www.geocities.com/TheTropics/Cabana/3826/j2inorbit.jpg
Mr Scott
38th Jedi
ITFC #0304
T.O.M.B. Raider
Mr Scott's Trade Page: http://community.webtv.net/shbeal/gif/index.html
Mr Scott's Halfway Station:
http://community.webtv.net/mrscottmn/MrScottsHalfway/index.html
"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired,
signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not
fed, those who are cold and not clothed."
President Dwight D. Eisenhower, April 16, 1953
Jim
"flyingtiger62" <jim.g...@shawgrp.com> wrote in message
news:1109814352.6...@l41g2000cwc.googlegroups.com...
But I always loved the Jupiter II ship. Seen it in a lot of magazines,
comics, and photos of models as I grew up.
Nice design.
Same goes for Doctor Who. I grew up with the concept, but not the shows. I
saw my first Doctor Who when I was 19 or 20.
I did see a few episodes of "Land of the Giants", though. And of course I
grew up on Twilight Zone and Outer Limits.
But not LIS.
Nice shot. Nice ship. The Trendmasters toy from the late 1990s is a
wonderful toy, and I'm glad to say I have one. I also have several of the
Johnny Lightning die-cast ones. I took one apart and removed the landing
gear and glued the plastic pieces in so I could have one in flight.
Sean.
"Mr. Scott" <mrsc...@webtv.net> wrote in message
news:15348-42...@storefull-3137.bay.webtv.net...
My favorite part of the 3rd season was the Space Pod....dang, I just liked
the heck out of that LEM wannabe....
I always figured that the Robinsons has built it from bits and pieces of
stuff they'd found over time and converted the Chariot space into a
storage bay...then I saw an episode with *both* the Chariot and the Pod,
so that was no-go....
I wish there was a real good 'making of' book about LIS....I'm guessing
the Pod was born due to the popularity of the Flying Sub from Voyage to
the Bottom of the Sea combined with Moon Landing Fever which was running
real high at the time...the Space Pod seems very 'toy-etic' in its design
and would have lent itself to a nice Aurora model kit...*sigh*
Now I'm getting sad that Polar Lights hasn't gone forward with the LIS
'add on kits' that were briefly discussed...Chariot and Pod in scale to
the J2 kit....larger scale versions for more detail...aarrggh.
--
I've been forced to spam-trap my edress.
To email me enter 'tochiro at ix dot netcom dot com' in your 'to' field.
I apologize in advance for making communication less easy.
Fight the Spam! <*> Steve H. Yamato Guru
Jim
Sean.
"flyingtiger62" <jim.g...@shawgrp.com> wrote in message
news:1109880158.9...@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Jim
Several aspects of The Time Tunnel (and possibly Star Gate command as
well) may have also been inspired by the control center in "Fantastic
Voyage." It was released the same year Time Tunnel came out, but it
had been in production for a long time, I think, and production
pictures had been widely circulated beforehand.
-------------------------------------------------
J. Steven York's Multiplex of the Mind
http://york-multiplex.blogspot.com/ BLOG
http://member.newsguy.com/~jsteven/ WEB
L.B. Abbott began his long career in 1926 as a cameraman's assistant.
He became a cameraman in 1943 and worked steadily until the early
1970s. Abbot has filmed many distinguished films, including The Longest
Day, Fantastic Voyage, and The Sound of Music. During his career Abbot
won four Academy Awards, including one for Logan's Run (1976).
In 1943, Fred Serson, legendary head of Fox's effects department, asked
Abbott to come aboard full time. He agreed, joined the team, and
really began honing the skills and talent of a true special effects
master. In 1957, L.B. Abbott was named head of what was now know as
20th Century Fox's special photographic effects department. During the
60s, the demand for photographic effects mushroomed along with the
popularity of science-fiction and, yes, disaster movies. L.B. Abbott
was in the right place at the right time. But, oh my goodness, he
didn't even have a computer! How did he direct the creation of all
those really nifty special effects? The old fashioned way, as is
implied by the title of a book on Abbott issued by the American Society
of Cinematographers. The title of the book: Special effects--Wire,
Tape and Rubber Band Style.
Look at his FILM credits at IMDB. It's long!
Jim