Posts Tagged ‘round 2’

PostHeaderIcon PMB! Interview: Round 2′s Jamie Hood (Part 1)

As both the snap and the glue versions of their new 1:25 1966 Batmobile model kits are now out in the world, and the Deluxe version is just around the corner, I asked Jamie Hood from Round 2 Models some questions about working for a model kit company, the project, his involvement and what’s in store for the 1966 Batman license.

Round 2's Jamie Hood

PMB: Jamie,  what is your job title at Round 2?
JH: Art Director & Brand Manager

PMB: When did you join the company?
JH: I joined R2 in the winter of 2006. We had bought the Forever Fun line of seasonal posable toys and I was the brand manager for those “pop culture” lines. [ed. note: The Forever Fun line makes the Rankin/Bass and Peanuts toys] We picked up slots and models the next year and I moved into managing the sci-fi, fantasy & character lines.

PMB: What did you do before joining R2?
JH: I worked as a graphic designer in the RV industry.

PMB: Is there a typical experience or educational track someone needs to take to work in the plastic models or toy industry?
JH: We’re a small company of 30 employees. Right now we have 11 designers working on multiple product lines. We look for intelligence and adaptability as much as design talent. What’s between the ears can be more important than a portfolio. As far as education, you need to know how to use the Adobe suite [Photoshop, InDesign, Illustrator et al.] Luck & timing and play a big part.

PMB: So let’s talk Batmobile. Bat-fans, collectors and modelers have been begging for a real, licensed, accurate 1966 Batmobile kit for decades. How did it come about for Round2?
JH: One day at a meeting, [Polar Lights' owner & founder] Tom Lowe said to us, “The ’66 Batmobile license is available. Should we pursue it?” And we had to really consider it. We had just entered the recession, and capital was harder to free up. And at that time, it would have been our biggest guarantee license. [Ed. A "guarantee" is how much of a payment goes back to the licensor. It's based on production numbers, not profits or revenues, so if the company sells less than their projections, the licensor still gets their guaranteed fees. A new license can be a huge risk for any company. For a small, fledgling business like Round 2, it can have serious repercussions if it doesn't pay off.]

PMB: Obviously you guys made decision to go with it. How did you take to the project?
JH: I grew up with the show. I love the car.

PMB: What were the biggest challenges with the project?
JH: The hardest part was getting the parts in the box to look like the car. We were working with tool & model makers in China  – people who had never seen the car or an episode of the show. The Batmobile is not part of their cultural history like it is here. Add to that we would go through a project manager who spoke perfect English, but he would then take our instructions and have to interpret them to different people all the time. There were lots of mockups and revisions. During the mock-up revisions there were 500 – 1000 corrections made. Those all take time. Once you enter a licensing contract, it’s a race to get product to market.

PMB: When you started the Batmobile project, how familiar were you with what had come before, the many resin unlicensed Batmobile garage kits that have been released over the years? Had you ever built or owned or had any experience with any of them?
JH: I was aware of them and some were sent to me to take a look at as I developed the kit. Honestly, I wasn’t terribly impressed by anything I saw. Despite the amount of effort put into them, they didn’t seem very accurate to my eye. I couldn’t really find much in them to latch onto.

PMB: When the announcement came out that R2 was going to do something more than just reissue a larger version of the old Aurora Batmobile again – the expectation level in the ‘bat-community’ rose pretty quickly. And with all the mistakes made and apathy that Mattel had shown as far as listening to fans about their 1:18 diecast metal car – many of us were skeptical that we’d ever see a plastic kit with the attention to detail the car deserved. What we got, with no exaggeration, was the most accurate Batmobile scale model ever made. How did you research the car and what was that process like? It’s been written and assumed that you got access to and used Mattel’s [Hot Wheels] digital scans of the full-sized car. But having seen the model, I find that unlikely.
JH: We did not use the Mattel scans. And we didn’t scan and resize the 1:18 Hot Wheels model. The model-toolers were given loads of photos, measurements, models and information to work from.  I thought I could visually correct anything using photo-references. But the details of the Batmobile are so organic that it was difficult to communicate. We had a lot of help from Eric Seltzer [1966batmobile.com] He and his associates had actual measurements and tons of photos of the original car. Any questions we asked were answered with good responses.

PMB: When the pictures came out of the mockups, the Batmobile “community” barraged the forums with a boatload of corrections, opinions, and demands. And then the snap kit was released and certain things had gotten fixed and some others – did not. And while most  modelers and collectors were ecstatic to just have the model, there was an inevitable backlash of criticism about some of the details. What’s your response to the nitpicking?
JH: As long as I can do something about it – the input is good. I saw about 80% of what was being said and tried to do something about most of it. The other 20%… Well, I had to pick the things that were: A) Most important to the look of the car. B) Easiest to modify by most modelers.  So – while things like the batphone pedestal aren’t perfect – many modelers can modify that themselves, so we let it go. But it’s really hard to address issues with clear plastic. So we revised the rear canopies.  We kept pushing back the release date, because I kept asking  for revisions. We were under a lot of pressure to get it done. At one point in the process I lost track of the engine revisions. It doesn’t look anything like the one I sent. The carb looks nothing like the original. The beacon was revised multiple times and they just couldn’t get it right. Looking back, I should have taken apart the mock-up more. A resin mock-up is very fragile and I didn’t want to handle it too much. There were so many things wrong with the test shot – the rocket tubes were mounted facing backwards. There were several “Oh Crap” moments where we had been looking at something for a while and just realized it was wrong. At some point we had to call it and  just get the model out.

