(He was killed in this year's issue #76.) The Iron Grenadiers and a Cobra civil war dominated the comic story. (He had long since switched sides in Marvel's comic series), and Serpentor was nowhere to be found. Consequently, the new Storm Shadow was now a Joe. Without the cartoon, the comic dictated the path of the toys. (Such a repaint, named Wreckage, was released in 2003.) In addition, Tripwire, Duke, and Flint were absent from the prototype photos. Wild Bill was originally to pilot the Tiger Fly, a repainted Skystriker was planned and eventually replaced by the Rattler, and there was also to be a Tiger Force Rip Cord and Sabretooth, a repaint of Firefly. There was also a change in the figures and equipment that would constitute Tiger Force. Quite a few of them are different, or a different color, than those pictured in 1988's catalog. There may have been some last-minute changes with the figures' accessories. Many figures packaged in 1988 and early 1989 came with small tubes of camouflage paint. The action pack trend continued, as well as the practice of releasing a heavy-duty mail-order exclusive figure (this time not an actual celebrity). Some inequities were balanced out in 1988 Cobra got a space vehicle and an astronaut, and the Joes got a new plane to fight the Mamba. Toward the end of the year, the Tiger Force was released, featuring nine repainted Joes and one original one, with several "Tiger" vehicles and a distinctive paint scheme. In late summer, Toys "Я" Us carried its own exclusive mission team, Night Force, consisting of repainted figures from the previous year, as well as several vehicles repainted black with orange highlights. Destro split off from Cobra and formed his own army, the Iron Grenadiers. Special forces multiplied this year: Battle Force 2000 started the year off with its own vehicles. There was a mix of traditional and futuristic looks, with many new figures, but also many recognizable faces. Forty-five figures and 42 vehicles were released. So Rows 492-510 are other directors to producers who mostly get Honorary Awards from the Academy.The year 1988 saw the largest release of G.I. Final Updated: The last row are other directors or producers that mostly won Academy Honorary Awards. Newest Update: I add Stanley Donen under the rows of script writers due to he won an Honorary Award while making Academy Award films without being nominated. Update: Under some of them are thanks to Executive producer credits by them for other Academy Awards films New Update: I now add their Academy Award nominated and winner films under some of them. For those who's film were nominated for Best Foreign Language Film are still declared film legends in their country and also Oscar Legends like Best Foreign Language Film winners. For those whose has their films won Best Foreign Language Film are being declared a film legend (or film legends) to that country while the Oscar they and the producer got for their country will be in the country's national museum. Also, some of these directors had their films nominated or won Best Foreign Language Film and had some of their other films nominated for other Oscar categories. The first five in each rows are who I think are the greatest Oscar legends of all them. The reason for James Cameron is due to his reputation and is declared a selfish and cruel director. He and Mel Gibson are my least favorite Academy Award winners of direction, but I like some of there films (Aliens, the Termanitor series, Titanic and a little of Braveheart). Also I added James Cameron in low part of the winners. Also Mel Gibson, Spike Lee, Seth MacFarlane (the new) and Randall Wallace are my least favorites of them. Rows 1-137 are Oscar winning directors, rows 138-286 are nominated directors, rows 287-402 are famous animated people, rows 403-491 are notable famous script writers.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |