As CreatureScape
readers are well-aware, modeling is not an inexpensive hobby. At a
bare minimum, a decent resin kit from a reputable company will run
50-60 dollars, and the average would be well over $100. Add in tools,
paints and time, and we could easily spend thousands on this hobby we
love.
But that wasn’t always
the case. When I started building models, resin and vinyl kits were
virtually non-existent. Airbrushes and moto-tools were unimagined
luxuries, glue came in red and white tubes and paints came in little
square bottles with “Testor’s” on the cap. My first kit was ancient
even in 1972… Monogram’s 1/72 scale Curtiss P-36 Hawk. I doubt that I
paid more than 75¢ for it, and the finished product was hardly worth
bragging about. But I was instantly hooked on a hobby that I still
enjoy 35 years later.
In those days I
built everything and anything… from the crappy Hawk box-scale
airplanes, to Monogram TBF Avengers with a torpedo that actually
dropped from the bomb bay, to Aurora’s Russian Golf-class Missile
Submarine. I even tried my hand at the Visible Eye… and wound up with
something not even Lasik could save. But given my natural affinity
for the monsters, it was only a matter of time before I found the
fantastic monster kits from Aurora.
Anyone who was a
regular reader of Famous Monsters in the ‘60’s and ‘70’s will remember
the ads for these kits . . . Dracula and Frankenstein, the Wolf-Man
and the Mummy, the skeletal Prisoner of Castle Mare chained to the
section of dungeon wall, even a scraggly-toothed, wart-nosed witch,
hard at work stirring a bubbling cauldron. Famous Monsters #59,
November 1969, lists several of the monster kits in the
Glow-in-the-Dark style for the princely sum of $1.49 . . . quite a bit
of money when you consider that you could get a perfectly good
airplane or car kit for half that.
But the monsters of Aurora were hard to
ignore, and, as soon as I saw one for sale at my neighborhood
Pic-n-Save, I had to have it. It was, luckily, my favorite
monster, the Mummy. But I wouldn’t have cared which monster I
wound up with… I just wanted one of them. Somehow, I came up
with enough money to buy it. How, I’m not sure; I am sure that
it was no mean feat on a dollar a week allowance. How much I paid for
the kit is a mystery; I doubt I could have told you the next morning
the price of the model. I had one, and that was all I cared
about.
When I got home
with my prize, I rushed to my room and opened the box. The figure
seemed huge compared to the kits I was used to building, though simple
to assemble… a definite plus at that stage in my modeling experience.
I can’t recall much detail about the kit, other than the Mummy was
undeniably Kharis. I don’t remember what color plastic it was molded
in, or how good the quality was. I just remember the joy of building
it.
I later added
other monsters to the collection, as well as some of the MPC Pirates
of the Caribbean kits. There was a Tarzan along the way, as well as a
Spock, a Batman, and others. Eventually, Aurora folded, the monster
kits went away, and I returned to the B-17G’s, M60A1’s, and Federation
Starships that I loved.
Now, some thirty-five years later, those Aurora monsters are hot
collector’s items, going for thirty to fifty dollars, unbuilt.
Companies such as Polar Lights have issued their own versions of those
kits, and high-quality resin and vinyl monster kits abound. These
kits, especially the latter, are so far above the old Auroras in terms
of quality and accuracy that comparing the two is akin to comparing a
’78 Ford Pinto to a brand-new Mercedes S-class. I just wish I could
afford them.
Yes, the new kits
are better in terms of quality, better in terms of accuracy, better in
terms of choice of subject matter. The only thing they don’t do
better is inspire joy and wonder in the mind of an eight year old boy.