![]() ![]() text: Matt Alt Additional images provided by: Ato Punch, Todd Stadtman, Yutaka Ishida & Kaikodo, Yappy, Alen Yen Updated: 03.12.05 ![]() Yonezawa managed to snag the license for an obscure live-action Go Nagai creation called "Star of Pro-Wrestling: Astekaizer," and created a series of ten or so diecast portrayals of the show's characters. The general response to these pieces remains tepid even today, which is a shame considering how insane the designs are. Their "ZnDc Diecast" series of robots were throwbacks to an earlier age -- in fact, they were little more than diecast representations of old, generic, and tired tin-toy robot designs -- and are as widely ignored by toy-collectors today as they were by children of the day. Yonezawa fought on bravely with a few more releases and even tried their hand at some all-plastic pieces later on, but never recaptured the glory of their years as the lords of tin-toys. ![]() ![]() Astekaizer was an odd television series that featured a live-action story interspersed with animated fight-scenes. Yonezawa sold toys of three Astekaizer
characters in a variety of scales. The standard sized Astekaizer diecast
is an incredibly colorful, insane-looking toy with an unusual missile
launcher placement: the projectiles fire from the soles of Astekizer's feet!
There's also a fairly common "mini-sized" diecast Astekaizer piece, and a difficult to find set of three "REALLY mini" diecasts of Astekaizer, Goriking, and the Mach Beat. Interestingly, and unlike the toys made by almost every other Japanese toy company, the Astekiazer pieces didn't feature a fancy brand name -- they were simply labled as being "made of diecast" on the package. ![]() Shorthand for "Zinc Diecast Robots," the unimaginative name of this series suits the totally derivative nature of the toys themselves. Although they're solid chunks of missile-firing metal, these three little guys are simply diecast renditions of robots in an old tin style. There are multiple color variations of each piece. ![]() Ninja Hattori-Kun was a mid-Seventies comic serial created by "Fujio F. Fujiko," the same two-man team who was responsible for the insanely successful Doraemon series. Although it never reached the commercial heights of Doraemon, Ninja Hattori-Kun was popular enough to warrant both an animated and a horrible-looking live action television show in Japan. The diecast Hattori-Kun toys were sold in at least three versions: "Pocket Gokin," "Junior Gokin" and "Daiya Gokin." The last two terms seem to have been used interchangably for both large and small toys. Yonezawa produced other Hattori-Kun toys as well, including a large plastic "ninja castle" and a "ninja ladder." The Hattori-kun series remains all but unknown outside of Japan. ![]() Yonezawa's Diapet seires consisted of every-day cars, steam shovels, trucks, and other construction equipment. The Rainbowman car and a handful of others seem to be the few exceptions.
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