Friday, August 31, 2007

Toy OTD: MINDstyle, Frank Cho Monkey Boy Vinyl Figure: NYCC Exclusive

Here's a terrific piece from one of the best figure-makers out there, MINDstyle. I've been very impressed with the level of quality of everything they do - if I don't want to buy it, it's usually a taste issue with the designer - and that's really rare, too!

This sculpt utterly nails Cho's drawing style, and it's a nice, solid, sag-resistant pose. The paint apps are really tight, and I like the color scheme a lot. If these colors are too loud for you, there's at least three other colorways, so you've got options.

This figure was exclusive to the New York Comic-Con earlier in the year, and I got mine for about $60. It might be a little trickier (or pricier) to get now. There's one for sale on eBay.ie for £74.99 (or about $150 USD).

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Thursday, August 30, 2007

Warm, Fuzzy Nostalgia Or Ungodly Crap? You Decide

As you may have seen on my Flickr page, I just found a treasure trove/trash pile of old Hanna-Barbera kiddie LPs (both sleeve scans and uploadable mp3s) at the Children's Records and More blog.

None of them are all that good, but I only had two of these records as a kid, and I was always curious to hear to the others. The neat thing about them is that they use real H-B voice talent (except Alan Reed and Mel Blanc), music and sound effects! Plus the sleeve art is pretty cool. Check 'em out!

Thanks to Men-oo-she-a for the tip-off!

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Toy OTD: Electric Tiki Betty Boop Figurine

Electric Tiki is wonderful at making maquettes of pop culture icons, but this one is exceptional! It's a great sculpt - tightly on-model but very appealing and in character.

The paint work - especially around the eyes, traditionally a problem area for toymakers - is superb! The base is on-theme, and has no visible labeling on it to identify the character (a touch I love). It's not all that big (just 5" tall), so it won't gobble up much shelf space.

Several versions were made - full-color paint jobs with red, black, and plum dresses; and (pictured) a monochrome variant. They both look sweet, but after seeing Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, I knew I had to get the black & white one!

You can pick up a figurine just like this one for $43.99 + shipping at dinstoys.com.

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Wednesday, August 29, 2007

About Fucking Time Dept, Part 2

VARIETY: Lucas taps Ridley to write 'Tails'
Filmmaker exec producing WWII movie
By MICHAEL FLEMING - Posted: Mon., Aug. 27, 2007, 8:00pm PT

George Lucas has hired John Ridley to write "Red Tails," a WWII action adventure about the Tuskegee Airmen based on a story by Lucas, who is financing development through his Lucasfilm production company and exec producing.

Pic charts a group of young pilots as they overcame racism to form the Tuskegee Airmen, a distinguished group of fliers who broke the aviation color barrier to become the first African-American fighter pilots in U.S. military history.

Lucas, who has been busy with the fourth installment of "Indiana Jones," has long had a passion for the Tuskegee Airmen, whose planes were distinguished by the red-painted tails that give the film its title.

He hired Ridley after reading "L.A. Riots," the Universal/Imagine drama Ridley just turned in to director Spike Lee. Ridley's just getting off the ground on "Red Tails" after meeting with the surviving pilots at a convention in Texas.

Rick McCallum and Charles Floyd Johnson are producing.

"These were guys who had to figure everything out for themselves, because military units were completely segregated at the time and there was no seasoned war pilot to teach them," Ridley said. "President Roosevelt formed the unit as a publicity stunt because he wanted the black vote for his re-election campaign, but these guys were such skilled pilots that they ended up becoming true heroes by escorting bombers in North Africa and Italy."

Ridley added: "ILM will make the fight sequences come alive, and make you feel what it must have been like to be 19 and flying in a fighter plane."

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I've been hearing about this film for well over ten years - probably closer to twenty. This is definitely a Lucasfilm project that I'd really like to see! Something other than "Star Wars" - awesome!

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Toy OTD: Jidousports PVC Figures

The dog Jidou is the lead character in a sports-themed animated series. It appears from the studio website that they have a television, internet, and merchandising presence; and that the series has aired in various formats in Asia. Whatever. What counts is that he's super-cute!

There's a bunch of figures available depicting Jidou and his friends playing various and sundry sports. As usual, these little guys have great sculpts and nice, tight paint work.

I can't recall how I got a hold of these toys; I thought I ordered them online from the company, but they don't seem to be available that way any longer. When I bought them, they were about $8 or $9 + shipping each. I think eBay is going to be your main hope on this one!

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Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Sequel OTD: Not Surprisingly, 'Rock' Part Of 'Mountain'

VARIETY: The Rock set for 'Witch Mountain'
Actor to star in Disney followup
By MICHAEL FLEMING - Posted: Tue., Aug. 28, 2007, 10:22am PT

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson will star in “Witch Mountain” for Walt Disney Pictures. Andy Fickman is directing, and the studio will begin production in March.

Johnson, who just teamed with Fickman in the Disney family comedy “The Game Plan,” is in negotiations to play a Las Vegas cab driver who picks up a pair of siblings with magical powers. Plot advances the storyline from the original “Escape to Witch Mountain,” which Disney released in 1975.

Andrew Gunn produces through his Gunn Films shingle, and Ann Marie Sanderlin is exec producer. Matt Lopez wrote the most recent draft.

Johnson, who most recently starred in the drama “Gridiron Gang,” stars next summer alongside Steve Carell and Anne Hathaway in “Get Smart” for Warner Bros. He’s repped by UTA.

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Remake OTD: The Illustrated Man

VARIETY: Zack Snyder to direct 'Illustrated'
Filmmaker also producing redo for Warners By DIANE GARRETT - Posted: Tue., Aug. 28, 2007, 5:32pm PT

Warner Bros. has tattooed Zack Snyder's name on its redo of "The Illustrated Man."

The helmer, busy prepping "Watchmen" for the studio, is attached to direct and produce the remake based on Ray Bradbury's collection of short stories by the same name. "Watchmen" scribe Alex Tse will tackle the screenplay.

The collection, first published in 1951, is narrated by a mysterious man with living tattoos that predict the future. Rod Steiger starred in the title role for the 1969 bigscreen adaptation, distributed by Warner Bros.-Seven Arts; Claire Bloom co-starred.

Di Novi Pictures and Snyder's shingle, Cruel and Unusual Films, are producing the remake. Denise Di Novi, and Deborah Snyder, the helmer's wife and producing partner, are also producing, along with Frank Darabont. Cruel and Unusual's Wesley Coller and Di Novi's Alison Greenspan are exec producing.

Snyder and his wife signed a first-look deal with the studio in the wake of his success with "300" (Daily Variety, Jan. 30). They are producing "Illustrated Man" through Cruel and Unusual.

Di Novi's shingle has produced numerous films at the studio under its production deal, including "Nights in Rodanthe."

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Toy OTD: Schylling Reproduction Flash Gordon Rocket Fighter (2004)

I've never been a purist in terms of original toys vs. "repros" - if it's well-made, I'll happily buy a reproduction (of course, it helps if the value of the original is in the ionosphere). Still, this sparking friction toy is a great example of how good a replica can be!

It's huge - 12" long - and looks a great deal like the real thing (I can't be the best judge, as I've never seen the original toy in person). It sparks and rolls around like the real thing, and the colorful artwork's terrific! It's great to be able to own one without having to shell out thousands of dollars.

Indeed - you can still buy one at robotisland.com for $16.95 + shipping!

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Arizona Beaver

My friend Craig sent me a cute picture of "Happy Beaver" in the wilds of Arizona. Feel free to send along any pictures you have of your beaver's travels!

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Monday, August 27, 2007

Toy OTD: FUNimation Dragonball Z Figure Set: Boss Rabbit & Goku (2002)

These are the best Dragonball toys that I've seen to date - really terrific sculpts and paintwork! They capture the flavor of the original artwork very well. If I remember correctly, three two-figure sets were released - I bought two of the line at Toys 'R' Us originally.

As you might imagine, Boss Rabbit doesn't have a lot of articulation, but Goku has a good amount of poseable joints. I could imagine that some fans might want more, since Goku is such an active character, but I think it's a good compromise between poseability and preserving the sculpt.

You can still get this set for a very good price - thecardkid.com has it for $9.99 + shipping.

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Another New Flickr Group!

I noticed that there wasn't a Hanna-Barbera photo group on the Flickr site, which seemed odd. You'd think it's a general enough topic that someone would've set one up before today. Maybe it's too general, and most folks pick a specific show to feature. Who knows?

Anyhow, as you can see by the link above, I started one! Feel free to join and post lots of images of anything H-B!

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Dutch Beaver

These are fun, even if I do get way too carried away with them!

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Sunday, August 26, 2007

Toy OTD: '60s Ideal Peter Potamus Doll

This is a really nice vintage doll I found on eBay a while back. It's unusual that a plush can stand on its own, so it gets big points just for that (I think there's a bendable frame within the stuffing)! It's still cuddly, and quite well made - the designers made the head out of plastic so that material could do the heavy design lifting. Nice colors and simple details - the leg wrinkles even work for the character! Good proportions, too.