Stay bat-tuned for Part Two of Pimp My Batmobile’s interview with Round 2′s Jamie Hood for more insider scoop about the 1:25 1966 TV Batmobile models project, including working with Alex Ross, the upcoming deluxe kit version,  future plans for other bat-kits and more in-progress photos.

One of many photo-reference revision notes sent to the toolmakers by Round 2.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

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PostHeaderIcon Glue Kit In The House.

Yes the diecasts, the Aurora reissue, the slots, the ornament and the snap kit were all cool & fun. But 45 years after it all started – here’s what we Batmobile modelers have really been waiting for. It all starts now.

Polar Lights 1:25 1966 Batmobile Glue Kit

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PostHeaderIcon PL Batmobile Snap Kit Packaging Guest Review

Ed. Note: We’re trying something new. I mentioned that PMB! is getting a major overhaul soon. (Don’t worry, you didn’t miss it. You’ll KNOW.) One of the planned changes is that we’ll be hosting features and articles by guest contributors. Our first article on lowering the 1:18 Hot Wheels Batmobile, by Insane Detailing’s Doug Switz was such a hit, that we want to share more info from our esteemed colleagues in the Batmobile community. Here then, is Kevin White of Bats Inc. with a review of the Polar Lights [Round 2] 1966 Batmobile Snap-Kit packaging.

I received my snap kit today, a gift from a friend back home. Not much has been said yet about the packaging of the kit. I will leave the building review to Scooter as he is already well on his way with that, but I thought it might be interesting to let you all know what to expect upon receiving your model.

1. The window box itself is quite nice, featuring the Alex Ross artwork on four sides and photos of the painted and assembled kit on the back along with small advertisement of the other related Bat kits. On the base of the box is a picture of the slot racing set and of course the UPC. A very attractive box, pretty much suitable for display itself.

2. The paper materials inside include the instruction sheet which, while well done and concise seems a little crowded in some spots. The decal sheet is quite decent. Packaged in it’s own baggie it includes duplicates of some of the more important decals like two sets of speedometer decal for the steering wheel. Kudos to Polar Lights for that! Finally there is the requisite survey/newsletter sign up card and a miniature version of their catalog.

3. The body in my example has some fingerprints and oily residue that both wipe off easily. Even with a few specks of dust in the paint it’s still hard not to marvel (sorry D.C.) at the shine of the paint. My body has a slight flaw in the driver’s side wing top in that it isn’t seated all the way down. A few seconds with some liquid cement, applied from the underside and a little pressure should easily resolve this.

4. The chrome tree is a truncated version of what we’ll see in the glue kit. Again, packaged in it’s own baggie there is a tree for the wheels separated from the beacon and rocket tubes by tissue paper to protect them from rubbing each other and wearing through the chrome during shipping and handling. Also in this baggie are the wheel spinners, pre-painted with red and the white outline my example had two perfect spinners and two that for some reason were slightly bent.

5. The next package contains the body skirts, tires and axles with chassis mounting screws. Although one baggie, the metal parts are heat sealed and separated from the tires as are the tires from the skirts. This is to keep the tires or axles from getting against the body skirts and leaving marks. Again, kudos to PL.

6. The bulk of the interior parts and the afterburner (season one) are contained in the next baggie along with those curious J shaped floor boards which are necessary for mounting the dash section.
7. The rest of the interior parts as well as the grilles and parachutes are packaged together in the next baggie and another baggie contains the chassis pan with it’s turbine engine molded in.
8. Last but by no means least comes the clear tree. This contains the canopies, beacon lens, headlight covers and front and rear lights. More tissue is employed here to separate the forward and rear canopies so they don’t rub each other and scratch. Double kudos for that!
While I feel Polar lights could have a better job on the pre-paint – what they did do is nice and goes a long way towards helping the novice builder in assembling a really good looking model. The kit does have some issues like parts that fit too tightly or too loosely. The spinners, rocket tubes, steering wheel, bat-phone and bat-beam all fit too tight and care should be taken to prevent breakage. Most of these items attach with a half-moon style pin and the pin should be sanded down slightly with an emery board rather than try to rout out a half moon mounting hole. As for the rocket tubes, if you don’t want the chrome scraped off, rout the holes in the deck before test fitting. The bat-phone cord does not stay in place and needs a touch of glue.

All in all it’s a very fine kit and should be an enjoyable diversion for the experienced and the uninitiated alike.
“To the Batmobile…let’s go!”
- Kevin White, Bats Inc.
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