Showing posts with label Movieviewer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movieviewer. Show all posts

Schtroumpf V35 Movie Viewer (Mupi)



Schtroumpf V35
Mupi
1981

Ah, Schtroumphs. Such a classic cartoon. I don't think I watched all nine season of it, but I certainly have fond memories of the earlier seasons - At least through three or four (if not more). It was and still is one of my all time favorite 80's cartoons.

For those of you scratching your head wondering just what the heck a Schtroumpf is, it's French for Smurf. If you're wondering what a V35 is, it's a format of cassette. Put them together, and you get Smurf cassette.

Though it was a highly popular cartoon in the 80's, the Smurfs actually began way back in 1958 when artist Peyo introduced them as a comic series. Over the decades of their existence, hundreds of Smurfs have been created for comics, television and even movies - Each with an adjective based name which essentially dictates their personality.

As is the case with a highly popular franchise merchandise is inevitable, and Smurfs have seen a ton of it. Figures, comics, clothing, food and pretty much every other type of merchandise you can think of. Today we're looking at the Portuguese Movie Viewer from Mupi.

Readers of The Toy Box will remember us covering the Kenner Movie Viewer in detail a few years ago. The Mupi V 35 viewer is similar to this design. It was a rectangular plastic box which you inserted a plastic cassette into, and turned the dial while looking through the viewer.

 Schtroumpf V 35 Movie Viewer

The back of the box advertised, or more accurately listed six different cassettes which you could purchase. Each one featured its own Smurf related story. A fun fact of these cassettes is that they utilized Super 8 film - A highly popular method of film of the era which superseded VHS tapes. Of course being a simple viewer device, none of the cassettes featured any sound.

 Le Geant affame (The Giant Starves)*Soupe De Schtroumpf (Soup of Smurf)
Les Schtroumpfeurs De Pluie (The Rain Smurfs)

How horrible! The first tape is about a starving giant, and the second about Smurf soup? Yikes!

 La Potion Magique (The Magic Potion)*La Schtroumpf Robot (The Smurf Robot)
Les Schtroumpfs Et Le Petit Prince (The Smurfs and the Little Prince)

We've seen only a handful of these available via secondary markets in the USA, and fortunately they're reasonably priced considering their age and that they were only available overseas. For $200.00 you can not only get the viewer but all six cassettes - In their boxes. That seriously isn't bad.

Mupi has produced numerous versions of their Movie Viewer, each with different themes and cassettes. Though we won't be going into any others today, we'll be sure to touch on them in the near future.

***BONUS***

Smurfs Vinyl Records and Cassettes
Sessions / Starland
1978 - 1983

If you're a child of the 80's, a Smurf fan or both, chances are high you owned at some point in your life owned (or like us still do own) Smurf vinyl records or cassettes. No, these aren't story's which you could read along to, but rather full fledged music albums with original material - Well, except the Christmas album.

Though Smurf albums are still made here and there to this day, it's the ones from Sessions / Starland which hold a special place to most collectors. As we said above, a lot of Smurf collectors owned these albums, and grew up with them as kids.

Father Abraham in Smurfland (1978)*Smurfing Sing Song (1980)*The Smurf's All Star Show (1981)
Best of Friends (1982)*Smurfs Party Time (1983)*Merry Christmas with the Smurfs (1983)

Here's an interesting liner note for the first Smurf Album, Father Abraham in Smurfland - It features a song called Smurfing Beer. We suppose this is due to the fact that alcohol is served somewhat regularly to young kids in some foreign countries. As such, this wouldn't be as taboo a subject as it is in the USA.

These days you can track down the cassette versions of these albums for relatively cheap. We actually purchased all of them for just a buck from one seller about a year ago. Surprisingly all but two of them played without any issue. That's pretty amazing for cassettes which are over thirty years old.

Of course vinyl is also an option - Though it will cost you about five to six dollars an album, and some of them are a little difficult to find.

Unfortunately these were never released on CD, and chances are high they won't ever be. However, there are multiple options for (legally) transferring records and cassettes to digital, and then burning them to a CD. Of course, first and foremost you need to own a copy on either of the two available formats.