I think this toy cost around $60.00 or so. There's one for sale at gasolinealleyantiques.com for $79.50 + shipping, but it's not in very good shape. I see the phrases rare! and hard to find! thrown about by dealers so often, I never really know when to believe it.

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Saturday, August 25, 2007

A Well-Groomed Beaver

I sold three more toys last night, so I'm thanking everyone with a drawing! I've got some more roughs planned out, so there'll be even more beaver fun in the days to come...

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Toy OTD: Mezco Animal House Figure: Kent 'Flounder' Dorfman (2003)

This figure is one one of my favorite examples of Mezco's caricatured sculpts. The likeness is good, and it's an appealing, funny sculpt using simpler shapes. The paint work is great, though there's not a lot of articulation (seldom a problem with me). Maybe his chubbiness could've been pushed more, but otherwise very cool.

I saw these figures in stores for quite a while, so I'm assuming they didn't sell all that well - that might explain why I'm not seeing more toys in this caricatured direction from Mezco. I was hoping that the Goonies figures would be made this way, but their designs and sculpts are noticeably more restrained, so I'm assuming consumers didn't generally embrace this approach. It's a shame, because there aren't many other toy lines doing it.

You should be able to get this toy for a good price - there's one for sale at figurerealm.com for $14.95 + shipping, and I'll bet you can find an even better deal if you dig about a bit, or set up a search on eBay.

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Friday, August 24, 2007

Toy OTD: Fisher-Price #464 - Gran'pa Frog (1958)

I love this era of Fisher-price toys - made with simple wooden shapes, but the paper labelling is well drawn and tastefully rendered in a storybook style. Plastic parts are just starting to creep into the equation, but it's only used for the parts that would be too fragile if they were made of wood. And of course, the noise-maker is totally analog - serrated wheels, offset axles and a paper and wood resonator make an appealing 'croaking' sound when the toy is pulled.

Your best bet to find one of these is either at a toy show, or on eBay (that's where I've scored most of my F-P collection). Make sure to ask a lot of questions before you bid - a lot of people sell 'display pieces' that won't roll or move properly, or have a broken noisemaker. Sometimes the item descriptions don't exactly lie - but they're not always very forthcoming, either.

Here's an auction for a reproduction
that's starting at $9.99 + $8.45 postage. I haven't seen this one up close, so I can't say if it's inferior to the original toy. Sometimes I buy repros if the originals are prohibitively expensive - be warned, when you start getting into '50s F-P toys (and older), things get pricey.

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"Happy Beaver": Now Shipping To Australia!

That's right, a new PayPal button sets up the potential for plenty of Bruce and Sheila Beavers! Shipping to Australia is now a reality, so get yours today!

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Thursday, August 23, 2007

That Sticky Stuff At The Bottom Of Your Toy Box Will Probably Be A Movie Soon

VARIETY: Hollywood's toy ploy
He-Man, Voltron, Bratz slated for adaptation
By MARC GRASER - Posted: Fri., Jun. 8, 2007, 5:27pm PT

In this summer's "Transformers," a truckload of Furby dolls gets blown sky-high by one of the film's giant robots.

It's meant as a sight gag, set up by toymaker Hasbro, which introduced the chatty little creatures, as well as the Transformers line, to the masses.

But Hollywood is hardly treating toys as a joke these days.

The next few years will see everything from He-Man to G.I. Joe to possibly Monopoly show up on the bigscreen. As the film biz runs out of original ideas, nothing, it seems, is too much of a stretch.

In the last two decades, Hollywood has gone through several crazes: U.S. adaptations of French comedies, remakes of vintage pics, film versions of old TV series, and adaptations of videogames and comicbooks. Now studios and high-profile producers are buying up rights to dolls, action figures and games, hoping their lasting popularity can prop up the next studio tentpoles.

As the thinking goes, the instant recognition of popular toys can only help an opening weekend. But everyone involved is also nervous. Studios are banking millions on just a brand name, while toymakers are risking their crown jewels to work in an entirely new format, knowing that a bomb can cut into their sales.

Toy sensations of the 1980s such as He-Man and Voltron are aiming to tap into a wave of nostalgia for the Reagan decade. The generation who grew up with these toys are now in positions of power in Hollywood, and the hope is that that same age-group, a key moviegoing demo, will embrace the bigscreen adaptations.

Given the success of the recent "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" movie ($91.3 million worldwide) and the buzz around "Transformers," there are high hopes for producers and studios.

Consider some projects in development:

* Warner Bros. is mulling a CGI-animated film version of "Thundercats," produced by Paula Weinstein ("Blood Diamond"), about a group of feline-looking warriors who have names like Lion-O, Panthro and Tygra.

* Warners and Joel Silver recently announced plans to make Mattel's "He-Man and the Masters of the Universe" as a live-action feature in the vein of "300." (The toy character, loosely modeled on "Conan the Barbarian," was first turned into a film in 1987.)

* Paramount has "G.I. Joe" in the works with producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura (who's also behind "Transformers"). The Hasbro character was spun off as "Action Man" outside the U.S., and the film would team up both characters.

* For girls, there's the "Bratz" movie that Lionsgate will release in August, and "Kit Kittredge: An American Girl Mystery," from HBO Films and Picturehouse, starring Abigail Breslin. The latter's based on Mattel's American Girl dolls.

* Avi Arad, who is producing "Bratz," is also behind a live-action movie version of the black-and-white animatronic robot "Robosapien," from Wow Wee Ltd. A former toy designer, Arad will also create a new robot that will appear in the film and on store shelves. Crystal Sky Pictures is producing.

* Mark Gordon has his own giant robot movie with "Voltron" that Justin Marks ("He-Man") is penning.

The toys worked because they weren't just things to play with. They were big businesses, backed by Saturday morning cartoons and comicbooks that generated interest around the properties and were essentially commercials to drive sales, much to the dismay of children's television advocates.

As a result, the toys became popular consumer brands. Brands that are now turning companies like Hasbro and Mattel into the next Marvel -- at least, that's the hope of William Morris.

After snagging the toymaker away from CAA as a client (WMA reps director Michael Bay, producer Tom DeSanto and General Motors, whose vehicles play many of the robots), the agency last week announced plans to turn the toymaker's more popular products, including Candy Land, Clue and Trivial Pursuit into movies and TV shows with its roster of talent attached.

For example, it envisions the company's Ouija board as the basis of a horror movie, and has even tossed around the idea of a Monopoly movie helmed by Ridley Scott.

With production and marketing budgets escalating, studios are looking for all the help they can get to open their pics. One solution is established brands. DreamWorks and Par's "Transformers" essentially sells itself (to kids and adults who grew up with the property) just based on the toy's name and awareness.

Hasbro has released an entirely new "Transformers" toy line around the release of the film, flooding stores like Wal-Mart, Target and Toys R Us with redesigns of its robot characters based on what's seen on the bigscreen. And it's covering all the bases: There's even a Mr. Potato Head Transformer.

For the toymakers, a hit movie could significantly boost sales. Conversely, if any of these adaptations stumble, toy sales could seriously be hurt; franchises are still considered fragile enough among fickle kids to take a tumble. Toy companies are clearly risking their biggest moneymakers on movies just to make more coin.

"They need to be very selective in who they do business with," warns producer Tom DeSanto, behind DreamWorks and Paramount's "Transformers," and exec producer of the first two "X-Men" films. "They need to get people who understand the property. This is their livelihood. If it bombs, it will damage the value of their bread and butter."

The box office is littered with failed vidgame or comicbook pics. The same could certainly happen with toy-based films. Past efforts, like a 1985 film version of the boardgame "Clue," flopped.

To try to prevent that from happening, Hasbro certainly kept a close eye on "Transformers" throughout the filmmaking, with Hasbro chief operating officer Brian Goldner serving as executive producer.

"We wanted to be very involved," Goldner says. "These are our brands. They have great meaning for us as a company and have stood the test of time. It's about igniting the passion of the fans as well as new generations of kids and collectors, for our brands are really beloved and played with the world over."

Goldner worked closely with Michael Bay, exec producer Steven Spielberg and DreamWorks on all aspects of the film's creative development, marketing and promotions, and is managing merchandising in conjunction with the release of the film.

"We think there is a tremendous upside in the movie, and taking the brand to the next level and exposing the idea behind Transformers, which is the 'more than meets the eye' concept to a new generation of adults and kids," Goldner says. "It celebrates what they were at the very core."

If it didn't, it could have been a situation like Mattel and "He-Man." The company has long held off on another "He-Man" movie after the '87 live-action version, starring Dolph Lundgren, wound up too campy. For example, Mattel nixed John Woo's plans for a redo.

