When I was a kid, every now and then when I was accompanying mum doing the grocery shopping, she would splurge a dollar and buy me a Matchbox car. I loved playing with my Matchbox cars. My friends and I would drive them around on the floor, make garages out of wooden blocks, do incredible stunts, and generally have an awesome time. One of the best times I remember was at a friend's house when we played on top of an enormous mound of dirt and we carved a winding road from the bottom all the way up to the top. The road was well made in my opinion, and even the tight u-turns were broad enough to drive a semi-trailer around them.
Because I liked Matchbox cars so much, one of my favourite books was Mike and the Modelmakers, which described the Lesney factory in London where Matchbox cars were cast out of a zinc alloy, sprayed with paint, baked to dry them, then assembled with the plastic parts and packaged up to be sent all over the world for kids like me to play with.
When I was about 24, my father was digging around the house to lay some drainpipes down. To his surprise he kept digging up old Matchbox cars that had been smashed into strange shapes. He rang me up to ask me if I knew anything about it, and I had to confess that indeed it was me who had smashed them all, then buried them to hide the evidence. Dead cars tell no tales, or so I thought.
You see, a friend and I had been crashing the cars into each other when it occurred to us that if we hit the cars with a brick it would make them look like real car smashes! Awesome! So we took some cars and snuck around behind the rainwater tank where the grownups never went, got some bricks, and started smashing. The first couple were disasters, we smashed them far too hard and either turned them into pancakes or broke them into tiny fragments. After that we became a bit more nuanced in our destruction and we mastered the caved-in side, the dented fender and the crumpled bonnet. Every weekend we'd scurry off and smash up a few more until most of those cars I'd loved so much were ruined.
My family was, of course, outraged when they found out a couple of decades later what we'd been up to. I think Dad was faintly amused, Mum was cranky because she thought of those cars as hers because she'd paid for them, and my older siblings were enraged because some of those cars had originally been theirs and this was so typical of the sort of stuff that spoiled younger brothers get up to. To attempt to heal the wounds I've been giving my mother a new Matchbox car every birthday and Christmas since my crimes were discovered, but it's really not the same.
These days I have a small collection of Matchbox cars myself, mostly older vintage cars from the 30's through to the 50's since the style is so classic. I also have one or two bizarro-cars, like the one shaped like a toilet, or the replica Oscar Mayer Wienermobile. The Wienermobile used to sit on my desk at work as a conversation starter. When you've moved to a new city and you have a Real Job for the first time and you're trying to make new friends and get to know people, having a tiny hotdog-shaped car on your desk is great! People can't help asking about it. And then you can sing the Oscar Mayer Wiener song for them and everything! I'd never heard the song in person except from an American friend who knew it from his childhood, but that was good enough for me.
It got me into trouble once though, when the local section head (my boss's boss at the time) was chatting to us and for some reason that I can't recall mentioned that he was taking mineral supplements because he had a zinc deficiency. At that moment, all the useful info from Mike and the Modelmakers flashed back into my head so I said to him, "Would you like to suck on my Wienermobile?"
You should have seen the look on his face!
Sunday, June 21, 2009
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8 comments:
I have to confess that I too have a love for Matchbox or Hot Wheels cars. I had so many as a child. I'm not sure where they ended up. I remember burying a number of them because I was playing "land slide" in the backyard at my parents house. I now collect them as a "grown up" hobby. Mostly American Muscle Cars like the Plymouth Roadrunner or Chevy Nova and some older Hot Rod models like the '32 Ford Deuce or '49 Mercury. I like this as it is mostly inexpensive as they rarely cost over $3. But I also think it's a link to my younger days. When life was care free and all that mattered was the acquisition of that next Matchbox car.
Nice entry Pete. It made me smile.
Thanks Jamie. "Landslide" eh? Sounds like it was good fun!
possibly best entry yet! i have to confess my cars were kept in pristine condition - lack of imagination or obssive perfectionism. take your pick.
Wow, you kept your cars in pristine condition? That is amazing. Were there not inevitable casualties in the war on tedium? Didn't some sustain bent axles from being trodden on by a clumsy parent? Weren't some clogged with sand from weeks buried in the sandpit before being unexpectedly excavated by a family pet?
I realize that I was being wantonly destructive by hitting them with bricks, but it's hard to imagine how I could have enjoyed them at all without some collateral damage.
My matchbox cars were in superb condition, all collisions were done in glorious slow motion and to the best of my recall none were ever left outside to be tarnished by the elements. However I did twist Luke Skywalkers head off (accidently) and Voltron (both of them) are rather battered, which is partially due to their functionality. If they were less, well functional, they'd be in better shape.
Later my radio controlled car was testament to my inability to drive and I broke the entire rear end off one. But that was a design fault of tamiya's. I mean why would you hold on your engine, and rear gear box by 4 measly screws into woefully inadequate graphite composite?
Oh yeah, slow-mo collisions! I hear you! I was right into the slow-mo collision. In fact, it was taking the slow-mo to its logical extreme - the still life - that got me into this whole brick-smashing thing. Po-mo slow-mo.
I'm sorry to hear that you accidentally twisted off Luke Skywalker's head. That must have been traumatic. I never experienced anything like that personally, though I did once see Han Solo's head get rubbed against a brick wall until his hair wore off in a strip down the middle, like a reverse mohawk. It wasn't done by Han's owner either - it was that day that I resolved to never bring my toys to school.
I also remember a wheel coming off a car. There's nothing quite so irritating as a flimsy toy that breaks the first time you try to use in the manner suggested by the picture on the box.
Fantastic entry!! God I wish I had known you as a kid - sounds like we played exactly the same way. I created a junkyard/wreckers yard for any old cars that started falling apart and used a hammer, brick or even dropped them off the second floor of our house onto concrete to 'accident damage' them, and the same fate for any of those that were doubles (usually gifts from distant relatives). I've also been trying to remember the name of the book I read at least once a week the entire time I was in primary school, and you've solved that riddle for me!!! Thanks so much - I'm going to try and find a copy to buy somewhere now. I still have a huge collection of matchbox cars/buses/trucks/places - most of which are boxed and as new even though they would have travelled the equivilant of 200,000+ scaled kms, and love to look at them from time to time and remember when I'd spend an entire weekend playing cars - even just by myself! I'm now married have our first baby on the way - I'm hoping that they will love cars as much as I did and I can pass on (most of but not all - I'll keep a few original) my cars to them to be enjoyed once again! Cheers - Drew (Australia - drewza@optusnet.com.au)
Drew! Oh my god - it's you!
Wait, no, I'm thinking of someone else. Still, glad to have brought back some happy childhood memories of mayhem and destruction. And how good was that book????
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