Check this out


and the best of all

really like the colors
*joking*
Moderator: Cajunkraut
Exactly. I see kids in the park with a cardboard cowboy hat, a bit of old rope and a bent stick and to them it's Indy's Hat and Indy's Whip and Indy's Gun. it's just us nerds... erm... I mean 'serious affictionados of adventure genre cinematic collectables' that obsess about the details instead of enjoying the thrill of adventure.binkmeisterRick wrote:For a kid, though, it's perfect. They don't care if the gun is red and blue, or even if it's moulded from a western six-shooter. They'll have just as much fun playing Indy with it (if not more) than us grown up fans being nit-picky with our expensive gear. Kids have the imagination that so many adults seem to lose down the line.
Those kind of kids won't end up here BinkbinkmeisterRick wrote:For a kid, though, it's perfect. They don't care if the gun is red and blue, or even if it's moulded from a western six-shooter. They'll have just as much fun playing Indy with it (if not more) than us grown up fans being nit-picky with our expensive gear. Kids have the imagination that so many adults seem to lose down the line.
The Lucas licensing exec 'may' have been persuaded that it wasn't worth the cost of the tooling (which is substantial - tens of thousands of dollars) to the costume company and let it slide. They probably did the same with Hasbro and the Akator set, that is mostly a reuse of a ROTS playset.binkmeisterRick wrote:
Kt, since you work in this kind of industry, is it cost effective to tool up a new gun for a toy that might not sell well enough to offset the costs? Knowing that Indy toys in the past haven't faired so well in the long run, you think LFL would prefer to save money by cutting corners as such? It makes sense to me, but I don't manufacture toys, I just play with them. ;-)
Its funny you say this. The first thing I thought when I saw the colored gun was 'man,I'm glad I'm not a kid these days!' I don't know 'bout you, but when I was a kid, I could tell the difference between a goofy lookin' red/blue/green/whatever colored toy gun and one that looks more realistic. I always went with more realistic..binkmeisterRick wrote:For a kid, though, it's perfect. They don't care if the gun is red and blue, or even if it's moulded from a western six-shooter. They'll have just as much fun playing Indy with it (if not more) than us grown up fans being nit-picky with our expensive gear. Kids have the imagination that so many adults seem to lose down the line.
They don’t color them that way for the kids; they do that for the soccer moms (because a red and blue pistol is less violent than a black one).Texas Raider wrote:Its funny you say this. The first thing I thought when I saw the colored gun was 'man,I'm glad I'm not a kid these days!' I don't know 'bout you, but when I was a kid, I could tell the difference between a goofy lookin' red/blue/green/whatever colored toy gun and one that looks more realistic. I always went with more realistic..binkmeisterRick wrote:For a kid, though, it's perfect. They don't care if the gun is red and blue, or even if it's moulded from a western six-shooter. They'll have just as much fun playing Indy with it (if not more) than us grown up fans being nit-picky with our expensive gear. Kids have the imagination that so many adults seem to lose down the line.
TR
Same here. It always bothered me as a kid that the top bash of my cheap hat was rounded (tear drop) and not straight like Indy's. I even remember as a 5 yr. old, trying to make it straight, but the wool felt apparently didn't feel like cooperating.Those kind of kids won't end up here Bink . I wouldn't have picked that thing even when I was a kid I've always been VERY picky (hence my presence here lol)
Even I had a hat that looked nothing like Indy but I was well aware of it