While toy marketers continue to produce animated series and direct-to-DVD movies for everything from Barbie and Strawberry Shortcake to Rainbow Brite and Care Bears (Fox will release a new animated film in theaters later this year), the companies have mostly been cautious about doing anything bigger.

Producers say companies like Hasbro and Mattel protect their properties like gold, as they should, but that zeal makes them increasingly more difficult to deal with.

One runaway hit, however, could easily loosen their grip.

"The studios need to bring people on board who might not be on some writers list or directors list that makes the studio feel comfortable, but understands the spirit of why these stories work," DeSanto says.

In other words, it takes a lot of passion toward these playthings. Those involved see them as much more than toys; they see them as, well, almost human.

DeSanto is one of those people: He owns more than 30,000 comic books. So is Arad, who put Marvel's comicbook characters like Spider-Man, the Incredible Hulk, the X-Men and the Fantastic Four in movie theaters. He's now turning his attention back to the toy biz.

"The toy industry is my first love," he said when announcing the Robosapien project. "Robosapien has intrigued me since he was introduced. He has all the right elements to make a family feature film, with the ability to touch people on an emotional level."

While studios are aggressively snatching up rights to toys, they haven't been quick to greenlight the film versions. Until recently, it's been tough for execs (other than junior execs or assistants) to see '80s toy icons as anything more than something sold on eBay.

"It wasn't their generation," says DeSanto, who had a tough time setting up "Transformers" at a studio. "The decisionmakers have had a hard time wrapping their heads around it," just as they have with videogame adaptations and some comicbooks.

One major reason is obvious: There's not much to adapt. These are toys, not toy stories.

Mattel first set up a "Hot Wheels" movie at Sony in 2003, with McG once attached to direct. That project has since broken down. It just proved too difficult a project to adapt. (Maybe it was the orange track.)

"There are a lot of properties that don't resonate today," DeSanto says. "The key really is finding out what the story is and if people still care about those characters. If they don't, Hollywood will go down the road making a lot of movies that don't speak to anyone other than the people that grew up with the cartoon or the toy. If you don't do them right, you will have a giant bonfire of money burning in front of the studio."

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I don't even remember seeing the Furby gag. Did you?

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Beavers Of The World - Uh, Disperse!

International orders are finally available for the "Happy Beaver" toy! I've gotten toy order requests from Canada, England and France, so now each has its own PayPal ordering button. Let me know if you live outside of these areas and want to order - I'll set up a new button as soon as I can!

UPDATE: I just got a request from Australia - time for a new button!

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Uncomfortable Resemblance OTD: Fisher Price's Professor Darkness, Photon & Neutron

Toy OTD: Presspop Gallery, Archer Prewitt's Adaptation Figures

This has got to be one of the least intuitive toy ideas ever - who would make vinyl figures of the Kaufman brothers (both played by Nicholas Cage) in Adaptation? Who (besides me) would buy them? It's like an outtake from the end of Waiting For Guffman, except that it's real!

Archer Prewitt (the creator of Sof'Boy) designed the caricatures, and they're terrific. The sculpts, color choices and paint work are all really good, too. Prewitt also did the box art, which looks great (sadly, I recycled mine). There's not much for articulation here - just three points each, but it's really not about that - the joke doesn't get funnier if you could pose them better!

You can still buy this Cage-endorsed set at designertoystore.co.uk for $49.68 USD + shipping.

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Picture OTD

Soundtrack Nerd Trivia

Here's an alternate version of the Enterprise cue from Jerry Goldsmith's Star Trek - The Motion Picture score. Julliarddropout fills us in on the cue's background:

"This was rejected by Wise because he thought the Enterprise needed a theme; which was something Jerry hadn't considered: so Goldsmith went back to the drawing board. Interestingly, the people who heard this cue in post all thought it sounded like a 'great big open prairie'. Trekkies will point-out that Sam Peeples once called 'Star Trek' a '
'Wagon Train to the Stars' (a comment stolen by Roddenberry at a dinner party); so the music, though discarded, is very appropriate."

Remake/Sequel/Re-Imagining/Fool's Errand OTD: The Wizard Of Oz

VARIETY: Warners, McFarlane return to 'Oz'
Olson to write revisionist take on Baum books
By MICHAEL FLEMING - Posted: Tue., Aug. 21, 2007, 8:00pm PT

Todd McFarlane will bring his own take on 'The Wizard of Oz' to the bigscreen.
Warner Bros. and Village Roadshow Pictures are teaming on "Oz," a revisionist take on the L. Frank Baum books that hatched "The Wizard of Oz."

Project was acquired based on an idea by Todd McFarlane that was fleshed out and pitched by Josh Olson ("A History of Violence").

Olson will write and McFarlane will produce with Thunder Road’s Basil Iwanyk. Rick Benattar ("Shoot ’Em Up") is exec producer.

Conversations with McFarlane and Olson make it clear that they are still working out the tone of the film. They have plenty to work with. WB has owned the rights to the original "The Wizard of Oz" since buying Ted Turner’s empire, whose assets included the film and other plum titles in the MGM library. There are also 15 novels in the Oz series written by Baum, most in the public domain.

McFarlane has a vision of Oz that is a dark, edgy and muscular PG-13, without a singing Munchkin in sight. That was clear with a toy line he launched several years ago that featured a buxom Dorothy and Toto reimagined as an oversized snarling warthog. Olson has something a little tamer, and PG, in mind.

"I saw those toys, and Dorothy as some bondage queen isn’t something I want to do," Olson told Daily Variety. "The appealing thing about the Baum books to me is how wildly imaginative they are. There are crazy characters from amazing places. I want this to be ‘Harry Potter’ dark, not ‘Seven’ dark."

Both McFarlane and Olson are on the same page when it comes to the promise of marrying the Baum story with benefits of visual effects advancements.

"My pitch was ‘How do we get people who went to ‘Lord of the Rings’ to embrace this?’ " McFarlane said. "I want to create (an interpretation) that has a 2007 wow factor. You’ve still got Dorothy trapped in an odd place, but she’s much closer to the Ripley from ‘Alien’ than a helpless singing girl."

Olson was keeping plot specifics to himself but said the film will be closer to a sequel than a remake.

"We still want to take advantage of the first film, which might be the most beloved of all time, and rely on its place in your cultural memory to bubble beneath the surface," Olson said. "A lot of the plot is mine, but the characters are all Baum."

McFarlane, a former Marvel Comics animator who created "Spawn," is working on several producing projects, such as Paramount’s "The Torso," which has David Fincher attached to direct. McFarlane is producing with Bill Mechanic and Don Murphy.

Olson is repped by WMA, McFarlane by ICM.

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Toy OTD: Bowen Designs Invisible Woman Statue (Half-Visible Version, 2000)

One of the first superhero comic books that I ever read was an issue of The Fantastic Four, and it's still one of my favorite Marvel creations. They hooked up with Bowen for all their statue and mini-bust needs, and DC's still playing quality catch-up. DC Direct may be improving, but Marvel's added Sideshow to their cool manufacturer list!

Anyway, I waffled for the longest time before I finally bought this statue. It wasn't too bad in terms of price (though I'm sure I could've paid less if I'd bought it earlier), and action figures just can't do the whole half-visible thing nearly as well. The sculpt is nice, and the paint work is strong, too. It has the added feature of the later statues - the figure itself can detach from the base, making cleaning and transport easier and less risky.

As you might imagine, there's two other variants of this statue - fully painted, and fully 'invisible'. To be honest, I don't know why the others even exist - the half-and-half version is definitely the way to go! Why not do the entire run that way?

At any rate, I think I paid around $200 for mine, but there's one for sale on eBay that's currently at $47.00 + shipping. Good luck!

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Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Another Write-Up In The Blog-o-Sphere

Here's a quick blurb about my toy on one of my favorite blogs, Plastic and Plush! A big "Thank you" to Brian Slivka for helping to get the word out there!

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A Note To All Happy Beaver Pre-Order Folks

If you pre-ordered a "Happy Beaver" toy (when shipping charges weren't included yet) and didn't pick it up at Comic-Con, please send your shipping address and $8.36 (via PayPal) for shipping materials, fees, and PayPal fees to me, and I'll ship your toy out as soon as I can! I've been slammed with work lately, so please be patient. Thanks!

Also, UK and Canadian orders are in the works! I'm sorry that this is taking so long.

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Toy OTD: Nami Iwata's Project Gregory Horror Show Figure: Gregory

Here's a really interesting toy made from a video game character with virtually no adaptation in the process. I've never played this game, but from the stills that I've seen, it's as close as you can get to a vinyl version of a low-res polygonal game figure!

It's a unique way to preserve the integrity of the original design, the graphic strength of the shapes and forms. It's almost five inches tall, and the construction and paint work are very strong.

You can get this figure (plus the other two characters in this line) for $12.99 + shipping each at UniToyzone.com.

