
What can I say? --I loves me a post that opens with Frankenstein. (Alfred E. Numan in this case, is just gravy.) When the issue of Mad that sported this cover hit the stands in 1964 the first wave of the original styrene Monster craze was in full swing. The old Aurora factory building in New York (pictured below at the time of it's demolition) was working overtime to meet the demand. Funny, I had always pictured "Aurora's New York Factory" to look more like a Johnny Vita background painting from a Bakshi Spider-Man episode. I guess it sorta does, still --the trees sorta threw me.



The ultra-cool thing here is --check it out--it's a different Drac kit! Too much like Bela?... Or did it just lack that "Comin' atcha" quality the Aurora kits were famous for?



MORE ORIGINAL ART : Monsters of the Movies series
Here's some more great Aurora original paintings and drawings...Starting off first with the original painting of the early 1970's Monsters of the Movies series Dracula kit.

And the Canadian version of the same kit, which featured a much more Bela-looking Drac.

Likewise, here's the Monsters of the Movies series Wolfman original painting.

And as it appeared on the box with a finished kit.




THE VICTIM!
I could really do a whole post just on this one kit alone. It single-handed helped dismantle and ultimately spell doom for the Aurora Monster Scene line. Even the image on the box has the feel of a lurid sixty-cent paperback on a wire rack in a Valdosta Truckstop. Even more insane is the proclamation emblazoned on the box "Rated X... for Excitement!" Jeez, who approved that??


It wasn't long before public outcry led to The Victim being retitled as Dr. Deadly's Daughter (Which I always thought, if the role is the same... Isn't this actually kinda worse?)
Still-- her, and the remaining Monsters Scenes stock mere presence on on store shelves
was controversial enough to create protests of Aurora that continued even after the company was sold to Nabisco. As you might imagine, the new cookie-mogul owners were less than thrilled at the prospect of inheriting a sleaze-merchant moniker along with their toy factory acquisition. It was the beginning of the end really.
Some of the revised art below by Dave (X-Men) Cockrum.

Here's the resin recast of this infamous gal in the form it's available from Monsters In Motion.
With the blonde paint job she sorta looks like a blood-drained bit player in a same-era AIP movie.

MORE ORIGINAL ART: Aurora Monster Scenes

THE GIANT INSECT

One night when I was ten I went out for Dairy Queen ice cream on South Cobb Drivewith the Cagle twins (Gary and Larry) and their mom. On the way home we happened to stop at Gibsons department store --just to look around I suppose. But when I walked up on the below display in their toy section I knew my world was changed forever.


I wish I had access to more of the original box paintings from these great 1970s kits, but so far it's limited to just the ones posted below.

AURORA TRIBUTE KITS
As good as the James Bama box paintings were they seldom matched the mood or the pose of the kit contained within. This bothered some folks more than others. I guessin' it REALLY must've bugged this next group of fellers. A few years ago they started to release a series of "Aurora Box-Art Tribute kits every few months. These beautifully meticulous --if not extravagantly opulent-- kits are available through Monsters in Motion in Orange County, if you dare...
THE BRIDE



THE WOLFMAN






THE PHANTOM



JEKYLL and HYDE



KING KONG



This kit by Dark Horse is in "Aurora shoulda-woulda-coulda" catagory.



"FANTASY AURORA KIT" BOXES
Over at Morbidmonster.com, Pete Von Sholly and Co. have taken the whole "what if?" Aurora query to a whole different level. For the past few years they've been regularly churning out "Fantasy Aurora kit" boxes as shrink-wrapped works of fine art. (Now if we can just get them to spend a few years tooling all the parts to go IN these boxes we'd really be in business.) Below are just a few examples of the kind of product they have to offer at present.









Whew! Allright I'm spent.
For what it's worth, this was going to be a two-part post with the second part being all the Aurora Tribute and fantasy-kit stuff but,... screw it. I've been admittedly lax in posting this Spring (for various reasons) so just consider that I'm making up for lost time. More exotic oddities cool art and and general weirdness coming soon, so stay tuned...
Big kudos and a tip of the hat for this post goes out to Steve Iverson, Cult TV man, Mike Talemal, Pete Von Sholly, Dave Cockrum, KitBuilders Magazine, Monsters in Motion and ...somebody else I probably forgot.
Man, if they'd ever really made that Invisible Man kit....Great post. Only thing I woulda added was that panel from, what was it, FF #89, where the Thing catches the voodoo'ed Sandman (who'd just run afoul of Agatha Harkness) and remarks about how he looks like an ad for Aurora Plastics!
ReplyDeleteAlways a great blog.
ReplyDeleteIts worth noting that the Aurora Jekyll kit will be out in May from a company called Moebius Models. www.moebiusmodels.com
And their are several detail kits coming for that model to convert to a Barrymore Hyde, a March Hyde, and even an Invisible Man figure.
Cult
thanks for this post. really exceptional research and images Clay.
ReplyDelete*although i was holding out for some images of that Star Trek model i had when i was a kid with Spock phasering that hydra-like creature. that was Aurora wasn't it?
Nice She-Creature. They should do a whole AIP series and include the giant pickle from Venus in It Conquered the World.
ReplyDeleteThis is beautiful...!
ReplyDeleteMy mother urged me to throw the packages away after building the models. One of the true great losses of my life... :-(
Does anybody happen to know where I could get really high quality scans of the original monster kits?
Thanks!!!