For instance, three cardboard
figures in the Space:1999 set are aliens directly from Year One episodes.
Peter Cushing's Raan, from
"Missing Link" is here with his daughter, Vanna. The popular and
horrifying octopus-like monster from "Dragon's Domain" is featured as well (with a puddle of drool/goo...). Even the scorched Zoref (Ian McShane)
from the episode, "Force of Life" is included in the set.
The
Alphan figures can inhabit the base, and even ride a working elevator from one level
to the next. One door in the interior
leads right out to the docking port, where the docked Eagle is stationed. One figure
is a blond astronaut, who I insist is actually Captain Alan Carter (Nick Tate), although
his hair isn’t quite right.
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