Joustra: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Joustra1.jpg|upright=1.6|thumb|"You need to go on a diet!"]] | [[File:Joustra1.jpg|upright=1.6|thumb|"You need to go on a diet!"]] | ||
'''Joustra''' was a French toy company, a subsidiary of Ceji (Compagnie Générale du Jouet), that held the license to | '''Joustra''' ("Jouets de Strasbourg") was a French toy company, a subsidiary of Ceji (Compagnie Générale du Jouet), that held the license from [[TakaraTomy|Takara]] to distribute ''[[Diaclone]]'' and ''[[Micro Change]]'' toys in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany in 1984 and 1985. Following a brief interlap during with both Joustra-branded ''Diaclone'' toys and [[Milton Bradley]]-branded ''Transformers'' toys were available in the same European markets in 1985, Hasbro/MB signed a deal with Joustra that gave Hasbro unrestricted access to all the figures Joustra previously held the license for. In return, Joustra provided their facilities to Hasbro/MB and manufacturered several ''Transformers'' toys for the European market. | ||
==Connection between Milton Bradley and Joustra== | ==History== | ||
Joustra was founded in Strasbourg, a city in the east of France, in 1934. The name "Joustra" is an abbreviation for "Jouets de Strasbourg", which translates as "toys from Strasbourg". In 1969, Joustra was purchased by Compagnie Financière Edmond de Rothschild, who incorporated it into the Compagnie Générale du Jouet (CEJI, "general toy company"), who also purchased model kit manufacturer Revell around 1979 or 1980. | |||
In 1984, Joustra began distributing its own ''Diaclone'' line in France, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany under license from Takara. Despite its title, the line included not only figures from Takara's ''Diaclone'' line, but also from the ''Micro Change'' line. Because Takara was mainly focused on producing ''Transformers''-branded toys for Hasbro's North American market from 1984 onwards, this resulted in some bizarre transitional releases, with toys featuring factory-applied [[Autobot]] or [[Decepticon]] [[insignia]] [[sticker]]s being sold in Joustra ''Diaclone'' packaging. Following the first wave in 1984, 1985 saw the release of a second wave of Joustra ''Diaclone'' figures. However, in 1985, Joustra's parent company Ceji ran into severe financial difficulties and thus struck a deal with Hasbro. As a result, the 1985 Joustra ''Diaclone'' figures are considerably rarer in the aftermarket than the 1984 wave. | |||
In 1999, Joustra was purchased by French model kit manufacturer Heller, and is now known as Heller Joustra SA. | |||
===Connection between Hasbro/Milton Bradley and Joustra=== | |||
[[File:G1devastator toy.jpg|upright=1.75|thumb|left|Yellow-bellied coward!]] | [[File:G1devastator toy.jpg|upright=1.75|thumb|left|Yellow-bellied coward!]] | ||
In 1985, [[Hasbro|Hasbro Bradley]] introduced the [[Transformers brand]] to continental Europe through their subsidiary [[Milton Bradley]] (MB). Besides Spain, all the countries the MB-branded ''Transformers'' toys were available in were the same countries where Joustra was distributing its ''Diaclone'' line under license from Takara. This meant that any toy released by Joustra was off-limits for MB due to Joustra's exclusive contract with Takara. Since this also included Autobot leader [[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys|Optimus Prime]], Hasbro/MB instead declared [[Jetfire (G1)|Jetfire]] (a non-Takara toy that was thus not affected by Joustra's pre-existing license) Autobot leader for the time being. | |||
The | When Joustra's parent company Ceji came in financial trouble in 1985, they struck a deal with Hasbro/MB.<ref name="confirmed">[https://20thcenturytoycollector.com/posts/2012/04/17/mbhasbro-and-ceji-theory-confirmed/ "MB/Hasbro and Ceji theory confirmed"] at 20th Century Toy Collector.</ref> The first part of the deal saw all existing unsold Joustra ''Diaclone'' stock being provided to Hasbro/MB, with the toys taken out of their packaging and put into ''Transformers'' packaging, with new sticker sheets added. This allowed for a second wave of MB-branded ''Transformers'' toys that were not part of the initial line-up, and which can all be traced back to a Joustra ''Diaclone'' figure. The hurried schedule also resulted in several oddities, such as the MB version of [[Tracks (G1)|Tracks]] being red (the toy's original ''Diaclone'' colors) instead of blue (the regular ''Transformers'' version's colors), [[Thundercracker (G1)/toys#Generation 1|Thundercracker]] being sold in [[Starscream (G1)/toys#Generation 1|Starscream]] packaging with Starscream's [[sticker]] sheet, and, most bizarrely, [[Sunstreaker (G1)/toys#Generation 1 2|Sunstreaker]] (whose toy, in its yellow Hasbro ''Transformers'' color scheme, was part of Joustra's ''Diaclone'' line-up), being sold in [[Sideswipe (G1)/toys#Generation 1 2|Sideswipe]] packaging with Sideswipe's instructions and sticker sheet. | ||
