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Gorgo release date?

7.6K views 41 replies 22 participants last post by  Anton Phibes  
#1 ·
Has a release date for Monarch's Gorgo been set?
 
#6 ·
Its been a long time. Scott is aware of this. He doesnt live in a different universe. Crummy comments we (all) at one point in time or another have made wouldn't incentivise me to move forward.

In fact, it might have the opposite effect and bum me out. You know--make me give up on the whole thing altogether. I hope Scott isn't swayed by our griping and gives us Gorgo. 2037? C'mon.;)

But let's look at something and weigh it out. Gorgo was announced at a set price a few years back. Cases were probably pre-ordered at that price. In the interim~ gas, groceries, clothing, and just about everything else has gone up. Plastic models probably are no exception. So---would we be happy if it finally saw release, but had to be 49.99 instead of 29.99? I am sure we would cry.:cry: Its all the majority of "fandom" does is complain. I AM GUILTY TOO. I have been really upset some items got scrapped and some others are (still) delayed. A lot longer than Mama Gorgo. :rolleyes:

If he never makes another kit---I am glad we got the Ghost and Nosferatu. I think Gorgo was going back on track when I last emailed Scott. Just keep your fingers crossed, think happy thoughts and try emailing Scott directly at monarchmodels@outlook.com . He's a great fella---but he's just one guy. He aint Mattel folks. :cool:

Maybe its a darned if you do, darned if you dont scenerio?:confused:
 
#11 ·
Thanks, I will be modeling soon also, I am married now, bought a big home in Brockville ont, my hobby room is 16 ft x 16 ft, had no room in my previous condo.We just moved in 5 weeks ago, we are almost done the renovations.
Brockville population is 23,000, reminds me of the 1960's, with Mom and Pop stores, our home was built in 1960, so my vintage kits are very happy now hehehe.

Randy
 
#17 ·
Just got this from Scott to share with you guys....
To share with the greater hobby community, here is where we stand;

My artist and friend Gary is still AWOL, so we are forging ahead with the talent and dedication of Sir John Graziano, artiste extraordinaire. John and Gary are Monarch family, and both will take a strong role in keeping the art work bustling at Monarch. We also take great pride in featuring the talent of Douglas Klauba.

During my absence last year, the OEM in China underwent major restructuring and the tools have been dusted off and delivered to a new and hopefully more responsive OEM.
Our new OEM is very anxious to do the job right and quickly.
We are very anxious to demonstrate to the hobby community that Monarch is not a passing ship in the night. We are committed to the long term. The customers will tell us when it is time to pack it in.

Our OEM has pinned September as a production start date for the Vampy and Jekyll kits, Gorgo, and possibly a glow Ghost. A delivery date prior to Christmas is achievable if production in Sept is met.

2014 has a few great possibilities with the cyclops at the pattern stage, the moonsuit leaving the drafting table for the pattern dept., and a very VERY cool new kit to fit the Adventure Series #2 kit. There is never a shortage of great ideas, only time.
Scott

:wave:
Denis
 
#29 · (Edited)
Wellll--- actually that name is Aurora's. Dencomm just resurrected it. They made a great feral cat and cage, skeleton, and new rabbit. Which I love. And I will buy anything else they release in styrene. But I would buy those same kits even if they were named "The Fascinating realm of Happy Harpy the Hand Puppet",lol.

But I personally couldn't care less if the "Sceners" kits or BlueSky helper's kits, or "Graveyard Scenes" kits are "official" releases or not. As far as most collectors are concerned they just want neat kits and couldnt care less about legalitites. I dont wanna come across as argumentative, expecially not with Resin the Barabrian, but hear me out. Every time someone brings up monster scenes kits....here comes the "TM" symbol and it inevitably winds up being a huge downer.

I, for one, say bring on the kits. Because with or without a "sanctioned" or "TM", we need new kits. Besides, no one seems to give a rat's hiney whether or not a resin kit is a garage kit or licensed. they just want quality. Why does this "TM" crap constantly rear it's head whenever Monster Scenes are mentioned? Put down those pitchforks and torches, pilgrims---I am just stating my opinion on this.

