From Fantastic Plastic"
The Lindberg "Flying Saucer" holds
a place in history as being the world's first injection-molded
science-fiction model. Re-released repeatedly during the 1950s and
1960s, it again hit the shelves in the 1970s in a "glow-in-the-dark"
version, in the 1990s as one of the Golden Age science fiction kits
resurrected by Glencoe Models, and finally in 2011 by Atlantis Models,
which specialized in flying saucer subjects.
The model was also released by Lindberg in the mid-1950s as part of its "Spaceships of the Future" and "Past, Present and Future" collector's sets.
This classic alien "flying
saucer" comes straight from the Golden Age of Little Green Men.
A basic convex disc with a bubble-dome cockpit within which the
big-headed Martian pilot is visible, the craft also featured twin
jet/rocket engines on its "tail," additional engines on its
"rotating" rim, and a pair of "zap guns" for shooting down pesky
Air Force fighter planes. A timeless relic of Eisenhower Era
mythology and paranoia, the Lindberg "Flying Saucer" captures in
plastic the hopes, fears and innocence of Pre-Sputnik America.
From Atlantis.com" Scale
models have been used for the real thing since the earliest days of
film making. So it's rather appropriate that the first plastic space
model was, in all likelihood, the first such kit to be used in a movie.
In 1956 film maker Ed Wood used a few Lindberg flying saucer kits in his
"Plan 9 From Outer Space" minus their jet engines and suspended on
wires. The Lindberg models were mistakenly thought to be spinning Chevy
wheel covers, a myth perpetuated by Tim Burton in his biopic of Ed Wood.
I like this kit. The gold color and the red color of the cockpit is a good idea. See these pictures makes me want to do my own sleeping on a shelf...
ReplyDeleteSleeping on a shelf?
ReplyDeleteThe kit is just on a shelf, waiting to be assembled :)
ReplyDeleteAh!
ReplyDelete