Archive for May 9th, 2008

The Five Worst Motion picture Toy Tie-Ins Of All Time
Since Star Wars, each movie made comes with some form of tie-in. Many of these have become collectible and many have been forgotten. There were also some pieces of merchandise begging to be made but which somehow never materialized, such…

forcebeam.jpgSince Star Wars, each motion picture made comes with some form of tie-in. Many of these have become collectible and many have been forgotten. There were also some pieces of merchandise begging to be made but which somehow never materialized, such as the When Harry Met Sally Vibrator (with realistic fake climax sounds) or the HAL 9000 Home Automation Kit (”Open the refrigerator door, Hal.” “I’m sorry Dave. I can’t do that”).

Some movies are only about merchandise, essentially 90 minute long commercials for toys (we’re looking at you, Transformers), but this list is dedicated to the childhood disappointment meted out by inferior spin-offs, toys which took the magical promise of motion picture props and crushed it into a wad of plastic disillusionment.

tardis.jpg

Photo [Dave Hicks and Skaro.org]

The TARDIS, 1970s

Ok, not strictly a movie tie-in, but this Denys Fisher made piece of junk was a big disappointment to me when I got it for my birthday. What’s the central premise of the TARDIS? It’s larger on the inside. This flimsy plastic box was not only slightly smaller on the inside, but it didn’t look anything like a TARDIS.

The light on top was replaced by a plunger which caused the inside to spin. Pressing those green and red knobs made the mechanism stop suddenly, and if you timed it right, the interior chamber would hide the action figure within, transforming the universe’s most advanced time traveling device into a cheap magic show prop. Lord knows what Tom Baker thought of his action figure becoming the dolly-bird assistant to a six year old Paul Daniels wannabe.

the_matrix_phone.jpg

The Matrix Phone 2003

The Samsung SPH-N270 was made for The Matrix Reloaded, and as such was an inferior tie-in to an inferior film. The original and ideal Matrix featured the Nokia 8110, an upgraded 7110, aka the Bananaphone, which was a real phone in real meat-world use. The N270, however, was a feature lacking spinoff, complete with green-code-on-black-background digital rain graphics.

Look at it again. The design is like something glued together from Airfix-kit leftovers, a suit’s idea of cyberpunk. Only 10,000 were made, and that was around 10,000 too many.

force-beam.jpg

Photos [jessharper78 and Ebay]

Star Wars Force Beam 1978

Actually, for a knock-off Light Saber, Force Beam isn’t a bad name, but the toy itself was. Essentially just a flashlight with a clear plastic tube, the Force Beam came with either a red or a green light and required the ubiquitous mobile power source of the 70s: D-Cell batteries, which probably cost more than the toy itself.

My brother and I had a couple of these (mine was the green one) and several problems became quickly clear through use. The tubes would buckle and bend, making combat difficult. There was a also a hemispherical plastic cap for the tube. This popped out after a few blows and left a rather sharp edge. The light managed to travel only halfway up the tube unless you were in complete pitch darkness, even with new batteries. And last, they were called Force Beams not Light Sabers. Like any such knock-off, these were designed to cynically cash in on parents’ lack of knowledge. Any kid knows that unless you’ve the real thing, you might as well have nothing at all.

LBC88-01.jpg

Photo [Mr Punch’s Old Toys]

Dinky Star Trek Klingon Battle Cruiser 1977

Yup, I had one of these, too. Actually a pretty good toy, the ‘Klingon’ Battle Cruiser (note the apostrophes on the box) suffered from a poor choice of accessory which would make it impossible to sell this day. It came with a small bag of plastic Photon Torpedoes which could be fired from the ship. See the tiny hole in the top of the bridge? The plastic disc would slot in and pressing one of the lugs on the side would fire it through a slot on the front.

So far, so safe. The thing was, these discs were the exact same size and shape as a Trebor Mint, a British mint something like a Polo with the hole filled in. This meant that you could fire the mints into your friends mouths, with hilarious choking effects.

That’s four, and I’ve run out of ideas already, which means it’s your turn. Leave your suggestions for the worst motion picture toys in the comments. You’ve the whole weekend. On Monday, I’ll pick my favorite and add it into this post. Remember to include links to photos. Go!


Popularity: 1% [?]

Comments No Comments »

DSSSS.jpgIf you encountered this Nintendo DS resold by King Deco, the question isn’t if you would kill it but how. My plan would involve a hazmat suit, the jaws of life and that huge pool of molten steel from Terminator 2. But enough about me. How would you kill this Nintendo DS? [King Deco via ShinyShiny]


Via [gizmodo]

Popularity: 1% [?]

