By Peter Varley - images & text © 2000 Like most dedicated scale modelers, my hobby evolved through a series of stages beginning in childhood. Roughly chronicled, these started with the "treat-it-like-a-toy-until-it-breaks" stage, progressed to the "put-a-bit-of-effort-into-it-and-then-blow-it-up-with-firecrackers" phase, moved on to the "hey-this-isn't-bad-keep-working-on-the-technique" period, and culminated with the triumphant "I-think-I've-got-it-maybe-I'll-actually-keep-this-one" era of my mid-twenties. Recalling International Rescue! Anderson would follow this early hit with a string of less memorable, but equally inventive and increasingly life-like programs including Captain Scarlet, Joe 90 and The Secret Service. By this time, however, the magic was somehow missing, and Anderson began the transition to live-action programs, beginning with UFO in 1969 (my own favourite nonetheless) and continuing into the '70s with the visually stunning, but often nonsensical, Space: 1999. Great spaceships for bad actors
Not to be forgotten, too, are the programs which preceded Thunderbirds, and shared with it a delightfully child-like sense of drama and adventure which was lost in later Supermarionation efforts: Supercar, Fireball XL-5 and Stingray also contributed to the inventory of Anderson vehicles, which, as their titles suggest, were the stars of the show themselves. Blowing up new ground
On reflection, I now realize that I owe my fascination with miniature vehicles and my enthusiasm for model building (not to mention my "blowing things up" period) to these wonderful old programs. You can imagine my delight, then, as over a period of years I have been able to accumulate model kits of most of the principal Anderson vehicles, allowing me to literally recreate my favourite childhood memories. (These are, after all, models of models.) Turning toys intro trophies
Thankfully, a few have even become the subject of exquisite, but costly and hard-to-find garage kits, some of which are also represented here. (The rest await a future pilgrimage to London's fabled Comet Miniatures.) Still more recently, several stars of the Anderson fleet have been realized as enormous and extremely expensive "studio-scale replicas." Unfortunately, the truly obsessed collectors to which these kits are pitched must dedicate a) half their annual salaries to acquire them in any numbers, and b) several hundred square feet of museum-quality space to display them. The less inspired among us will simply have to make do with more conventional offerings. Must…get…more…dirt!
A footnote: Without a doubt, the newest boon to model builders in this genre is the Internet, and the proliferation of web sites devoted to science fiction films and TV. These web resources offer superb photos of most sci-fi modeling subjects, allowing modelers to scrutinize their projects from every conceivable angle. With a bit of creativity, small details, such as instruments, illuminated windows and minor hardware items can in some cases be reproduced at high resolution and appropriately sized for special applications on the models themselves. |
These photos appear in chronological order as these programs were produced. Click on each thumbnail to see the larger picture. SUPERCAR ![]() While lovely looking on completion, this Comet Miniatures kit is an unwieldy mass of paper-thin resin and hefty white metal. Kids, don't try this one at home. The Lucite base is from an old aircraft manufacturer's promotional model and nicely adapted itself to this use. STINGRAY ![]() Bandai, straight-from-the-box, with the exception of landing gear fashioned from sprue and a properly-contoured nose cone. TB-1 is mounted on a wire strut embedded in the plaster used for the "mountaintop" base, which in turn was layered over a cookie tin lid. The strut was then concealed in the landing rocket exhaust. Small figure has apparently been foiled trying to fire a laser cannon at an installation below. THUNDERBIRD 2![]() Imai's truly "accurate profile" version, mounted on a picture frame base depicting an airport tarmac surface and -- typical for these scenes -- a police vehicle of incongruous sixties vintage. TB-2 is perched on shortened landing gear struts concealed by landing rocket exhaust. Although nearly invisible here, many hours were spent achieving the correct panel colour variations using pastels. THUNDERBIRD 4 ![]() Imai again, virtually straight-from-the-box, with some minor surgery around TB-3's engine area. One of these days I've got to find a stand-alone Thunderbird 3 in a larger scale. LADY PENELOPE'S FAB 1
![]() Another of those unfortunate spring-loaded, gadget-laden Imai models, but the only one of this strange machine available. Most of these gee-gaws have been successfully concealed on this rendition, except for the crude toy airplane launch ramp smack in the middle of the runway. This has been disguised as repair work in progress (note the crane lifting adjacent runway panels, revealing the structural frameworks underneath). Base is a Lindbergh display case bottom, laminated with a magazine photo of Earth from high altitude, augmented with cotton-batting clouds. ![]() The oldest model I own. An Airfix kit (and much superior to the Imai version), bought and hastily assembled as a teenager, which I disassembled and properly refinished about 12 years ago. Panel lines, as with most of my models, are applied by mechanical pencil. Base sports a section of Cloudbase runway. UFO SHADO MOBILE
![]() This spindly resin and white metal Comet Miniatures rendition is a delight to look at but was murder to build and finish. Mounted on an inverted pie shell form, which was layered in plaster and sculpted into a lovely lunar crater. Modest additional cockpit detailing, mostly in the form of instrument decals. Ring around the launch platform is a length of telephone cord. EAGLE 1 On now to the next kit in my cupboard -- and my first project for a genuine "Century 21" -- a Comet Miniatures UFO Space Intruder Detector! |
This page copyright © 2000 Starship Modeler. Last updated on 5 May 2000.