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Monday, August 20, 2007

Toy OTD: Brothersfree Figures: Ah Gum & Ah Aun (2000)

These are two cool designs that I bought soon after I discovered the joys of urban vinyl. They were created by a toy group called Brothersfree, who've been designing toys for seven years now.

The articulation on these figures is almost non-existent, and they're somewhat fragile in the bargain, but the design, sculpts, color and paint work are super-cool! There's lots of great variations in these seemingly identical designs.

I think I've found a website where you can still buy these, but it's hard to be sure. They seem to be for sale at micromania.co.kr (Korea?) for 160,000 Won ($169.71 + shipping USD).

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Sunday, August 19, 2007

Toy OTD: Toy Biz 13" Raging Hulk Figure (2003)

Let me say up front that I've never been a big fan of Toy Biz in general or the Marvel Legends line in particular. While I understand that fans enjoy the poseability, I've found the sculpts and paint work to be consistently wanting, and the abundance of joints winds up making the characters look more like robots than people. This figure, though, is a nice exception.

It was released in conjunction with the Hulk movie, and was left stranded on store shelves for months afterwards. Ironically, it's one of my favorite Toy Biz items. I like the sculpt, and the real cloth pants. The articulation isn't staggering, but you can pose it in a few different ways.

There were a few variants - two head sculpts (calm and raging), and the pants came in a bluish-purple, or redder like the comic. It was never terribly expensive, and I got it remaindered for about seven or eight dollars. The only places that I can find it for sale are at toybiz.com, who has it for $34.99 + shipping; and eBay, who has it for $22.95 + shipping. I'd say keep looking, considering how many of these there were around.

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Saturday, August 18, 2007

More Attention Is Good

My friend Jenny Lerew wrote a nice defense of my "Happy Beaver" toy on her Blackwing Diaries blog, supported by the New York Times article I posted below. Check it out, and her many other thoughtful postings!

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New Display Cabinet

This sale couldn't have come at a better time - I was in dire need of more toy display space, and this cabinet comes along. It's got twice the visibility for half the price of my other cabinets (and almost as much volume)! I'll get a shot of it filled up in a day or two.

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Mark Your Calendars!

Next Saturday (August 25th) is the San Jose Super Toy and Collectible Show, sponsored by Time Tunnel Toys!

Santa Clara County Fairgrounds - 344 Tully Road, San Jose, CA 95111

Early Bird 9 AM - 10:59 AM General admission 11 AM - 4 PM
General Admission: $5.00 Kids Under 12: $2.50 Early Bird: $15.00

I found a lot of great stuff at the last one, so I can't wait to go! Hope to see you there...

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Toy OTD: Tomy Fraggle Rock Wind-Up Toy: Doozer

This is an item ripe for re-issue, now that Fraggle Rock is starting to come out on DVD! Tomy made a few different Doozer wind-ups back in the day, and they're still the best merchandise of those characters. They're really appealing - I love how they molded the parts out of six or seven different colors of plastic, rather than painting an all-green figure. I think it looks so much better that way!

Don't expect to find a working specimen - they seem to break pretty easily. If you can find them on eBay, they make great display pieces! Generally, they're pretty affordable - expect to pay between $5 - $35.00, depending on condition and location.

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Friday, August 17, 2007

Toy OTD: Tyco RC Cars Toy: Sally

Here's another great line of Cars toys - Tyco's 1:32 scale, radio-controlled (27 MHZ) vehicles! On the plus side, you can zip one around with the controller (it's simple enough for little kids to use), and the characters are nicely on model - they don't have the clear plastic "eye stalks" like the Disney Store toys. The minuses are that they're made entirely of plastic, Tyco hasn't made as many of the characters, they cost more, and they'll take up a lot more shelf space. Still, they're very well done!

You can get Sally for $19.99 + shipping at idcow.com.

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We Can Send A Man To The Moon, And This Is What We Do With It - Part 1

An entire car made out of cake! That must have been a lot of fun to wreck after the shoot was over. Or was it cut up and served to the crew for a mini-wrap party?

I'm assuming that to survive under studio lights, a significant portion of it would either taste bad, or be just plain inedible.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Toys In The News

ABC NEWS: Giant Lego man washed up on Dutch beach
Posted Wed Aug 8, 2007 6:03am AEST - Photo by Paul Vreeker

A giant, smiling Lego man has been fished out of the sea in the Dutch resort of Zandvoort.

Workers at a drinks stall rescued the 2.5-metre tall model, which had a yellow head and blue torso.

"We saw something bobbing about in the sea and we decided to take it out of the water," said a stall worker. "It was a life-sized Lego toy."

A woman nearby added: "I saw the Lego toy floating towards the beach from the direction of England."

The toy was later placed in front of the drinks stall.

-Reuters

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Why The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund Exists

NPR: Comic-Book Store Owner on Trial for Nude Images
Morning Edition, August 14, 2007

Listen to this story... by Susanna Capelouto

Gordon Lee, owner of Legends Comic Book Store in Rome, Ga., goes on trial this week over whether he willfully gave a comic that depicted nudity to a child. His store took part in a downtown trick-or-treat celebration three years ago. Instead of candy, Lee handed out free comics. One of them had two drawings showing painter Pablo Picasso moving about his studio in the nude, his genitals clearly exposed. Lee was arrested a week later. The case worries the comic book industry, which fears limits on artistic expression.

Susanna Capelouto reports from Georgia Public Broadcasting.

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I don't think this guy should be thrown in jail for a year and fined $1,000 for what was clearly an accident. I'd question Lee's judgement for handing out anything other than a Disney, Archie, or Harvey comic on Hallowe'en (especially if you haven't read it), but I don't think a court case or yet another call for a ratings system is necessary. Take the comic back, apologize to the parents, and you're done. Thank goodness the CBLDF is around to help out!

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Toy OTD: UNKL Tinpo Figure: Sync 5

Here's another great Tinpo design from the UNKL brand of mini-figures! I can't remember if these were blind-boxed originally or not (I think so). Each figure came with a capsule and an extra part - if you got all of the series 1 figures, the extra parts could be assembled to form a pet!

These toys first sold for $8.00 each, but series 1 figures like this one are long sold out - more than likely, your only hope is the dreaded secondary market. eBay favorite searches are your friend in this case!

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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Remake OTD: Fantastic Voyage

VARIETY: Emmerich to captain 'Voyage'
Sci-fi guy embarks on redo
By MICHAEL FLEMING - Posted: Wed., Aug. 15, 2007, 7:25pm PT

Helmer Roland Emmerich is boarding a remake of the 1966 sci-fi pic "Fantastic Voyage" for 20th Century Fox.

"National Treasure" scribes Marianne and Cormac Wibberley are in talks to write the script.

"Voyage" is about a scientist who is dying of a blood clot. His only chance for survival is for five scientist colleagues to be miniaturized in a ship, and injected into his bloodstream.

The original, directed by Richard Fleischer, starred Raquel Welch and Donald Pleasence.

Emmerich's Centropolis Entertainment partner Michael Wimer will produce with James Cameron's Lightstorm Entertainment.

It is Emmerich's second tour of duty on the project, after being attached a decade ago. The Wibberleys recently took a stab at a draft of "Voyage" that sparked the director's renewed interest in doing the remake.

"Fantastic Voyage" is the director's third large-scale film for Fox, after "Independence Day" and "The Day After Tomorrow."

Emmerich recently completed "10,000 B.C.," which will be released March 7 by Warner Bros. and Legendary.

The Wibberleys are among the dozen scribes in Writing Partners, the scribe collective which just sealed an unusual first-look deal with Fox for spec scripts. (Daily Variety, Aug. 15). That deal is reserved for original creations by those writers, so the "Fantastic Voyage" assignment doesn't apply.

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Hmm... I'm not enamored enough with the original to get upset about this. In fact, I think it's a pretty good candidate for a remake - the only thing that I'd really like to stay the same is the design of the submarine. I wonder if they'll stylize the human body like last time, or get all squishy and use endoscopic photography? Who will they stuff into the low-cut wetsuit in this version (no votes for Jessica Alba, please)?

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Toy OTD: Modern Pets Wind-Up Baton Poodle

This is a tricky item to research - I'm not sure if Modern Pets is the name of both the manufacturer and the line, or just the line. At any rate, this is the current Japanese equivalent of the Dakin Dream Pets toy line, consisting of a completely different series of animal designs.

This character is called "Baton Poodle", and it's somewhat unique - while there are many plushes and some vinyl figures of the various designs, this is the only wind-up toy in the line (that I'm aware of). As you'd expect, it shakes its batons about when wound up.

I bought mine for around $18 or so at Super 7 in San Francisco, but they don't have them in stock any longer. If you can read Japanese, you can buy a wind-up Baton Poodle here for 1,344 Yen (or $11.59 USD) + shipping.