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Movie Viewer (AKA Movieviewer) (Kenner)



Movie Viewer
Kenner
1975 - 1979

Kids these days don't know how good they have it when it comes to media entertainment.  Back in the 70's, we kids were lucky if our parents were rich enough to purchase video cassettes, let alone the VCR to play them on.  Back in those days, your average VCR cost about $1,300.00 - in today's standards, that's about $5,000.00.  In fact, the standard format of what most people call a "video cassette" didn't even come about until 1976 when the first VHS cassette VCR was developed and marketed in Japan.  This wouldn't hit US shores until October of 1977, and your average movie would set you back anywhere from $50.00 to $100.00 (the first released were M.A.S.H., The Sound of Music and Patton).

During this time, companies such as Ken Films, Blackhawk Films, Castle Films, and other such companies were appeasing movie fans at a much cheaper price with 8MM, Super 8MM and 16MM reel to reel films.  However, with this cheaper price came reels that only included selected scenes of films, some of which ran for as little as two minutes.  The first batch of films started out as black and white silent films, but as time progressed the various companies would also produce films in color, and eventually with sound.

So how does all of this come together for Kenner's Movie Viewer?  It's simple really.  It was a way for Kenner to market movies and television to children in a cheaper format, which in turn could be used to market more toys.  If children had the ability to watch film strips of television shows or movies, this in turn would make the action figures based on said films more marketable.

Each Movie Viewer cassette came in a bright red plastic casing, which inside featured a strip of 8MM film that contained approximately sixty seconds of footage with no sound.  A spindle with a groove on the side of the cassette would catch on the Viewer's knob mechanism when it was inserted into the side of the "machine", and turning the knob manually with your hand would cycle the film in a continuous loop.

Using pretty much the same technology of a View-Master, the mechanism would allow the person to hold the machine to their eye, looking through the small "lens" on the back side at the film.  Light would shine through on the other side of the chamber, providing just enough illumination to see the film inside.  It was essentially a self powered 8MM projector for kids, and we loved it!

Kenner began its Movie Viewer series in 1975 with the highly popular Snoopy Movie viewer.  It would be the first of many Viewers over the course of the 1970's, and worked so perfectly that up until the time it was discontinued, the design never changed.  Sure the Viewers came in different colors with various sticker logos on them, but the basic design stayed, as did the design for the red cassettes.

The Snoopy series encompassed twelve individually packaged cassettes, and one which was only available with the Viewer itself.  Each cassette was numbered at the top of the box portion of the package, and also included the name of the film.  The only exception to this is Slide, Snoopy, Slide, which was packaged with the Viewer, and thus did not have its own individual box.  The Viewer itself was green with a yellow crank knob.


Snoopy Movie Viewer with Slide. Snoopy, Slide Cassette


MOVIE CASSETE
1) I'll Be A Dirty Bird
2) Good Grief
3) Roll Over Beethoven
4) Snoopy's Garage Sale


MOVIE CASSETTES
5) Chow Hound Snoopy
6) Skateboard Olympics
7) Blockhead's Bobble
8) Hang On, Snoopy


MOVIE CASSETTE
9) The Easter Beagle
10) Sherlock Snoopy
11) Lucy Vs. The Masked Marvel
12) Curse You, Red Baron

Kenner followed up with the highly popular The Six Million Dollar Man Movie Viewer (also in 1975).  This particular Viewer featured a blue color, with white crank knob, and had six individually packed cassettes.  The seventh cassette, The Crash...The Creation of the Bionic Man, was packed in with the "machine" itself.


The Six Million Dollar Man with The Crash...The Creation Of The Bionic Man Cassette


MOVIE CASSETTE
1) Bionic Feats
2) The Bionic Man In Action
3) Col. Steve Austin Adventures


MOVIE CASSETTE
4) Col. Steve Austin In Pursuit
5) Bionic Rescue
6) Col. Steve Austin Tackles Danger

In an attempt to gain interest from young girls, Kenner also produced the Bionic Woman Movie Viewer that same year.  The Viewer itself featured an all red look with the exception of the white crank knob.  Only three individually packaged cassettes were produce with an additional fourth cassette, If The Shoe Fits..., which was packaged in with the Viewer.  It unfortunately never really took off for girls.


