Sunday, March 03, 2019

Review: Big Jim : A World of Adventures



As a kid of the early 1970s, Big Jim rocked my world. I'm also happy I have video evidence of me receiving a Big Jim for Christmas in 1974.



As you can see, I'm pretty happy with the guy. As a lover of collector books, i've always felt Big Jim was kind of ....underserved. (more after the jump)




I have beautiful books on GI Joe, Star Wars, Mego etc but Mattel's man of action never got much love. That's why I'm so excited about this, even if it's entirely in French. 

Yes, Big Jim: un Monde d'Aventures is from France, not surprisingly though considering that after leaving US toy shelves in 1976, Big Jim would enjoy massive success in Europe for another decade, becoming a Spy, a pirate, a cowboy and eventually heading off into outer space. 




Despite this language barrier ( Trust me my French is at a "D student in ninth grade" level) I still heartily recommend this book because it is just wall to wall eye candy!




Author Pascal Pinteau has gone above and beyond with this and created a 286-page publication that explodes with colour. Toy pictures, catalogs, comics all merged into a buffet that I'll admit, had me checking eBay.


All of Big Jim's eras are covered including his early development at Mattel including a fun part about how he was marketed in the United Kingdom as a spy known as "Mark Strong: The Man from M.A.T.T.E.L". Mark Strong even had his own comic book and this wouldn't be the last time Jim got a comic in foreign countries.


The Wolf P.A.C.K era (one of the most popular iterations of Big Jim, especially if you're me) gets loving coverage and includes several prototype items that didn't make it to market. I had never seen this stuff. 





Pascal has tracked many former Mattel employees and interviewed them at great length,  you get a wonderful visual window into this lines origin, different incarnations and even what the future held. There are so many little fun  surprises here, I don't want to spoil them.

Fans of "Masters of the Universe" will really enjoy the many connections Big Jim had to the line, from character designs to just plain old recycling (Mattel is the king of that), it's a fun bit of history.



But that's not it, Pascal also spend hundreds of hours creating fun dioramas, These beautiful shots give the book a wonderful "Wishbook" feel and well, it truly adds to the charm. Here is a behind the scenes shot of one of those dioramas and below is an exclusive widescreen shot.




Pascal has clearly written the best book on Big Jim ever done but more importantly, it's one of the nicest collector publications I have ever seen. The attention to detail on this book is an example of how much love was put into this, if you like Big Jim, you should get this.




Now if you'll excuse me, I have some interviews to try and translate.




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5 comments:

YesterdayIsNow said...

Cool book! Wish someone would make one for other now obscure lines like Adventure People.

Not sure about that artwork for "The Pack" though. Looks like a bunch of scruffy, stoned ex-cons. What's with thet 1000-yard stare they've all got? Doesn't really say "hero." I feel like I have seen this artist's work for Marvel, but not sure who it is. Not Kirby, is it?

Plaidstallions said...

It is Kirby and the original concept was that they were Ex-Cons now reformed under the leadership of Big Jim. That later came out in the wash though.

YesterdayIsNow said...

Ah, got it. I don't remember seeing any Big Jim merchandise in stores in the late 70s. Must have just missed it.

Anonymous said...

"It is Kirby and the original concept was that they were Ex-Cons now reformed under the leadership of Big Jim. That later came out in the wash though."

That sounds [ A LOT ] like the plot of the 1980s TV show, The A Team [R].
I doubt that the writers of the A Team ever saw this Big Jim, ex-cons story, though. :D

Plaidstallions said...

Well techinically the A-Team got it from the "Dirty Dozen" with some "Doc Savage" sprinkled in for good measure and so did Big Jim.

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