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Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Comic Artist Mike Wieringo Dies At 44

NEWSARAMA.COM: MIKE WIERINGO PASSES AWAY

The comics industry lost a luminary this weekend - Mike Wieringo passed away Sunday of a sudden heart attack. Details are still sketchy as of this time, but according to close sources, the acclaimed artist had chest pains at some point during the day and called 911, but the responders did not make it in time.

Wieringo was 44 years old. He was a vegetarian, and "one of the healthiest ones of us in the bunch," as his longtime friend and collaborator Todd Dezago described him. Currently, there are no details about services or a funeral.

Wieringo worked every day, updating his blog and website with a constant stream of sketches at MikeWieringo.com. His last sketch was posted on Friday.


I had to keep the sketch pretty quick today if I was going to get it done and posted at all. I spent the morning with an electrical contractor here at the house. I’ve been having trouble with my heating and air conditioning unit switching its breaker off during the height of the heat of the day the past few afternoons (and for those of you in the southeast dealing with these 100-plus degree days, you know just how sweltering and oppressive this week has been). As it turns out, my entire wiring setup outside is horribly old and doesn’t meet code. It also contains quite a bit of aluminum wiring– which the contractor tells me is very dangerous and not in use anymore. So I got the great news that it’s going to cost me thousands of dollars to bring everything back up to code…. and not have the danger of causing a fire at any point as well. Ah, the joys of being a homeowner….!

I’ve had several folks inquire about my 2007 sketchbook and whether it would be for sale here on the site. Steven Gettis has set up a store link in the PERSONAL section of the column at the right for selling the sketchbook and prints I’ve produced. So anyone interested in the things offered there, I’ve got a PayPal account set up to handle the sales that way.

OK… have a great weekend, everyone.

This is Entry 412.

Mike

Wieringo was born June 24th, 1963 in Venice, Italy, and first caught the attention of comic book fans when he joined writer Mark Waid on DC's The Flash with issue #80 in 1993. Together, the two co-created the character Impulse, the future speedster brought back to the present. Wieringo (or, 'Ringo as he was better known by then) moved on to Robin at DC, and then moved to Marvel, where he settled in on Sensational Spider-Man with writer Todd DeZago.

The pairing with DeZago was something of fate, as the two co-created and launched their creator-owned property Tellos, which saw several projects and miniseries published over the years. Ringo moved back to DC for a run on Adventures of Superman, and then, in 2002, reunited with Waid for a run on Fantastic Four that was perhaps best known for fan outcry when Marvel announced that they were going to replace the team. Marvel quickly reversed their decision, and the two completed their run on the series.

Ringo then moved to Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man with writer Peter David, and most recently, completed a Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four miniseries written by Jeff Parker. His next project had not been announced, although, as readers of his blog knew, he was very excited at the prospect of doing more Tellos work, with an eye on being able to debut something at next month's Baltimore Comic-Con.
Mike was a regular face at East Coast conventions for years, and was known to both fans and pros as one of the friendliest, and most approachable guys in comics. Heck, he was, I think, the first "pro" I ever met, back when he had just started drawing Flash. I remember asking him for a sketch at a small convention in High Point, North Carolina, he said, "Sure - what of?" And I told him it had to be the Flash - but not with the mask on, with the mask pulled back, showing Wally West. Mike looked thoughtful for a few minutes, gave me a look, and got to drawing. A few minutes later, he gave me the sketch (still framed and in my office) and I thanked him. It wasn't until later that my wife pointed out that he'd drawn me in the mask, instead of Wally. That's the kind of cool guy Mike was. And with the North Carolina comics community being pretty tight-knit, Mike and I got to be pretty good friends after that. He was a great friend, and a friend of the site - all too happy to help out years back when Mike Doran and I needed headshots for the then-version of Newsarama. We looked a little dorky, but I think that was Mike making a little joke that included all of us. He loved what he did. -- Matt Brady

ps - I see we're getting some database errors from the traffic with this news. Heh - it was the news of Mark and Mike being kicked off of the Fantastic Four that melted down our server when it happened a few years back. Mike was the most humble guy you'd ever meet, but I think he's at least getting a smile out of that.

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Sunday, August 12, 2007

I've Started My Own Flickr Group!

I noticed that there didn't seem to be a group expressly devoted to Hasbro toys, so I started one of my own! If you have neat pictures of any Hasbro dolls, toys or games that you'd like to add, drop me an email, and I'll formally invite you to the group!

PS - I'm trying to find a better picture of the old-school Hasbro mascot (the little kid). If you remember what his name is, please drop me a line so I can search for him better!

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Toy OTD: Plastoy Tintin PVC Figures: Thomson And Thompson

I'm constantly impressed by the quality of Plastoy figures - the sculpts are on-model and well-posed, the paint work is strong, and they have good taste in licenses.

I don't often get figures this small, but I was struck by the subtle differences in the two brothers, and I'm a big Tintin fan in general.

I bought these at a store in San Francisco called Karikter - both of them are available at their online store for $7.50 + shipping each.

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The Violent Legacy Of Bonnie And Clyde


NY TIMES: Two Outlaws, Blasting Holes in the Screen
By A. O. SCOTT - Published: August 12, 2007

THE story of “Bonnie and Clyde” has been told so many times that it has acquired the patina of legend. It’s the kind of historical fable that circulates to explain how the world once was and how it came to be the way it is now: a morality tale in which the wild energies of youth defeat the stale certainties of age, and freedom triumphs over repression.

I’m not talking about the adventures of the actual Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker, who robbed and shot their way through Texas, Oklahoma and adjacent states in the bad old days of the Great Depression. Their exploits have been chronicled in books, ballads and motion pictures, never more famously than in the movie named after them, which first opened in New York 40 years ago this month. The notoriety of “Bonnie and Clyde,” directed by Arthur Penn from a long-gestating script by David Newman and Robert Benton and produced by Warren Beatty, who also played Clyde, has long since eclipsed that of its real-life models.

The ups and downs of the movie’s early fortunes have become a touchstone and a parable, a crucial episode in the entwined histories of Hollywood, American film criticism and postmodern popular culture. “Bonnie and Clyde” was a scandal and a sensation largely because it seemed to introduce a new kind of violence into movies. Its brutality was raw and immediate, yet at the same time its scenes of mayhem were choreographed with a formal panache that was almost gleeful.

Their horror was undercut by jaunty, rambunctious humor and by the skittering banjo music of the soundtrack. The final shootout, in which Mr. Beatty and Faye Dunaway’s bodies twitch and writhe amid a storm of gunfire (not long after their characters have successfully made love for the first time), was both awful and ecstatic, an orgy of blood and bullets. The filmmakers seemed less interested in the moral weight of violence than in its aesthetic impact. The killings were alluring and gruesome; that the movie was so much fun may well have been the most disturbing thing about it.

As we endure another phase in the never-ending argument about movie violence — renewed by the recent popularity of extremely brutal horror films like the “Saw” and “Hostel” cycles; made momentarily acute by the Virginia Tech massacre last spring; forever hovering around the edges of dinner-table conversations and political campaigns — it’s worth re-examining this legend to see if it has anything left to teach us.

“Bonnie and Clyde” had its North American premiere on Aug. 4, 1967, at the Montreal film festival. When it opened in New York a short time later, the initial critical reception ranged from dismissal to outright execration. Leading the charge was Bosley Crowther, chief film critic of The New York Times, who attacked “Bonnie and Clyde” as “a cheap piece of bald-faced slapstick comedy.” Crowther’s short, merciless review — the film’s “blending of farce with brutal killings is as pointless as it is lacking in taste” — was followed by a Sunday column that made the case at greater length.

The most celebrated, and consequential, brief for the defense was longer still. In more than 9,000 words in the Oct. 21 issue of The New Yorker, Pauline Kael, then a freelance contributor, hailed “Bonnie and Clyde” as “the most excitingly American movie since ‘The Manchurian Candidate,’ ” which had come out five years earlier. Hardly an unqualified rave (“probably part of the discomfort that people feel about ‘Bonnie and Clyde’ grows out of its compromises and its failures,” she noted), Kael’s article instead made a sustained argument for the film’s status as a cultural event.

“ ‘Bonnie and Clyde,’ ” she wrote, “brings into the almost frighteningly public world of movies things that people have been feeling and saying and writing about. And once something is said or done on the screens of the world, it can never again belong to a minority, never again be the private possession of an educated, or ‘knowing’ group. But even for that group there is an excitement in hearing its own private thoughts expressed out loud and in seeing something of its own sensibility become part of our common culture.”

And so “Bonnie and Clyde” was the somewhat improbable vehicle — a period picture made, with some reluctance, by a major movie studio (Warner Brothers) at the insistence of an ambitious young movie star — by which a new mode of expression and a new set of values entered the cultural mainstream. The movie was quickly marked as a battlefield in an epochal struggle: between “the kids” and their stodgy, respectable elders, between the hip and the square.

