Another year comes to its end and the newest issue of Figuras en Acción is out for everybody to enjoy it. This time, the articles deal mainly with toys from the 70s, with some bits of 80s and 90s toys as well.
The cover article deals with the figures of Hercules The Legendary Journeys by ToyBiz. In it, we review all released figures including variants plus some other related toys. This article is followed by a shorter one dealing with the 80s bootleg crossover between Masters of the Universe and the Ninja Turtles called Amicable Herculeans.
Spanish Toys are also present this time with an extensive article on the history of Juguetes Rico and his most iconic toy: the Mini-Sanson truck, which is based on the Tiny Tonkas made by Tonka. But was it licensed or a mere knock-off? We discuss this issue as well.
The following article is another superextensive one dealing with the egg-shaped children figures Weebles, with a focus on the Spanish Weebles (made by Brekar), but commenting as well those from Hasbro, Airfix.
Finally, we analyse the Transtech concept of Transformers, what should have been in the early 2000s but it finally wasn´t.
There are lots of other smaller pieces and sections that you will also enjoy. And remember that the magazine can be downloaded for free, as usual, as all the previous issues in our blog.
Rack Toys is a book published by the Plaidstallions website and the Nacelle Company. The object of the book are cheap rack toys from the 70s and early 80s, and most pictures come from the collection of Brian Heiler, whose father used to be toy merchant at that time and made business distributing this particular type of toys.
The book is divided in several chapters, such as superheroes, monsters, TV shows... but the toys shown are so different from each other, that it is a pleasure to pass the pages and let you surprise for whatever comes next. Most of the brands that made these toys were unknown to me, I had only heard about Imperial, AHI, Lincoln or Fleetwood Toys before, and not much about each of them.
The book has almost no text (just the introduction by Brian Heiler and a prologue), and the toys are commented in short captions. This is not very annoying, as the pictures are descriptive enough and there is not much to say about them, but there is something I disliked about the book, and it is that they only focus on very popular themes, leaving out everything else: for example cars and vehicles of any kind (except Batmobiles and co.), starships that do not belong any TV series or dinosaurs. I guess they just wanted to attract the broadest group of toy collectors and chose the most mainstream topics, probably also leaving many other pictures for a second publication.
.jpg)

Wishing you a Happy New Year Gog, I already downloaded this issue, your mate posted it a few days ago! I hope you had a lovely Christmas, and yes, I too, found Brain's otherwise excellent book to be lacking all my favourites! No Army men, not much space and only the stand-out parachute stuff! All power to your Blogging-elbow!
ReplyDeleteH
Hi, Hugh! Many thanks for the comments and for the good wishes! Happy new year to you too! The other blog is also managed by myself, only I let some days pass before I post it here. I think many people are following both blogs, and the chances, this way, are higher that somebody sees at least one of the two posts. Also many friends are spreading the news these first days. It has been a while since I last visited Small Scale World, sorry for that. I will try to pass by more often and leave some comments. Cheers, Juan
Delete