If Dencomm ever makes the Dungeon and Animal Pit, I will buy several of each. But all of this "TM" stuff, and Dencomm owns it, is , well---ridiculous. because all my vintage Aurora's dont have a dang thing about Dencomm on them. It also may be one of the reasons Monarch hasn't gone forward with these yet after all this time. :cool::cool: Just sayin'.
 
#38 · (Edited)
Rob, I don't think the CONSUMER missed the boat at all! :rolleyes: Should not really get TOO mad at dealers on eBay either, supply and demand setting prices is a reasonable way to do business. In the past Scott (when he was actually posting here directly) was very PROUD to report how quickly his products were COMPLETELY selling out. IMHO that is a VERY flawed approach; the only way to know just HOW MANY of ANYTHING ( alarm clocks, widgets, what have you ) you might be able to sell is to have remaining inventory; i.e. if you do a run of 5,000 units and after a certain amount of time sales slow to a crawl and you have about 1,000 units left, then you mark down the thousand to be done with them and the NEXT time you can make an INFORMED choice about just how many widgets (or GLOW widgets, or widget MKII, you get the idea) to make. If you make 2,000 and SELL 2,000 quickly,then retire the tooling, the amount of POTENTIAL sales lost are IMPOSSIBLE to measure. Also, if the widgets start selling on eBay for MORE than you were making on them, rather than begrudge them (the eBay sellers) their success, make MORE widgets. See, back to supply and demand. The only thing I can figure is Monarch is basing the size of their kit runs on how many units will fit in a shipping container from China. WHICH, btw I am pretty sure how EVERYONE does it; Moebius, Revell, Round 2, EVERYBODY. For the FIRST run. And THEY pretty much ALWAYS produce MORE than they EXPECT to sell. Sometimes a kit is just a HUGE seller right out of the gate and a second run is almost immediately ordered, or in some cases even planned BEFORE the first one ships; pretty sure this was true of the 4 window Moebius Seaview and more recently the Round 2 1/350 TOS Enterprise. And NONE of them REFUSE to do a second run of ANYTHING out of so-called "loyalty" to the "collectors" who purchased from the first run (OBVIOUSLY this does NOT apply to the tinbox/lunchbox/hatbox etc stuff Round 2 and Tom Lowe are enamored with, but you see my point). Anyway, just an INFORMED opinion , NOT based on ten plus years of selling little plastic heads on the internet (those I DO NOT keep in stock, but rather make to order, but then I am THE manufacturer, THE distrbutor AND the retailer and little heads do NOT require instructions, so THAT has NEVER been a delay for me. :p) Rather, the ten plus years BEFORE that working in retail sales, distribution and wholesale distribution. Some of this does NOT require tons of time or a huge staff, just a little bit of common sense and the ability to learn from your mistakes. Otherwise, good money CONTINUES to be thrown after bad. :thumbsup:
Tom
 
#39 · (Edited)
And THEY pretty much ALWAYS produce MORE than they EXPECT to sell.
Tom
Which is why, I suppose, we can still purchase pristine copies of Famous Monsters of Filmland over 50 years after they were printed.

I only took two quarters of economics, so my knowledge of the business end is limited. It would be difficult to predict which characters and sculpts would sell even for an experienced business person. The Ghost is a wonderfully realized sculpt, but not even based on a literary or cinematic character. It came solely from the minds of its creators, and the kit proved enormously popular (for good reason, I might add. It's off the coolness meter). I wasn't interested in Nosferatu at first, even after seeing the sculpt. But like the fungus in a silly B movie, it grew on me.
Now I look forward to buying a couple of Gorgos and Hyde / Vampires just because I know Scott and his friends will deliver an exciting fun kit.

In short, I can't criticize or second guess how a business person operates (though I'm stunned that my idea for a classic voodoo zombie hasn't been snapped up). I can only give a:thumbsup: to those who take the risk and continue to make our hobby so thoroughly enjoyable.