According to the standard accounts, now duly taught in classrooms and rehearsed around baby-boom Elderhostel campfires, hip triumphed. By the beginning of 1968 the squares had been routed. Time magazine, which had run a dismissive review, put Bonnie and Clyde, as rendered by Robert Rauschenberg, on its Dec. 8 cover, accompanying an essay by Stefan Kanfer called “The New Cinema: Violence ... Sex ... Art.”

Crowther, after 27 years at The Times, retired. His place was taken by Renata Adler, a writer for The New Yorker who was not yet 30. Kael, already a contentious and influential figure in the world of movie criticism, joined the staff of The New Yorker, where for the next quarter-century she would reign as the most imitated and argued-about film reviewer in the English-speaking world. “Bonnie and Clyde” was nominated for 10 Academy Awards.

That it won only two — best supporting actress for Estelle Parsons and best cinematography for Burnett Guffey — may have helped to assure its enduring cachet. Too complete a victory would have led to a loss of credibility. Hip is, by definition, an oppositional stance that the embrace of the establishment can only compromise.

The products of the liberal Hollywood establishment — the earnest, socially responsible dramas that Crowther frequently championed and that Kael in particular despised — did not retreat in the face of a generational challenge mounted by “Bonnie and Clyde” (and also, less noisily, by “The Graduate”). The big Oscar winners that year were “In the Heat of the Night” and “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner,” both movies about gray-haired, socially empowered white men whose prejudices are demolished by Sidney Poitier, at the time Hollywood’s all-purpose answer to America’s race problem.

At the height of the ’60s, the solution proposed by those movies — that basically decent men could work toward mutual understanding and respect — might have seemed wishful at best. The Oscar ceremonies took place on April 10, 1968, a week after the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The summer before, “Bonnie and Clyde” had opened against a backdrop of rioting in Newark and Detroit. Part of the film’s mythology has been a product of that coincidence. American cities were burning, the war in Vietnam and the protests against it were escalating, and a new revolutionary consciousness was in the air, somehow shared by college students and third-world guerrillas, by artists and the urban poor.

As J. Hoberman notes in “The Dream Life,” his revisionist history of the ’60s and its movies, “ ‘Bonnie and Clyde’ popularized the attitude Tom Wolfe would derisively call ‘Radical Chic.’ ” Its hero and heroine exist in a state of vague solidarity with the poor and destitute — the banks they rob are the real enemies of the people, and they are admired by hard-luck farmers and sharecroppers — but they themselves are much too glamorous to pass as members of the oppressed masses.

They are not fighting injustice so much as they are having fun, enjoying the prerogatives of outlaw fame. They exist in a kind of anarchic utopia where the pursuit of kicks is imagined to be inherently political. In this universe the usual ethical justifications of violent action are stripped away, but the aura of righteousness somehow remains.

When pressed by his brother, Buck, about the killing of a bank employee — “It was him or you, right?” — Clyde mumbles that he had to do it, even though the audience knows there was no real question of self-defense. Later, Bonnie’s humiliation of a Texas ranger is justified because the ranger is such a brutal, reactionary authority figure. His subsequent pursuit of the criminals, in contrast, is treated as sadistic and irrational.

But the Barrow gang’s own sadism is evident when the outlaws kidnap a nervous undertaker and his girlfriend after stealing the man’s car. The couple turns out to be the very embodiment of square: He complains about his hamburger; she reveals that she lied to him about her age. These people are along for the ride, but they just don’t get it.

Not Getting It has been, ever since, the accusation leveled against critics of a certain kind of movie violence by its defenders. The easiest way to attack movie violence is to warn of its real-world consequences, to worry that someone will imitate what is seen on screen. The symmetrically literal-minded response is that because violence already exists in the world, refusing to show it in movies would be dishonest.

Neither of these positions quite acknowledges the particularity of cinematic violence, which is not the same as what it depicts. Even the most bloodthirsty moviegoer would be likely to leave a real fusillade like the one at the end of “Bonnie and Clyde” sickened and traumatized, rather than thrilled. The particular charge of that scene, and others like it, is that it tries to push the pretense — the art — as close to trauma as possible and to make the appreciation of that art its point. Missing the point is what marks you as square.

The Hollywood and critical establishments, both of them in the early stages of a generational upheaval, did not miss the point for long. “Bonnie and Clyde” was hardly the first picture to push against the limits of what was conventionally seen as good taste. But it conducted its assault in the name of a higher form of taste, fusing the bravado of youth with the prestige of art. It legitimized the connoisseurship of violence, which does not present itself as an appetite for cheap thrills, but rather as a taste for the finer things.

Thus the geysers of blood at the end of Sam Peckinpah’s “Wild Bunch” two years later could be savored for the director’s visual and formal audacity. The unflinching brutalities of ’70s movies like “The Godfather” and “Chinatown” became hallmarks of the honesty and daring of the New Hollywood. (At the same time the harsh, righteous vengeance unleashed in the “Dirty Harry” and “Death Wish” movies appalled many of the same critics who dug the radical chic of “Bonnie and Clyde.”)

By the 1990s, as a newer generation of filmmakers began to fetishize the glories of post-“Bonnie and Clyde” American cinema, stylized, tongue-in-cheek violence became a sign of rebellious independence. The ear-slicing sequence in Quentin Tarantino’s “Reservoir Dogs” seemed like a deliberate attempt to replicate the kind of shock produced by the wildest moments in “Bonnie and Clyde,” but without the pretense of political or social relevance. This year the best-picture Oscar went to “The Departed,” a movie whose jolting, cold-blooded killings occasioned little objection.

And to raise objections at this point is, perhaps, worse than square. It seems philistine. But I can’t escape the feeling that, just as it has become easier since “Bonnie and Clyde” to accept violence in movies, and more acceptable to enjoy it, it has become harder to talk seriously about the ethics and politics of that violence. The link between real and pretend violence has been so completely severed that some of the ability of movies to offer a critical perspective — to elicit thought as well as gasps and chuckles — has been lost. We’ve become pretty comfortable watching the infliction of pain, and quick to laugh it off.

Don’t misunderstand: I still get a kick out of “Bonnie and Clyde,” but it’s accompanied by a twinge of unease, by the suspicion that, in some ways that matter and that have become too easy to dismiss, Bosley Crowther was right.

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Saturday, August 11, 2007

Toy OTD: Chicken Little Bootleg Figure: Foxy Loxy

There's a small mall near my house that sells some Japanese toys - every once in a while, I stop by and see if there's anything new. I've picked up some of my Moomin toys there, among other things.

More recently, I discovered that one of the smaller shops sells (what I would assume to be Chinese) bootleg toys. I love bootlegs, but it's hard to find a place that sells them. The stock in this tiny store doesn't change all that often, but it does make for some interesting discoveries!

At the end of last year, I found a four-pack of bootleg Chicken Little figures. The other characters looked pretty awful (I know, isn't that the point?), but this Foxy Loxy was actually pretty good. I liked the character design in the film, but there wasn't a licensed toy of it that I liked, so I kept this one and discarded the others (they weren't ugly enough to be interesting).

I think the four-pack cost me about $6.00, but I think the store's out of them now, and I can't imagine anyone being able to find these again, even on eBay. But that's kind of the way of bootlegs in general - they make money while they can, then disappear.

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Friday, August 10, 2007

Fire At Cinecitta

VARIETY: 'Rome' burns in Cinecitta blaze
Studio plays down reports of damage
By NICK VIVARELLI - Posted: Fri., Aug. 10, 2007, 7:23am PT

ROME -- Flames blazed overnight on Rome's Cinecitta Studios backlot, where a swath of the monumental set of HBO's completed "Rome" skein burned down but few other damages were caused, leaving the sprawling facility's sound stages, film archives, and other sets intact.

"The studios are safe, sound, and in good shape, except for a corner of the backlot where the fire broke out," Cinecitta Studios deputy director Maurizio Sperandini told Daily Variety.

The Cinecitta exec said the fire broke out near the "Rome" set -- which HBO vacated in January -- between 10 and 10.30 p.m. on Thursday night and lasted for under three hours, thanks to prompt intervention by firefighters who stamped out the flames with powerful fire trucks known as Super Dragons, sent over from nearby Leonardo da Vinci and Ciampino airports.

The fire is believed to have been caused by an electrical short circuit in an equipment shed on the compound. Officials are ruling out arson.

Flames quickly spread to the area known as the "suburra," the ancient Roman red-light district on the "Rome" set which is considered among the largest open-air sets ever constructed. It comprises a partial recreation of the Roman Forum, with temples, thermal baths, bordellos, and public buildings, all made using fiberglass panels, and other materials, some of which are highly flammable.

According to Italian press reports the flames reached as high as 40 meters (133 feet) and burned down an area of 3,000 square meters, or 32,000 square feet.

