Estrela: Difference between revisions

From MediaWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Moved Invasion Galactica to Overview, added info about post-G1 Hasbro relations and lawsuit, added board game
Line 10: Line 10:


==Overview==
==Overview==
====Estrela's Transformers toyline====
[[File:Estrela_Catalogue.jpg|thumb|left|Being a kid in 1980s Brazil was a masterclass in [[repurposing]]. Red and blue robot? That's gonna be your Optimus Prime! Red sports car? Get used to calling it Sideswipe! Red and white vaguely jet-looking thing? Buy five and you have your Aerialbots!]]
[[File:Estrela_Catalogue.jpg|thumb|left|Being a kid in 1980s Brazil was a masterclass in [[repurposing]]. Red and blue robot? That's gonna be your Optimus Prime! Red sports car? Get used to calling it Sideswipe! Red and white vaguely jet-looking thing? Buy five and you have your Aerialbots!]]


Line 20: Line 21:
The fiction of the toyline is... fuzzy. The cardback [[bio]]s for the Robocars are direct Portuguese translations of their base molds' Hasbro bios (with the obvious exception of Bumper-mold [[Sedan (Robocar)|Sedan]]), thus this wiki places those toys as those already-established characters. However, the Salt-Men have unique bios, placing them as all-new characters. Every other toy lacks a bio. While this is not so big a deal when it comes to the Bat-Robo and Eletrix (who have no ''Transformers'' analogues whatsoever), things get hinky when it comes to the Optimus and Malignus, who use the same names as their Robocar forebears; for simplicity (or as close as this can generally get), this wiki treats all of the Optimus and Malignus as new characters. Odder still, since none of the pre-Optimus/Malignus toys or packaging featured any [[insignia|faction symbol]]s, their allegiance is mostly conjecture, but between the re-use of "Autobot" character bios on "Autobot" molds and all of them using the "Autobot" style packaging, plus the lack of any indication in what bios exist that any of the toys are villains, the general fandom assumption (and wiki default placement) is "Autobot".
The fiction of the toyline is... fuzzy. The cardback [[bio]]s for the Robocars are direct Portuguese translations of their base molds' Hasbro bios (with the obvious exception of Bumper-mold [[Sedan (Robocar)|Sedan]]), thus this wiki places those toys as those already-established characters. However, the Salt-Men have unique bios, placing them as all-new characters. Every other toy lacks a bio. While this is not so big a deal when it comes to the Bat-Robo and Eletrix (who have no ''Transformers'' analogues whatsoever), things get hinky when it comes to the Optimus and Malignus, who use the same names as their Robocar forebears; for simplicity (or as close as this can generally get), this wiki treats all of the Optimus and Malignus as new characters. Odder still, since none of the pre-Optimus/Malignus toys or packaging featured any [[insignia|faction symbol]]s, their allegiance is mostly conjecture, but between the re-use of "Autobot" character bios on "Autobot" molds and all of them using the "Autobot" style packaging, plus the lack of any indication in what bios exist that any of the toys are villains, the general fandom assumption (and wiki default placement) is "Autobot".


On another odd note, Estrela also licensed out the ''Transformers'' toyline to Argentinian company [[Antex]]. Considering Hasbro's ownership of the brand, whether or not Estrela actually had the legal right to do so is... questionable, but regardless, neither company seemed to suffer for it, as both Estrela and Antex would go on to become official distributors of Transformers figures in their respective countries during later years. Antex's line-up was mostly similar to Estrela's pre-Optimus vs Malignus toys, featuring some of the Robocars (albeit in different colors) and the Salt-Men molds (retaining the Estrela colors), but no Bat-Robôs or Eletrix. They also reused the logo created for Estrela's toyline, as well as the unique character names.
====Licensing and distribution in Argentina====
[[File:InvasionGalacticaCamaro.jpg|right|thumb|Robots in disguise in disguise.]]
Estrela licensed out the ''Transformers'' toyline to [[Argentina|Argentinian]] company [[Antex]], who also released their Transformers toyline in 1985. Considering Hasbro's ownership of the brand, whether or not Estrela actually had the legal right to do so is... questionable, but regardless, neither company seemed to suffer for it, as both Estrela and Antex would go on to become official distributors of Transformers figures in their respective countries during later years. Antex's line-up was mostly similar to Estrela's pre-Optimus vs Malignus toys, featuring some of the Robocars (albeit in different colors) and the Salt-Men molds (retaining the Estrela colors), but no Bat-Robôs or Eletrix. They also reused the logo created for Estrela's toyline, as well as the unique character names.
 