Following the release of the Joustra ''Diaclone'' figures as MB-branded transformers, the packaging for European ''Transformers'' releases saw the branding changed from "MB" to "Hasbro", even though in many countries, the local MB subsidiaries still handled the distribution of the toys. As the second part of the Hasbro/Joustra deal, several of the 1986 European ''Transformers'' were actually ''manufactured'' by Joustra to fulfill Hasbro's massive demand for ''Transformers'' product. Oddly, the packaging for these figures alternatively credits them to Joustra, parent company Ceji, and even Revell (misspelled as "Revel"), which was another Ceji subsidiary at the time. Similar to the MB-branded figures, these Ceji-manufactured figures also included bizarre oddities such as ''yellow'' versions of the [[Constructicon (G1)|Constructicons]] (not to be confused with the later, non-combining European 1992 releases of the Constructicons, or the 1993 ''[[Transformers: Generation 2 (toyline)|Generation 2]]'' versions), Optimus Prime with red feet (which even exists in MB-branded packaging), or [[Pipes (G1)#Toys|Pipes]] as a straight redeco of [[Huffer (G1)#Toys|Huffer]], rather than a [[retool]] like the US release (nicknamed "[[Puffer]]" by fans; not to be confused with a similar Huffer-in-Pipes-colors release by Mexican manufacturer [[IGA|Plasticos IGA]], which was later also available in Europe). Some of these Joustra-manufactured ''Transformers'', such as Megatron or red-feeted Optimus Prime, were not only available in continental Europe, but also in the United Kingdom (in English-only packaging). | |||
{{-}} | {{-}} | ||
==Joustra ''Diaclone''== | ==Joustra ''Diaclone''== | ||
<div class="center">[[File:Joustra Diaclone Logo.png|none|350px]]</div> | |||
[[File:Joustra Minibot Murder.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.3|Trust us, those little bastards had it coming.]] | |||
As alluded to above, Joustra's iteration of the ''Diaclone'' franchise bore little resemblance to its [[Diaclone|Japanese namesake]]. In addition to combining product from multiple Takara toylines, Joustra's ''Diaclone'' notably featured more robust fictional support than the original, replacing pretty much all art assets for new packing illustrations and an elaborate pack-in comic called "''Duel on Diaclona''" (''Duel sur Diaclona'') by future animation industry legends {{w|Paul and Gaëtan Brizzi}}. This comic saw the Brizzis throw out Takara's "space troopers versus bug aliens" conceit entirely, recasting the robots themselves as the main characters on the exotic robot planet "Diaclona," where the heroic truck robot "Diaclone" and his mostly-car forces did battle against the evil forces of the tyrant "Multiforce 14" and- hey wait a minute. | |||
Much like how Takara's Italian licensee independently named their toyline "''[[Trasformer]]''," the timeline of who was copying whose homework or whether the similarity of conceit comes down to simple convergent evolution remains less clear cut than it would immediately appear, and a definitive answer is potentially lost to the sands of time. One thing that is clear, however, is the influence Joustra's ''Diaclone'' exerted on Takara's American efforts, with the names developed for the [[Powerdasher]]s being ported directly into ''[[Diakron]]'' and subsequently ''Transformers'' itself. Shortly thereafter, Joustra's name for ''[[Micro Change]]''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s Watch Robo inadvertently inspired the entirety of the ''[[Kronoform]]'' toyline. | |||
{{--}} | |||
===Wave 1 (1984)=== | |||
{| style="margin-left:1em;" width="100%" | {| style="margin-left:1em;" width="100%" | ||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Mini-Cars | |width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Mini-Cars'''</u> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
* | *9600 Trans Am (pre-[[Windcharger (G1)#The Transformers|Windcharger]]) | ||
* | *9601 Truck (pre-[[Huffer (G1)#The Transformers|Huffer]]) | ||
* | *9602 Pick Up (pre-[[Gears (G1)#The Transformers|Gears]]) | ||
* | *9603 Cheetah (pre-[[Brawn (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Brawn]]) | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
| | | | ||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>''' | |width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Change Attacars'''</u> | ||
<ul> | |||
*9604 Van | |||
*9605 Cheetah | |||
*9606 Turbo 2000 | |||
</ul> | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Cars wave 1'''</u> | |||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
* | *9607 Toyota 4x4 (pre-[[Trailbreaker (G1)#The Transformers|Trailbreaker]]) | ||
* | *9608 Ambulance (pre-[[Ratchet (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Ratchet]]) | ||
*9609 Porsche 935 (pre-[[Jazz (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Jazz]]) | |||
