Tag Archives: Hasbro

Cool Movie Toys: San Diego Comic-Con 2019 exclusives

The 50th annual San Diego Comic-Con is finally here, beginning with a preview night Wednesday before it kicks into high gear Thursday. The bigger it becomes (it’s already massive, with a reported average of 130,000 fans from all over the world), the more stars it seems to attract, particularly from the superhero, sci-fi and horror movie realms.

And while throngs of fans descend upon the San Diego Convention Center’s famed Hall H to see panels of stars from upcoming films and perhaps some teaser footage not available anywhere else, there’s a large contingent of fans also attending the annual gathering to get some exclusives: toys and collectibles not available to the general public.

This year’s offerings features a gaggle of new and cool movie playthings, including action figures of actors being produced for the first time, including NECA’s retro eight-inch action figure of the villainous “Karate Kid” coach Kreese (Martin Kove), which comes on the heels of releases of eight-inch figures of Daniel (Ralph Macchio), his coach, Mr. Miyagi (the late Pat Morita) and Daniel’s chief rival, Johnny (William Zabka), as seen in the 1984 film.

Fans who purchase the Kreese figure will also get another special opportunity: to meet Kove, who will be on-hand at NECA’s booth to sign packages of the miniature version of himself. In addition to the Kove figure, NECA’s SDCC exclusive offerings include a special “etched” seven-inch version of Pennywise the Dancing Clown (Bill Skarsgard), just in time for the release of “IT: Chapter 2” in September; and a seven-inch scale figure of the young version of John Connor (Edward Furlong) and his motorcycle from the 1991 blockbuster “Terminator 2: Judgment Day.”

As NECA’s offerings prove, there’s a big enough market for action figures from classic films to justify the release of action figures of them, even if only in limited quantities.

Continuing its “Jurassic Park” legacy line of three and three-quarter-inch figures in the past year, figures of paleontologists Alan Grant (Sam Neill) and Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern), as well as mathematician Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum) have already been released, Mattel is about to debut a figure as a SDCC exclusive: Jurassic Park founder John Hammond (the late Richard Attenborough). Hammond’s figure not only features packaging that looks like the gateway to Jurassic Park, it includes a stand that holds a cracked open egg with a baby dinosaur.

Images: Hasbro, Mattel

While some toy and collectibles companies are concentrating on releasing exclusive products of vintage movies, others are concentrating on more modern fare. Among them are Hasbro, which is selling an exclusive “Star Wars” Black Series six-inch figure of a Sith Trooper (think of Stormtrooper’s armor, but molded in red), the first new character being revealed for the December film “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.”

Also being offered by Hasbro are pair of six-inch figures from the Marvel Cinematic Universe: The Collector (Benicio Del Toro) from “Guardians of the Galaxy” and Grandmaster (Jeff Goldblum) from “Thor: Ragnarok.” While the exclusive figures are packaged separately (with their respective movie title treatment), they are being sold as a set. Per Marvel lore, the Collector and Grandmaster are brothers, after all.

The San Diego Comic-Con runs through Sunday.

Copyright 2019 DirectConversations.com

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Interview: Director Jon M. Chu talks ‘Jem and the Holograms’

Aubrey Peeples and Jon M Chu on the set of 'Jem and the Holograms' (photo -- Universal Pictures)

By Tim Lammers

Jon M. Chu has always been a resourceful filmmaker, dating back to his childhood when he shot mini-movies in his backyard with G.I. Joe action figures — experience that became particularly helpful when he made “G.I. Joe: Retaliation” a couple years back.

Fortunately, the “Jem and the Holograms” director also had sisters with “Jem” dolls, that yes, were featured in his movie mix. Talk about a guy with foresight.

“Since I was surrounded by sisters, we had a lot of ‘Jem’ dolls in the household. We had a giant bucket of toys and we would always fight over them,” Chu told me, laughing, in a phone conversation Thursday. “Jem was definitely included in the movies, out in the dirt with G.I. Joes. Those dolls got really, really dirty, but there was some glitter around, too.”

Opening in theaters nationwide on Friday, Chu’s feature film version of “Jem and the Holograms” — a live-action adaptation of the Hasbro animated TV series/toy line — stars Aubrey Peeples as Jerrica, a small-town California teen who in a month’s time is catapulted from an underground Internet video sensation to a global rock star.

Signed by a conniving music agent, Erica Raymond (Juliette Lewis), Jerrica, marketed as a mysterious girl named Jem, quickly gets caught up in the pitfalls of fame, and her sisters/fellow band mates Kimber (Stefanie Scott), Shana (Aurora Perrineau) and Aja (Hayley Kiyoko) become her biggest casualties on the way to the top.

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Clearly, Chu, 35, is not one to shy away from challenges, and his film resume validates that. He’s done everything from dance movies (“Step Up 2” and “Step Up 3D”), documentaries (“Justin Bieber: Never Say Never”) and of course, action adventure with “G.I. Joe: Retaliation.” Basically, he’s of the mind that any type of film genre is fair game.

“It’s so fun, but it’s also really scary,” Chu said. “By doing different types of films you learn about what you’re capable of doing and what you need to get better at, but I love that. I got into storytelling to be able to jump into different worlds and absorb myself in those worlds. When I did the ‘Step Up’ movies, I didn’t know a lot about dance — I had done some dance shooting but not in that world — so I absorbed myself in it and now people think I’m a dancer or a choreographer because of it.

“When I got into Justin Bieber’s film I didn’t know who Justin Bieber was but now I’m an expert,” Chu added with a laugh. “With ‘Jem,’ it was really fun to be able to take this beloved ’80s cartoon and try to translate it for a new generation 30 years later.”

Part of translation, Chu said, was to not throw viewers into the world of the plot of the animated series, but go back a bit further to examine how Jerrica was before “Jem and the Holograms” — and then introduce them to more familiar territory.

“In the ‘Jem and the Holograms’ cartoon there is a band called The Misfits that wants to destroy them, and not just in a band wanting to beat another band sort of way. They want to destroy them by trying to kill them,” Chu explained. “When you bring that to live-action, something like that just seems crazy and you just can’t throw that on an audience (new to the story). So we knew from the start, ‘Let’s get there. Let’s just take our time and build the story.”

To build it, Chu said, you have to start with a strong protagonist. “The No. 1 thing in a movie is that you have a great character that you can root for, cry for and celebrate with, so we changed our focus to make it less about ‘Jem and the Holograms’ and make this more about Jerrica,” Chu said. “We’re looking at the girl behind it, sort of like ‘Batman Begins’ to ‘Jem and the Holograms.’

“Once we changed the focus, it freed us of sticking to the stuff of the ’80s, and helped us look at who this girl is now, and how she would become famous now; how she lives her life and express her identity now. That’s allowed us to make a great story and follow a great character,” Chu added. “We slowly but surely infuse the crazy world of ‘Jem and the Holograms’ in the story, but as the story gets crazier and crazier, you still have a person at the foundation of it that is a girl that you relate with and you know.”

Of course, to bring that vision to life, Chu needed a capable perform to not only act the part of Jerrica, but sing the songs of Jem — and he feels extremely fortunate to have found that person with “Nashville” series star Peeples. “I hadn’t watched a lot of ‘Nashville’ before making the film, so when she walked into audition room, I just went, ‘Whoa,'” Chu said of the 21-year-old actress. “She has everything. She sings and is an amazing actress, and outside of that, she lives a real analog life. She drives a VW Bug that almost got towed the day she auditioned for us. She was everything you would want Jerrica to be in a natural, real way … whether she knew it or not, she had an analog style about her that works in a digital movie.”