Comments No Comments »

Kodak’s First Digital Still Camera From 1975
Let’s take a trip back to 1975, the year the digital camera was born. Here’s the Gadget Lab entry as it would have appeared 33 years ago: Kodak’s Steve Sasson has come up with a brand new alternative to…
1_Camera.jpg

Let’s take a trip back to 1975, the year the digital camera was born. Here’s the Gadget Lab entry as it would have appeared 33 years ago:

Kodak’s Steve Sasson has come up with a brand new substitute to film. Dubbed “Film-less Photography”, the prototype camera records images and plays them back on a TV set. Sasson hacked together the camera from spare parts: the lens is from a Super 8 movie camera, the image is captured by a CCD (Charged Coupled Device, an array of capacitors which convert light into an electrical signal) and the resulting image is recorded onto a cassette tape. The whole thing is powered by 16 nickel cadmium batteries.

The portable electronic still camera takes 23 seconds to record a 100 line image to tape. To view the picture, you pop out the cassette and slip it into the custom-built playback device. This uses another cassette player and a frame store to boost the image to 400 lines and outputs a standard NTSC signal for use on any television. The Kodak engineers are optimistic:

The camera described in this report represents a first attempt demonstrating a photographic system which might, with improvements in technology, substantially impact the way photos will be taken in the future.

We’re not so sure. Who would want to look at photos on a Television screen? And even with leaps and bounds in technology, I predict that people won’t want to press the shutter and wait for the camera to snap a picture seconds later. We’ll stick with our Instamatics.

Look at that. Even back in 1975 I was moaning about shutter lag in digicams, and they still haven’t fixed it. Check out the history behind the first digicam on Sasson’s blog.

We Had No Idea [Steve Sasson’s Posts via Retro Thing]


Popularity: 1% [?]

Comments No Comments »

I love when life imitates art. A few weeks after a South Park episode where indignant Canadians go on strike and are rewarded with Bennigan’s coupons, indignant Canadian iPod owners go to court and win roughly the equivalent of a meal at Bennigan’s: $44. Why? Because the 1G, 2G and 3G iPods that were supposed to have battery life of up to 8 hours instead delivered a paltry 3 hours, according to two separate rulings in Canadian court. Still up for settlement: the lawsuit by the Canadian gentleman who discovered that his 8GB nano only has 7.45GB of storage. He wants $220, but he’ll take $92. [InformationWeek]


Via [gizmodo]

Popularity: 1% [?]

Comments No Comments »

Before that other Newton, there was Newton, the helpful, friendly housebot. Equipped with an “IBM Computer XT equivalent system,” a “16-bit real-time microcomputer,” and a 20MB hard drive, Newton was kind of like a Computer crammed into the body of…
Newtonstill

Before that other Newton, there was Newton, the helpful, friendly housebot. Equipped with an “IBM PC XT equivalent system,” a “16-bit real-time microcomputer,” and a 20MB hard drive, Newton was kind of like a PC crammed into the body of a cheap R2-D2 knockoff. With baleful orange eyes peering out of a swiveling, saucer-shaped head, watching you.

“You’d be amazed at what he has the ability to do,” the cheesy 1980s jingle promises. But what exactly he does isn’t clear from the video, apart from distracting kids from working on their homework, attempting to scare an obviously sedated baby and comforting an old lady who appears to have slipped into the late, pathetic stages of dementia and loneliness.

As the excellent Paleo-Future blog suggests, fast-forward to 6:20 in the video to experience the Newton theme song in all its glorious, big-haired awesomeness.


Via [wired.com]

Popularity: 1% [?]

Comments No Comments »

Video: How to Make Carrot Juice ‘Caviar’
Maker Faire wasn’t all exploding battlebots and 300,000-volt giraffes. There were food hackers at work, too, like Michael Zbyszynksi, who explains how to make carrot caviar in this video. He starts with a beaker of ordinary carrot juice blended with…

Maker Faire wasn’t all exploding battlebots and 300,000-volt giraffes. There were food hackers at work, too, like Michael Zbyszynksi, who explains how to make carrot caviar in this video.


He starts with a beaker of ordinary carrot juice blended with sodium alginate — a derivative of seaweed — at a ratio of 2 grams of sodium alginate to 250 grams of carrot juice (a 0.8 percent solution).

He then uses a syringe to drop small beads of the solution into a bath of water with a couple grams of calcium chloride dissolved in it. The calcium chloride hardens the sodium alginate from the outside in, giving it a “skin” that holds the carrot juice inside.

After rinsing in plain water, the caviar-like beads are ready to be used as a surprising garnish. Nifty!

Video production: Annaliza Savage. Camera: John Ross. Editing: Michael Lennon. For more Wired video, see video.wired.com.


Popularity: 1% [?]

Comments No Comments »

The WaSnake shelf concept by designer Jean Louis Frechin not only holds your stuff, it also features connectivity that allows it to display news from chosen RSS feeds and even SMS messages. Plus, the whole unit is highly configurable so you could find a spot for it on nearly any wall in your home.

All in all, I love the idea of packing more functionality into each day objects, but I can’t say that I concur with the artist’s description of a “discreet,” visual experience. There is nothing discreet about my naughty text messages being broadcast to everyone in the room. At any rate, it seems that the WaSnake will remain a concept for the time being. [Newlaunches]


Via [gizmodo]

Popularity: 1% [?]

Comments No Comments »

Close
E-mail It