*9610 Ligier (pre-[[Mirage (G1)#The Transformers|Mirage]]) | |||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
| | | | ||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Dashers | |width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Dashers'''</u> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
*[[Aragon#The Transformers|Aragon]] | *9613 [[Aragon#The Transformers|Aragon]] | ||
*[[ | *9614 [[Zetar (G1)#The Transformers|Zetar]] | ||
*[[ | *9615 [[Cromar#The Transformers|Cromar]] | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
| | | | ||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>''' | |width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Mini-Cassettes'''</u> | ||
<ul> | |||
*9620 Jaguar (pre-[[Ravage (G1)#The Transformers|Ravage]]) | |||
*9621 Condor (pre-[[Laserbeak (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Laserbeak]]) | |||
</ul> | |||
|- | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Other'''</u> | |||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
* | *9611 Diaclone Truck (pre-[[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Optimus Prime]]) | ||
* | *9612 F-15 (pre-[[Starscream (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Starscream]]) | ||
* | *9622 Camera Robot (pre-[[Reflector (G1)#The Transformers)|Reflector]]) | ||
*9623 Robocolt (pre-[[Browning#Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers|Browning]]) | |||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
| | | | ||
|width="20%" valign="top"|< | |width="20%" valign="top"|<br> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
* | *9641 Cosmocar | ||
* | *9642 Diatrain | ||
* | *9650 Multiforce 14 | ||
* | *9655 Kronoform (pre-[[Autobot (G2)|Autobot]]) | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
|- | |} | ||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Cars wave 2 | {{-}} | ||
===Wave 2 (1985)=== | |||
{| style="margin-left:1em;" width="100%" | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Cars wave 2'''</u> | |||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
* | *9656 Countach (pre-[[Sunstreaker (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Sunstreaker]]) | ||
* | *9657 Fairlady racing<!--The lowercase spelling of "racing" is not confirmed, by matches the spelling of similar suffixes on other 1985 Joustra packaging.--> (pre-[[Smokescreen (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Smokescreen]]) | ||
* | *9658 Jeep (pre-[[Hound (G1)#The Transformers|Hound]]) | ||
* | *9659 Fairlady police<!--The lowercase spelling of "police" is accurate to how it's printed on the toy's packaging.--> (pre-[[Prowl (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Prowl]]) | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
| | | | ||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<br> | |width="20%" valign="top"|<br> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
* | *9660 Lancia Stratos (pre-[[Wheeljack (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Wheeljack]]) | ||
* | *9661 Corvette (pre-[[Tracks (G1)#The Transformers|Tracks]]) | ||
* | *9662 Camion grue<!--The lowercase spelling of "grue" is not confirmed, by matches the spelling of similar suffixes on other 1985 Joustra packaging.--> (pre-[[Grapple (G1)#The Transformers|Grapple]]) | ||
* | *9663 Camion pompier<!--The lowercase spelling of "pompier" is not confirmed, by matches the spelling of similar suffixes on other 1985 Joustra packaging.--> (pre-[[Inferno (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Inferno]]) | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
| | | | ||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>''' | |width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Cassettes'''</u> | ||
<ul> | |||
*9665 Cassette hélicoptère<!--The lowercase spelling of "hélicoptère" is accurate to how it's printed on the toy's packaging.--> | |||
*9666 Cassette moto<!--The lowercase spelling of "moto" is accurate to how it's printed on the toy's packaging.--> | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Balle / Ball'''</u> | |||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
* | *9667 Balle Lion / Ball Löwe<!--The bilingual name is kept unchanged to show the contrast with most other Joustra releases, which didn't have multilingual names.--> (pre-[[Eggleo]]) | ||
*9668 Balle Robot / Ball Robot<!--The bilingual name is kept unchanged to show the contrast with most other Joustra releases, which didn't have multilingual names.--> (pre-[[Eggbot (BW)|Eggbot]]) | |||
* | *9669 Balle Aigle / Ball Adler<!--The bilingual name is kept unchanged to show the contrast with most other Joustra releases, which didn't have multilingual names.--> (pre-[[Eggbird]]) | ||
* | |||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
| | | | ||
|width="20%" valign="top"|< | |width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Other'''</u> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
