Showing posts with label Marx Astronaut Figures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marx Astronaut Figures. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Marx Toys "Lunar Exploration Miniature Playset" Astronauts & Craters, 1970

I've latched onto the idea that this very brief production run of miniature space toy sets were Marx's reaction to the Golden Astronaut and Spacex toy lines. Both featured reduced size astronauts with some sort of space vehicle, Marx upping the ante with sculpted terrain pieces and a window box construction with impressive folding popup diecut diorama stage to get the imagination rolling. I'd be interested in learning what these sold for at retail in 1970.



This particular set arrived with its Space Tank loose from its correct natural colored Marx factory twine, and all of the other toy pieces tied down with black sewing thread and, hideously, adhesive applied to glue them to the printed surface of the diorama stage. Marx did not use black sewing thread or adhesive to fix the pieces in place: Their concept for the sets had owners cutting them loose for play including on the diorama stage. So if you come across sets with the pieces glued down that was a prior owner and collector (or vendor) assembling the set to appear as-was.


I believe the figures stand at 30mm, on-scale with the Golden Astronaut figures for that toy line, which is what got me wondering if these were a response. Will look at that idea closer in another update.



Pilot figure with left arm extended outward in what I call the Werner Von Braun position, mimicking a famous picture of the German rocket scientist after a complicated surgery to repair a fractured arm.

Merkwuerdigliebe


The reduced sized cameraman is unique to this series. For whatever reason Marx did not downsize a cameraman for their Mystery Space Ship & Space Ranger sets, whose figures are somewhat larger but are still nicely reduced Operation Moon Base poses. But if you want a downsized cameraman you gotta go the LEMP route here.


Stamped "Marx Toys Made In Taiwan".


Same here. He'd been adhered to the surface of someone else's playset, which as we can see had to be ruinously marred to remove him. Obtained loose along with the pilot figure last fall.


Maybe even more exciting to have these freed. They feel like resin castings rather than formed plastic mold pieces. Very hard plastic.




Dunno if those are maker's marks or something related to the molding process.


And again on this one just below the white surface remnant.


Very odd, and worth the wait to finally get to look these over.


Space Tank had come loose prior to my obtaining the set and I was overjoyed. Soft plastic chassis with hard plastic dome & painted operator figure.



Also marked Made in Taiwan. Box inking states Made In Hong Kong, so perhaps the toy pieces were fabricated in Taiwan and then the sets assembled, painted and boxed in Hong Kong.


M-48 Patton tank chassis.

Saturday, August 17, 2019

Larger Sized Spaceman Figures by Marx, Tim Mee, MPC, Multiple Toymakers, Archer, Ajax, Glencoe, Shadowbox, and Iron Curtain Made "Unknowns"





Had all six of the large Marx Apollo astronauts as a kid, slowly getting them back. Also set out their smaller sized equivalents, the white figures from either the "Giant Martian Landing" or "Galaxy Command" sets, the orange versions from "Star Station Seven". Preparing a separate post on just the larger Marx figures and their 70mm analogs. The five inch MPC guys at opposite are wearing flight suits with crash helmets, the Marx figures have pressurized EVA suits. Blue dude at center vended from the Cape Kennedy gift shop, obtained from its sole original owner, an awesome score with documented provenance ... For a plastic spaceman? Yes.



The red MPC guy with the pistol is different. Red dude at half-squat in front Russian made. White one next to him described as a Buck Rogers figure from Hungary. Larger Tim Mee Gemini Suit spacemen to the right.


Yeah, he's just different. Different helmet, different suit design, different facial characteristics. 


Tim Mee Gemini Suit guys reaching out with right hands. Silver and green variants believed to be of fairly recent production, the white one late 70s.



Still need to find six-inch versions of Flag Guy and Square Scoop Dude. Behind them are the biggest Hing Fat type spacemen I've encountered and are unknowns. If anybody recognizes them from being of a particular release or set PLEASE give the high-sign in comments. MPC and Tim Mee Geiger Counter guys at left for comparison. Metallic green figure by Archer, black figure wearing helmet by Ajax, and the gray one in middle back a recent copy by Glencoe.


Left: Marx "Giant Martian Landing" Camera Guy.
Right: MPC Camera Guy.



Tan figures at upper right are Marx produced Japanese WW2 soldiers, next to them a Shadowbox Toys Nordic Alien female. It was late when shooting the pix & video, may add to this yet. 

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Marx Toys Operation Moon Base "Prime Mover" ATV Space Tank + "Car of the Future" Rocket Sedan + Small Plastic Tank



My video is incorrect in one aspect: The blue shaded Moon Base vehicles were also issued in the 1968 "Apollo Moon Landing" and 1972 "Giant Martian Landing" playsets. So I've included one of the white castings first introduced in "Giant Martian Landing" on the outside chance the vehicle was from either of those later sets. The 1977 "Galaxy Command" and 1978 "Star Base Seven" sets had the white vehicles.







"QUICK! GRAB ON ..."


Now for the forensic study of the three vehicles from the video.






Unlike the other two vehicles below there are no markings on the tank which I can discern.


A look at the interesting variable axles.





Totally badass and the new gem of my space vehicle collection. Now to find the trailer & one of the rockets it hauled ...


Unknown smaller tank, very hard plastic, year and make/model unknown.









Absolutely love this thing and have already used it in some of my art. I am fairly certain it is one of the "Cars of the Future" range of mid 50s Marx vehicles, sold both as individual units from countertop boxes and in collected sets. Mine came from a vendor specializing in estate sales.






;]


Definitely original as its wheels are outside of the axle braces. The 4 also suggests it may have been part of a boxed collection of vehicles, though sadly the vendor was unable to supply any information other than it came from an estate sale.




I'm puzzled by the odd pattern to the roof and have wondered if it might be evidence of restoration work. One would think that if the car had been crunched (stepped on would be the likely story) an effort would have been made to use the broken pieces to rebuild it, but they look to be of a different color. Any insights are welcome in comments below.