Downplaying the damage, Sperandini said the scale of the fire had "been a bit exaggerated by early press reports."

The large complex founded by Benito Mussolini in 1937 -- and known as Hollywood on the Tiber in its 1950s heyday when "Ben Hur" and "Quo Vadis" shot there -- spreads out over 600,000 square meters (717,000 square yards) and comprises 22 soundstages, including the legendary Studio 5, where Federico Fellini worked.

Besides "Rome" recent Hollywood productions at Cinecitta include Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ," Wes Anderson's "The Life Aquatic" and "Exorcist: The Beginning."

On the artier front, Abel Ferrara last year shot his screwball comedy "Go Go Tales" there.

Sperandini said the BBC is on site preparing to shoot its revived sci-fier "Doctor Who" at Cinecitta in September.

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Toy OTD: Funko Wacky Wobbler: Velma

Funko just keeps delivering plenty of kidvid love - this time in the form of everyone's favorite bespectacled teen detective, Velma! As usual, the sculpt is nice, and the paint apps, while varying to a degree, are also good.

Rather than give the character a grotesquely oversized head, the designer wisely chose to bobble Velma at the waist, like a hula nodder. It's a nice touch that best preserves the integrity of the source design. There's the usual awkward and unecessary labeling of the base, but all things considered, it's a minor quibble.

You can get a Velma Wobbler for $8.49 + shipping at givemetoys.com.

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Thursday, August 09, 2007

Toy OTD: Strangeco, Super 7's Neo-Kaiju Figures: Seonna Hong's Kara Kara Tako Girl (2004)

Today I'm featuring another figure from this great, artist-filled toy line! All ten characters are great, but this is one of my particular favorites. Super-cute, but with a nice, offbeat quality to it. Nice sculpt and paint apps for a capsule toy - each came in its own beautifully labeled egg.

These have been out for a few years now, so they may be tough to find. They do show up on eBay, priced between $8.00 - $20.00 each. You can get this figure right now at designertoystore.co.uk for £7.99 (about $16 USD) + shipping.

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From Layer Cake To Stardust To Thor

VARIETY: Matthew Vaughn to direct 'Thor'
Marvel aiming for pre-strike start in winter
By MICHAEL FLEMING - Posted: Thurs., Aug. 9, 2007, 7:30pm PT

Marvel Studios is setting Matthew Vaughn to direct "Thor," based on the Marvel Comics character. Marvel is aiming for a pre-strike production start this winter.

Mark Protosevich ("I Am Legend") did the adaptation of the comicbook franchise that launched in 1962. Thor is a blonde-tressed, hammer-wielding hero who's sent to Earth to protect mankind.

Vaughn's deal is closing just as Paramount releases the Vaughn-directed "Stardust" today. The Neil Gaiman novel adaptation stars Robert De Niro and Michelle Pfeiffer.

"Thor" marks Vaughn's second effort at a superhero pic. He was attached to direct "X-Men 3" before bowing out for personal reasons. Vaughn, who produced the Guy Ritchie-directed films "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels" and "Snatch," made his directing debut with the Daniel Craig starrer "Layer Cake."

Marvel Studios will likely finance "Thor" using its $500 million credit facility through Merrill Lynch. Marvel has used that fund to finance both Edward Norton starrer "The Incredible Hulk," which Universal releases June 13, and "Iron Man," the Robert Downey Jr. starrer that Paramount will open on May 2.

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"They're Heee-rre..."

The "Happy Beaver" toy shipment arrived today - all four hundred of them. My office is filled with boxes! I'll set up the Canadian and UK mail-order buttons as soon as I can. As always, please let me know if you want to buy my beaver toy, and live outside of the five-digit-zip-code US, Canada or the UK.

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Boxes Are Here! More Beaver Toys Soon!

My order of shipping boxes arrived yesterday, and the remaining four hundred "Happy Beaver" toys are scheduled to arrive sometime today! I should be able to start shipping domestic orders the weekend, and I'll set up PayPal buttons here on the blog for UK and Canadian orders very soon! So if you live in the US - order away!

Also, if you live in northern California, I'll be throwing a "toy premiere party" in conjunction with my generous friends at Super 7 very soon - keep checking back for updated event news!

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Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Unfortunately Named Toy Dept.

Here's an ad from a far more innocent time... uh, 1975 or so. Okay, so maybe this product had a really, really naive project head.

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The Chiodos Have Swag

...and they want you to buy it! Yes, the Chiodo Brothers, the brains behind Killer Klowns From Outer Space, now have their very own Zazzle store. Peruse the various and sundry mugs, mousepads, and T-shirts decorated with new artwork! Choose from the delightfully nasty Klowns, the diminutive alien Marteenie, or some beautifully rendered dinosaurs. Don't delay - shop today!

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Picture OTD

Rumer Willis on set.

Thanks to The Superficial for the image!

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Toy OTD: Meredith Dittmar's Corporate Pig Figures

Meredith is a sculptor who lives in Oregon making and selling her own characters:
Meredith Dittmar was born outside of Boston Mass. A self taught artist - she first started sculpting at UMass while trying to avoid getting her computer science degree. After graduating and several years pursuing the backcountry on her snowboard she worked as an interactive designer/programmer - her digital works having been shown in international film festivals, exhibits and magazines

She has since put the digital realm on the backburner to pursue 3dimensional passions. Over ten thousand completely UNIQUE "guys" have been created and successfully adopted in the last 10 years. Along with her 3d "doodles" she creates larger hung environments inspired by nature, Consciousness, and the various diverse music scenes she has participated in over the years. Meredith currently lives, explores the outdoors, and seeks the zone in Portland, Oregon with her husband Randy, dog Oscar and crew of amazing peeps.
They're great, affordable figures - you can buy one-of-a-kind designs from her website for $18 + shipping, or buy "Clones" (figures she makes repeatedly) for $12 + shipping. They're aren't any new characters for sale right now, so if you want an original design, you'll need to sign up for email updates - she'll let you know when new figures are ready!

PS - None of the figures have names, so you'll just have to name whatever you buy yourself!

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

About Fucking Time Dept.

VARIETY: WB sends 'Jonny Quest' to bigscreen
Mazeau to adapt Hanna-Barbera series
By MARC GRASER - Posted: Tue., Aug. 7, 2007, 7:30pm PT

Adrian Askarieh and Daniel Alter, who have the vidgame-based "Hitman" bowing in October from Fox, will produce the live-action adaptation of the popular 1960s animated TV series from Hanna-Barbera, with Dan Mazeau penning the script.

Series revolved around a young boy who travels the world with his scientist father, adopted brother from India, Bandit the bulldog, and a government agent assigned to protect them as they go on their adventures investigating scientific mysteries.

The show, which is owned by Warner Bros. Animation, aired during primetime on ABC in 1964, lasting only one season. It was updated in the late '80s and '90s as "The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest" on the Cartoon Network. Property's also been spun off as a comic book from DC.

Askarieh, a longtime fan of the series, is hoping to turn the property into a family-friendly adventure franchise -- something the studio is clearly looking for now that "Harry Potter" is winding down.

Mazeau recently sold his fantasy adventure spec "Land of Lost Things" to Paramount Pictures' Nickelodeon Films, with Arnold and Anne Kopelson producing.

Warner Bros. execs Dan Lin and Matt Reilly will oversee "Jonny Quest" at the studio, which is lensing another film version of an iconic '60s TV series, "Speed Racer."

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Oh, who am I kidding? Even though I've been waiting for this forever, there's no way such an anachronistic show could be updated without losing the horribly inappropriate flavor that I ashamedly love.

I think they should just expand the "Turu the Terrible" episode to feature length. It has everything - an ex-nazi in a wheelchair excavating a secret jungle diamond mine with his pet pterodactyl! Plus jet packs and bazookas! I mean, C'MON!!

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"Happy Beaver" Toy Mail Order Now Available, With Two Caveats!

The new PayPal button is working, but I don't have my shipping boxes (or the extra toys), so I can't send anything out yet. I'll work on international orders (especially the UK) while I'm waiting for them to arrive. Stay tuned! Feel free to pre-order, just be aware it'll be a while before I can ship them to you.

PS - If there's other folks outside of the US and the UK who want toys, please let me know, and I'll figure out the shipping rates!

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More Caricature Sweetness

Previously-posted caricaturist Peter Emslie has another webpage, a blog called The Cartoon Cave. There's more great posts and drawings there, so stop by if you have a minute!

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Toy OTD: Cominica Japan Metropolis Maquette: Tima

I'm not a big fan of the film version of Tezuka's Metropolis manga - I thought technically it was amazing, but the story was weak. Still, director Ritnaro kept the essence of the Tezuka character designs, so the merchandise is still very cool!

Here's a resin staute of the main character Tima, the robot around which much of the story revolves. It's an appealing design, and the sculpt and paint work is quite nice. I do remember some fragility issues - originally I had wanted to buy a statue of Kenichi, but the figure came off the base too easily, or there was some damage to it that I hadn't noticed in the display case. If you can, be sure to check an item in this line carefully before purchasing!