* | *9654 Scorpion / Skorpion / Schorpioen<!--The trilingual name is kept unchanged to show the contrast with most other Joustra releases, which didn't have multilingual names.--> (pre-[[Scorpia (G2)|Scorpia]]) | ||
*9664 Camion porte-voitures<!--The lowercase spelling of "porte-voitures" is accurate to how it's printed on the toy's packaging.--> (pre-[[Ultra Magnus (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Ultra Magnus]]) | |||
*Camion | |||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
|} | |} | ||
| Line 84: | Line 121: | ||
==Joustra ''Transformers''== | ==Joustra ''Transformers''== | ||
{{ | ===Milton Bradley Transformers wave 2 (repackaged Joustra ''Diaclone'' figures, 1985)=== | ||
{| style="margin-left:1em;" width="100%" | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''[[Mini Vehicle]]s'''</u> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Brawn (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Brawn]]}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Gears (G1)#The Transformers|Gears]]}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Huffer (G1)#The Transformers|Huffer]]}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Windcharger (G1)#The Transformers|Windcharger]]}} | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Cassettes'''</u> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Ravage (G1)#The Transformers|Ravage]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Laserbeak (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Laserbeak]]}} | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Autobot Cars'''</u> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Hound (G1)#The Transformers|Hound]]}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Jazz (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Jazz-Porsche]]}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Mirage (G1)#The Transformers|Mirage]]}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Prowl (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Prowl]]}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Ratchet (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Ratchet]]}} | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<br> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
</ul> | |||
{{Bp-a1|"Sideswipe"<br>(actually [[Sunstreaker (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Sunstreaker]] in a [[Sideswipe (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Sideswipe]] box)}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Tracks (G1)#The Transformers|Tracks]] (red)}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Trailbreaker (G1)#The Transformers|Trailbreaker]]}} | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Wheeljack (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Wheeljack]]}} | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Other'''</u> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Optimus Prime]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Starscream (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Starscream]]<br>(alternatively in Starscream's own colors or [[Thundercracker (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Thundercracker]] in a "Starscream" box)}} | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top" rowspan=3|[[File:G1toy optimus prime variants and running changes.jpg|upright=1.4|thumb|Why are my feet red?]] | |||
|} | |||
{{-}} | |||
== | ===Hasbro Europe Transformers manufactured by Joustra (1986)=== | ||
{| style="margin-left:1em;" width="100%" | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Mini Vehicles'''</u> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-a1|"[[Pipes (G1)#Toys|Pipes]]"<br>(actually [[Huffer (G1)#Toys|Huffer]] in "Pipes" colors, aka "[[Puffer]]")}} | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''[[Insecticon (G1)|Insecticons]]'''</u> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Bombshell (G1)#Toys|Bombshell]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Kickback (G1)#Toys|Kickback]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Shrapnel (G1)#Toys|Shrapnel]]}} | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''[[Constructicon (G1)|Constructicons]] (yellow)'''</u> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Bonecrusher (G1)/toys#Toys|Bonecrusher]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Hook (G1)/toys#Toys|Hook]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Long Haul (G1)/toys#Toys|Long Haul]]}} | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<br> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Mixmaster (G1)/toys#Toys|Mixmaster]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Scavenger (G1)/toys#Toys|Scavenger]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Scrapper (G1)/toys#Toys|Scrapper]]}} | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''[[Decepticon Planes]]'''</u> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Starscream (G1)/toys#Toys|Starscream]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Dirge (G1)/toys#Toys|Dirge]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Ramjet (G1)/toys#Toys|Ramjet]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Thrust (G1)/toys#Toys|Thrust]]}} | |||