The Bionic Woman Movie Viewer with If The Shoe Fits... Cassette


MOVIE CASSETTE
1) C'mon, Jaime
2) Attempted Escape
3) The Bionic Woman To The Rescue

In 1976, Kenner released six Cartoon Cassettes which featured;

1) The Flintstones: Hold That Tiger
2) Hong Kong Phooey: The Clutching Claw
3) Scooby Doo: Scuba Scooby
4) Great Grape Ape: Gridiron Grapple
5) Pebbles & Bamm Bamm: What A Figure
6) Speed Buggy: Love Buggy

Out of all the Movie Viewer products that Kenner produced, these six Cartoon Cassettes are the most difficult to track down.  We've seen about half of them, but none of them had the original boxes.  If anyone has any of the above in the box, please send us photos.  We are happy to credit anyone who contributes.  Please send all photographs to thetoybox1138@gmail.com.  Thank you.

Enter, Star Wars...

These days it's relatively unheard of to have access to a film (legally) while it's still running in the theater, so when Kenner released one of its first products based on the film, kids and adults went nuts.  Despite being only sixty seconds of footage, fans of the film were eager to see anything and everything they could over and over and over again.  What better way then in the palm of your hand?

Despite its major popularity, Kenner only produced four individually packaged cassettes, and the fifth, May The Force Be With You, which came packaged with the Viewer.  There's no real answer known to the general public as to why there were so few cassettes, but we speculate that when the film took off like it did, Lucasfilm and/or Fox pulled the plug on the cassettes to encourage people to continue to fill theater seats.

With the exception of the Star Wars logo sticker, this model was the exact same as the Six Million Dollar Man released version from 1975.


Star Wars Movie Viewer with May The Force Be With You Cassette


MOVIE CASSETTE
1) Destroy Death Star
2) Danger At The Cantina
3) Battle In Hyperspace
4) Assault On Death Star

The final Movie Viewer can be traced to one that we've already mentioned - Alien.  From the start, Alien products from Kenner were facing an uphill battle.  The science fiction/horror film may have been doing great in theaters, but the rated R film was far from marketable to children - At least back in those days.  If parents weren't taking children to see the film in theaters, why would they buy them a hand held cassette player with sixty seconds of footage from the film?  Well, long story short, they didn't.

After a very short lived shelf life, Kenner pulled the plug on all its Alien related products, leaving this Viewer with only the one cassette it came packaged with - Alien Terror.  This was sadly the last Movie Viewer Kenner would release in general.  The Viewer was given one final paint job of dark gray with a white crank knob.


Alien Movie Viewer with Alien Terror Cassette

During the popularity of the Movie Viewer, Kenner also explored other avenues which would make use of the same cassettes.  These included the Six Million Dollar Man Bionic Video Center and Snoopy Drive-In Movie Theater.  These two particular items incorporated the same hand cranked knob technology, but also contained a small screen that would project the film on it from behind.  This was made possible with three "D" cell batteries which powered a bulb inside.

Much like the Movie Viewers, Snoopy's Drive-In Theater came with its own unique cassette, Woodstock's Dream House.  The Six Million Dollar Man Bionic Video Center included a prior released cassette, Col. Steve Austin Adventures.  It contained a seat in front of the screen that you could place your Col. Steve Austin doll, but the doll itself was not included.

These days it's incredibly difficult to track down the majority of the Kenner Movie Viewer cassettes, especially mint in the box.  They're just not as readily available as the Viewers themselves.  Oddly enough, while the Star Wars Viewer and Cassettes seem to pop up more often than the rest, they also seem to have the higher asking price - Probably solely for the Star Wars name.

Fisher Price competed with their owner Movie Viewer which was much more successful on the market, and lasted well into the mid 1980's.  However, this was probably because they also had a far superior library of cassettes which extended to franchises such as Sesame Street, Disney, and several cartoons of the era.

Join us next time when we take a look at Kick-Ass 2!

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