The figure is 18 cm tall, and is from an edition of 1500 pieces. You can get one from kibidango.ch (for 49.90 CHF Switzerland Francs or 41.88 USD) if you can read German. I bought mine from Things From Another World, but I don't see it listed on their website.

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Monday, August 06, 2007

Someone Will Always Get Nerd-ier

Apparently, the serial number on the crate in the Indy 4 teaser poster is extremely close to the one on the crate packed away at the end of Raiders. According to this article, though, Lucasfilm says that it's not referencing the ark - other than to be a similar catalog number. Two fansites based on the number have already surfaced.

Man! It's amazing how quickly the scrabbling begins.

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The Man In The Hat Is Back

A New Short By Jason Reitman

Nicely done! Some great reveals and line readings.

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Sunday, August 05, 2007

Toy OTD: Medicom Vinyl Collectible Dolls: Minnie Mouse From 'Two-Gun Mickey' (2004)

Once again, Medicom hits it out of the park with this fantastic retro Disney figure! A gorgeous sculpt, a strong pose, and an appropriately monochromatic color scheme. The only thing that keeps this toy from being utterly perfect is the lack of a dispaly base, but it does stand well on its own. It's a lovely piece of work.

Minnie wasn't as popular a seller as the Two-Gun Mickey was, so you might be able to find one for sale outside of eBay, even though it came out three years ago. Hobby Link Japan might be able to get you one for about $32.00 + shipping, and Toy Tokyo is selling it for $44.99 + shipping.

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Saturday, August 04, 2007

For All You PidgeonBlog Archive Browsers (Both Of You)

You might notice that a lot of the Toy OTD posts are gone. I delete these posts periodically since they're the easiest way to thin down the blog and prevent problems. Worry not, though, they're all still on their own Flickr page!

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Toy OTD: Hasbro Mr. Potato Head: Fireman (1970s)

Here's another cute variant from the '70s Mr. Potato Head line. It's interesting that, even as the arms were temporarily jettisoned from the design, the character still has accessories that required arms! I'm glad they brought the arms back, appealing as this line is. I also like the pants-as-body treatment, too - it's a nice compromise from the wobbly full-body that the toy originally had.

eBay is probably your best bet if you want to get one - I don't see any for sale right now, but it's nothing a Favorite Search can't eventually fix. I'm not sure how much these go for nowadays - this one was a gift from a friend.

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Friday, August 03, 2007

A Sequel I Actually Want To See

Sweet! Chunky bat-suit aside, I'm there!

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Toy OTD: Ideal Zeroid Robots: Zobor, The Bronze Transporter

Here's another robot from the late '60s/early '70s toy line from Ideal, the Zeroids. Each toy scooted about on motorized treads. Zobor's early box was cleverly designed to add to the play value - the robot could pull the box along on its wheels, carrying cargo like a wheelbarrow. The robots came with different hands (some magnetic) and a variety of accessories.

One of my school buddies had this specific Zeroid, and I coveted it fiercely. I managed to pick up this one years later on eBay, and other than some missing accessories and paint wear, it's in good shape. eBay is really the only place to buy one of these, and examples in decent condition start at roughly $70-$100 each. The more complete it is, of course, the more it'll cost!

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Thursday, August 02, 2007

The KarateGuard

This may be the last Tom & Jerry cartoon with Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera's input. It's a little derivative, and there's some story problems, but as short film franchise resurrections go, it's pretty good!

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Toys, by Grant Munro

Here's a National Film Board of Canada short from 1966. Other than contrasting the innocence of playthings and adult battle imagery, I'm not sure what the message is here. Is it, "Children don't like the adult tendency toward war", or "We shouldn't pass our warlike impulses down to our children though toys", or is it, "This is what war toys really represent"? I'm not sure. Maybe it was primarily an exploration of montage.

Thanks for A/V Geeks for the film!

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Toy OTD: Dark Horse Mutts PVC Figures

A little while ago, Dark Horse released a four-figure set of characters from the Mutts comic strip. Earl and Mooch are both available in larger sizes, but there's two other characters (Guard Dog and Shtinky) included that you can't get any other way. So of course I bought it!

The sculpts and paint apps, while not as good as many imported toys, are still nice for the figures' size. The poses also stand well without bases, not as precariously as the larger vinyls.

These haven't been out all that long (since last October), so you can still get the set for retail - reduced, in fact, to $13.49 + shipping from Things From Another World.

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Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Remake OTD: Anthony Zimmer

VARIETY: Hallstrom to direct French remake
Helmer signs first-look deal with Regency TV
By MICHAEL FLEMING - Posted: Wed., Jul. 25, 2007, 8:00pm PT

Lasse Hallstrom is set to direct "Anthony Zimmer," a remake of the 2005 French film. Spyglass is financing and has set an early 2008 production start in Europe.

Hallstrom also has made a first-look production deal with Regency Television to develop programming he'll exec produce and direct. Deal comes after Hallstrom directed the Regency pilot "New Amsterdam," which will debut on Fox's fall schedule.

"Anthony Zimmer" will be Hallstrom's next feature assignment. Pic will be produced by Spyglass' Roger Birnbaum, Gary Barber and Jonathan Glickman. Leslie Holleran, Hallstrom's longtime producing partner, is expected to join as a producer.

Scripted by Julian Fellowes ("Gosford Park"), thriller concerns an American tourist who finds his life in danger when a female Interpol agent uses him as a dupe to flush out an elusive criminal with whom she once had an affair.

Original pic was written and directed by Jerome Salle. Spyglass and Canal Plus co-financed development and will produce the remake together. Spyglass, which this summer opens "Underdog," "Rush Hour 3" and "Balls of Fury," just wrapped the Katherine Heigl starrer "27 Dresses" and just started production on Universal's Greg Kinnear starrer "Flash of Genius," directed by Marc Abraham.

"New Amsterdam" marked Hallstrom's first TV job in America, but Regency Television president Robin Schwartz said it won't be his last.

"I sent him the script on a whim, and it turned out he'd done TV in Sweden and many commercials, and he just elevated the pilot," she said. "We might bring a concept to him, early on, and he will bring us ideas he has that fit better as a series than a feature."

Regency also has a deal with screenwriter Allan Loeb, who co-wrote and is an exec producer on "New Amsterdam."

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Wow! We're down to three years between the original and the remake now. Do I hear a year? Do I hear six months? Going once, going twice...

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Where Was This Stuff When I Was A Kid? - Part 1

Pottery Barn Kids has Batman and Superman bedding, and it looks really cool! No bland style guide crap for these sheets - check it out! Wayne Boring and Dick Sprang drawings for today's kids. Awesome!

Actually... these might fit our beds....

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(Someone Else's) Brain Fart

This seems like something you'd see in a sketch comedian's first film, representing his character's lifelong dream: to erect a building that looks like Godzilla in Tokyo. Pretty funny!

Thanks to Ironic Sans for the post.

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Comic-Con Swag

I didn't pick up any of the freebies available this year, mainly because I'm not even sure I have shelf/wall space for what I'm buying. I was on a budget this time around, but I still think my 'got' list is pretty cool. Or at least, sporadically cool:

* Cranky Studios' Whaleboy vinyl figure
* Monkey Fun Toys Milk & Cheese vinyl figures
* Mindstyle Dark Crystal vinyl figure
* Mindstyle Jim Henson City Critters pvc figures (8)
* Young Epoch Susie the Little Blue Coupe wooden toy
* All-Star Vinyl Brett Favre figure
* Funko Scooby-Dum bobblehead (cool factor/reader respect plummets here)
* Plan B Toys Dark Crystal Garthim resin bust
* McFarlane Toys Jonny Quest action figure
* Mezco Professor Chaos action figure (SDCC exclusive)
* Mezco Abe Sapien figure (SDCC exclusive)
* Gargamel/Tim Biskup Kaiju For Grownups figure: Dragamel
* Character Options Ltd. 12" Cyber Leader action figure
* Exclusive old-school Peanuts T-shirts (2)
* Huckleberry Toys' limited edition 1971 Grimace figure
* Chris Sanders' Maile vinyl toy
* Banpresto Super Mario Brothers Luigi vinyl figure
* Medicom Frankenberry, Count Chocula Kubrick figures
* Super 7 Ghost Land figures (2)
* Kaiju Big Battel figure: Sky Deviler
* Mindstyle/Cameron Tiede's 13 Tomadachi vinyl figures - Edgar, Oswald, Agatha
* Wesco Doctor Who Tardis 4-port USB hub
* Tim Sale old-school Daredevil sketch (a gift from Michelle, my sister-in-law... how cool is that?)

Well, that's most of it - I'll add the things I've forgotten (as well as updated picture links) later!

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Wikio