</ul> | |||
| | |||
|width="20%" valign="top" rowspan=3|[[File:G1toy European Pipes.jpg|upright=1.4|thumb|I swear I'm not a [[parallel import]] from [[IGA|Mexico]]!]] | |||
|- | |||
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Other'''</u> | |||
<ul class="iconlist"> | |||
{{Bp-a1|[[Optimus Prime (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Optimus Prime]] (alternatively with red or blue feet)}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Soundwave (G1)/toys#Toys|Soundwave]] and Condor Cassette: [[Buzzsaw (G1)/toys#Toys|Buzzsaw]]}} | |||
{{Bp-d1|[[Megatron (G1)/toys#The Transformers|Megatron]]}} | |||
</ul> | |||
|} | |||
{{-}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
===Source material=== | |||
*[https://www.brizzibrothers.com/graphic-novels/diaclone The complete ''Duel on Diaclona'' comic] at the Brizzi brothers' personal website | |||
*Lettered translations of ''Duel on Diaclona'' by Necronomitron on Twitter: | |||
{{collist|6| | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328831720712331264 Chapter 1: "Surprise Attack"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328832311945695232 Chapter 2: "General Mobilization"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328832486810419201 Chapter 3: "The Mad Pursuit"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328832657292070913 Chapter 4: "Reprisal"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328832858190872579 Chapter 5: "Battle in the Dunes"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328833132599025664 Chapter 6: "The Sky on Fire"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328833391156813825 Chapter 7: "The Savage Routes"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328833657885257728 Chapter 8: "The Traitor] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328833804098707456 Chapter 9: "Enemy Shadows"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328833956498735104 Chapter 10: "The Clash of the Titans"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328834120546361345 Chapter 11: "Sabotage"] | |||
*[https://twitter.com/_necronomitron_/status/1328834252465553408 Chapter 12: "The Chaos"] | |||
}} | |||
===Further reading=== | |||
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20191013201945/https://www.tf-1.com/articles/pretf/joustra_template.html Overview of Joustra's iteration of the ''Diaclone'' franchise at TF1.com] (archived) | *[http://web.archive.org/web/20191013201945/https://www.tf-1.com/articles/pretf/joustra_template.html Overview of Joustra's iteration of the ''Diaclone'' franchise at TF1.com] (archived) | ||
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20191115103456/http://www.tf-1.com/cat_frame.php?cat=pretf Articles on various Joustra ''Diaclone'' toys at TF1.com] (archived) | *[http://web.archive.org/web/20191115103456/http://www.tf-1.com/cat_frame.php?cat=pretf Articles on various Joustra ''Diaclone'' toys at TF1.com] (archived) | ||
* | *"Milton Bradley Transformers" article series at 20th Century Toy Collector: | ||
*[http://tfsource.com/blog/french-connection/ French Connection] | **[http://20thcenturytoycollector.com/mb-transformers-part-2/ Part 2: The Pre-Transformers Era in Europe] | ||
*[http://www.fredsworkshop.com/vfrance.html French Transformers] | **[http://20thcenturytoycollector.com/mb-transformers-part-4/ Part 4: The MB & Joustra Connection] | ||
**[http://20thcenturytoycollector.com/mb-transformers-part-5/ Part 5: Jetfire VS Optimus Prime] | |||
**[http://20thcenturytoycollector.com/mb-transformers-part-6/ Part 6: MB Packaging Mix-Ups] | |||
*"[http://tfsource.com/blog/french-connection/ French Connection]" article on Joustra's ''Diaclone'' at TFSource | |||
*[http://www.fredsworkshop.com/vfrance.html French Transformers] at Fred's Workshop | |||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
[[Category:Companies]] | [[Category:Companies]] | ||
Latest revision as of 20:12, 17 August 2023

Joustra ("Jouets de Strasbourg") was a French toy company, a subsidiary of Ceji (Compagnie Générale du Jouet), that held the license from Takara to distribute Diaclone and Micro Change toys in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany in 1984 and 1985. Following a brief interlap during with both Joustra-branded Diaclone toys and Milton Bradley-branded Transformers toys were available in the same European markets in 1985, Hasbro/MB signed a deal with Joustra that gave Hasbro unrestricted access to all the figures Joustra previously held the license for. In return, Joustra provided their facilities to Hasbro/MB and manufacturered several Transformers toys for the European market.
History
[edit]Joustra was founded in Strasbourg, a city in the east of France, in 1934. The name "Joustra" is an abbreviation for "Jouets de Strasbourg", which translates as "toys from Strasbourg". In 1969, Joustra was purchased by Compagnie Financière Edmond de Rothschild, who incorporated it into the Compagnie Générale du Jouet (CEJI, "general toy company"), who also purchased model kit manufacturer Revell around 1979 or 1980.
In 1984, Joustra began distributing its own Diaclone line in France, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany under license from Takara. Despite its title, the line included not only figures from Takara's Diaclone line, but also from the Micro Change line. Because Takara was mainly focused on producing Transformers-branded toys for Hasbro's North American market from 1984 onwards, this resulted in some bizarre transitional releases, with toys featuring factory-applied Autobot or Decepticon insignia stickers being sold in Joustra Diaclone packaging. Following the first wave in 1984, 1985 saw the release of a second wave of Joustra Diaclone figures. However, in 1985, Joustra's parent company Ceji ran into severe financial difficulties and thus struck a deal with Hasbro. As a result, the 1985 Joustra Diaclone figures are considerably rarer in the aftermarket than the 1984 wave.
In 1999, Joustra was purchased by French model kit manufacturer Heller, and is now known as Heller Joustra SA.
Connection between Hasbro/Milton Bradley and Joustra
[edit]
In 1985, Hasbro Bradley introduced the Transformers brand to continental Europe through their subsidiary Milton Bradley (MB). Besides Spain, all the countries the MB-branded Transformers toys were available in were the same countries where Joustra was distributing its Diaclone line under license from Takara. This meant that any toy released by Joustra was off-limits for MB due to Joustra's exclusive contract with Takara. Since this also included Autobot leader Optimus Prime, Hasbro/MB instead declared Jetfire (a non-Takara toy that was thus not affected by Joustra's pre-existing license) Autobot leader for the time being.
When Joustra's parent company Ceji came in financial trouble in 1985, they struck a deal with Hasbro/MB.[1] The first part of the deal saw all existing unsold Joustra Diaclone stock being provided to Hasbro/MB, with the toys taken out of their packaging and put into Transformers packaging, with new sticker sheets added. This allowed for a second wave of MB-branded Transformers toys that were not part of the initial line-up, and which can all be traced back to a Joustra Diaclone figure. The hurried schedule also resulted in several oddities, such as the MB version of Tracks being red (the toy's original Diaclone colors) instead of blue (the regular Transformers version's colors), Thundercracker being sold in Starscream packaging with Starscream's sticker sheet, and, most bizarrely, Sunstreaker (whose toy, in its yellow Hasbro Transformers color scheme, was part of Joustra's Diaclone line-up), being sold in Sideswipe packaging with Sideswipe's instructions and sticker sheet.
Following the release of the Joustra Diaclone figures as MB-branded transformers, the packaging for European Transformers releases saw the branding changed from "MB" to "Hasbro", even though in many countries, the local MB subsidiaries still handled the distribution of the toys. As the second part of the Hasbro/Joustra deal, several of the 1986 European Transformers were actually manufactured by Joustra to fulfill Hasbro's massive demand for Transformers product. Oddly, the packaging for these figures alternatively credits them to Joustra, parent company Ceji, and even Revell (misspelled as "Revel"), which was another Ceji subsidiary at the time. Similar to the MB-branded figures, these Ceji-manufactured figures also included bizarre oddities such as yellow versions of the Constructicons (not to be confused with the later, non-combining European 1992 releases of the Constructicons, or the 1993 Generation 2 versions), Optimus Prime with red feet (which even exists in MB-branded packaging), or Pipes as a straight redeco of Huffer, rather than a retool like the US release (nicknamed "Puffer" by fans; not to be confused with a similar Huffer-in-Pipes-colors release by Mexican manufacturer Plasticos IGA, which was later also available in Europe). Some of these Joustra-manufactured Transformers, such as Megatron or red-feeted Optimus Prime, were not only available in continental Europe, but also in the United Kingdom (in English-only packaging).
Joustra Diaclone
[edit]
As alluded to above, Joustra's iteration of the Diaclone franchise bore little resemblance to its Japanese namesake. In addition to combining product from multiple Takara toylines, Joustra's Diaclone notably featured more robust fictional support than the original, replacing pretty much all art assets for new packing illustrations and an elaborate pack-in comic called "Duel on Diaclona" (Duel sur Diaclona) by future animation industry legends Paul and Gaëtan Brizzi. This comic saw the Brizzis throw out Takara's "space troopers versus bug aliens" conceit entirely, recasting the robots themselves as the main characters on the exotic robot planet "Diaclona," where the heroic truck robot "Diaclone" and his mostly-car forces did battle against the evil forces of the tyrant "Multiforce 14" and- hey wait a minute.
Much like how Takara's Italian licensee independently named their toyline "Trasformer," the timeline of who was copying whose homework or whether the similarity of conceit comes down to simple convergent evolution remains less clear cut than it would immediately appear, and a definitive answer is potentially lost to the sands of time. One thing that is clear, however, is the influence Joustra's Diaclone exerted on Takara's American efforts, with the names developed for the Powerdashers being ported directly into Diakron and subsequently Transformers itself. Shortly thereafter, Joustra's name for Micro Change's Watch Robo inadvertently inspired the entirety of the Kronoform toyline.
Wave 1 (1984)
[edit]Mini-Cars
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Change Attacars
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Cars wave 1
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Dashers | Mini-Cassettes | |||
Other
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Wave 2 (1985)
[edit]Cars wave 2
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Cassettes
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Balle / Ball | Other
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Joustra Transformers
[edit]Milton Bradley Transformers wave 2 (repackaged Joustra Diaclone figures, 1985)
[edit]| Mini Vehicles | Cassettes | Autobot Cars | (actually Sunstreaker in a Sideswipe box) |
Other
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Hasbro Europe Transformers manufactured by Joustra (1986)
[edit]| Mini Vehicles | Insecticons | Constructicons (yellow) | Decepticon Planes | ![]() | ||||||
Other
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External links
[edit]Source material
[edit]- The complete Duel on Diaclona comic at the Brizzi brothers' personal website
- Lettered translations of Duel on Diaclona by Necronomitron on Twitter:
- Chapter 1: "Surprise Attack"
- Chapter 2: "General Mobilization"
- Chapter 3: "The Mad Pursuit"
- Chapter 4: "Reprisal"
- Chapter 5: "Battle in the Dunes"
- Chapter 6: "The Sky on Fire"
- Chapter 7: "The Savage Routes"
- Chapter 8: "The Traitor
- Chapter 9: "Enemy Shadows"
- Chapter 10: "The Clash of the Titans"
- Chapter 11: "Sabotage"
- Chapter 12: "The Chaos"
Further reading
[edit]- Overview of Joustra's iteration of the Diaclone franchise at TF1.com (archived)
- Articles on various Joustra Diaclone toys at TF1.com (archived)
- "Milton Bradley Transformers" article series at 20th Century Toy Collector:
- "French Connection" article on Joustra's Diaclone at TFSource
- French Transformers at Fred's Workshop
References
[edit]- ↑ "MB/Hasbro and Ceji theory confirmed" at 20th Century Toy Collector.