On another odd note, Estrela's original versions of the Sedan, Camaro, and Pick-Up molds were also sold across some locations in Argentina in 1985 under unusual circumstances by an unknown company. The toys and their bubbles were manually cut off the Transformers branded cards and then attached to new cards featuring the logo "Invasion Galactica" and art of a flying saucer. The original design of the Transformers cards was still plainly visible beneath the bubble, with the distinct red background elements now depicted as part of a newly-drawn fireball.  Collectors from South America have long maintained that these packaging swaps were done by legitimate retailers and toy stores in Argentina, who were attempting to find a way to move their Transformers merchandise during a time when protectionist laws forbade selling products that had been manufactured in foreign countries. <ref>https://www.toyarchive.com/Transformers/Brazilian/Invasion.html</ref>
 
====Later partnership with Hasbro and lawsuit==== 
Eventually, as the 90s came and the ''Transformers'' brand proved itself to be a reliable long-term investment for Hasbro worldwide, Estrela went from being a manufacturer to a distributor for the post-Generation 1 toylines, with figures from [[Beast Wars: Transformers (toyline)|Beast Wars]], [[Beast Machines: Transformers (toyline)|Beast Machines]], and all the way into the 2000s with [[Transformers: Universe (2003 toyline)|Transformers: Universe]] and the [[Unicron Trilogy]] getting Estrela-branded releases in Brazil. Other Hasbro toylines, like the then recently-obtained ''[[Star Wars]]'' license (formerly belonging to [[Kenner]] before it was absorded into Hasbro), were also similarly distributed by Estrela. In contrast, multiple popular Hasbro-owned board games like [[Monopoly]] (sold in Brazil as ''Banco Imobiliário'', i.e., "Real-Estate Bank") and Cluedo (sold in Brazil as ''Detetive'') that had been provided through similar licensing deals kept on being manufactured locally by Estrela, as well as a few other toys like Play-Doh (sold in Brazil as ''Super Massa'', i.e., "Super Dough").
 
By 2007, Hasbro had stopped renewing their distribution contract with Estrela in favor of a self-owned South American distribution chain - thus, future ''Transformers'' figures, starting from the [[Transformers (2007 toyline)|2007 movie toyline]] and beyond up until today, were released in Brazil directly by Hasbro. Still, Estrela kept manufacturing Super Massa and the aforementioned board games under their own localized titles, which led to Hasbro suing Estrela for royalties in 2008 and culminated in a long legal battle lasting a whole 15 years. Eventually, the Court of Justice of São Paulo ruled in 2021 that while some of these brands, like Detetive and Super Massa, still belonged to Hasbro, others, like Banco Imobiliário, had been made sufficiently legally distinct to belong to Estrela instead <ref>https://g1.globo.com/sp/sao-paulo/noticia/2022/02/14/em-nova-decisao-de-disputa-com-hasbro-tj-sp-manda-estrela-destruir-apenas-super-massa-brasileira-segue-com-banco-imobiliario.ghtml</ref>: thus, to this day, both the original Monopoly and its localization as Banco Imobilário can be found for sale in Brazilian stores. Interestingly, this court ruling also determined that ''Comandos em Ação'' / Brazil's localization of G.I. Joe was also a property of Estrela rather than Hasbro, although nothing with the ''Comandos em Ação'' brand has been done by Estrela since.
 
{{-}}


==Toys==
==Toys==
Line 63: Line 75:
{{bp-mal|[[Jipe (Malignus)#Toys|Jipe]]}}
{{bp-mal|[[Jipe (Malignus)#Toys|Jipe]]}}
{{bp-mal|[[Pick-Up (Malignus)#Toys|Pick-Up]]}}
{{bp-mal|[[Pick-Up (Malignus)#Toys|Pick-Up]]}}
|}
==Merchandise==
{| style="margin-left:1em;" width="100%"
|width="20%" valign="top"|<u>'''Board Games'''</u>
<ul class="iconlist">
{{bp-multi|''Jogo dos Transformers'' (The Transformers Game)<br>(featuring miniature vehicle mode versions of Volks, Camaro, Carrera, and Sedan)}}
|}
|}


==Notes==
==Notes==
[[File:InvasionGalacticaCamaro.jpg|right|thumb|Robots in disguise in disguise.]]
* Estrela's Sedan, Camaro, and Pick-Up were also sold in [[Argentina]] in 1985 under unusual circumstances.  The toys and their bubbles were manually cut off the Transformers branded cards and then attached to new cards featuring the logo "Invasion Galactica" and art of a flying saucer. The original design of the Transformers cards was still plainly visible beneath the bubble, with the distinct red background elements now depicted as part of a newly-drawn fireball.  Collectors from South America have long maintained that these packaging swaps were done by legitimate retailers and toy stores in Argentina, who were attempting to find a way to move their Transformers merchandise during a time when protectionist laws forbade selling products that had been manufactured in foreign countries. 
* Surprisingly, the [[Bat-Robô]] molds were also simultaneously released in Brazil by rival toy company Glasslite as the ''Crash Tron'' figures '''Blocker''' and '''Turborg''', under the GoBots-localized ''Mutante'' toyline.
* Surprisingly, the [[Bat-Robô]] molds were also simultaneously released in Brazil by rival toy company Glasslite as the ''Crash Tron'' figures '''Blocker''' and '''Turborg''', under the GoBots-localized ''Mutante'' toyline.
* Despite still owning the distribution rights to Transformers in the early 2000s, Estrela would also release a small self-branded line of transforming toy robots under the ''Mutantes'' toyline (which, somehow, seems to bear no relation to the previously mentioned Glasslite ''Mutante'' toys) during this time. These were simple bulky figures that'd transform into either die cast vehicles or plastic dinosaurs,  with the molds consisting of basic budget toys repackaged from other non-Transformers toylines that you'd commonly find in budget toy shops during the 2000s.
* Despite still owning the distribution rights to Transformers in the early 2000s, Estrela would also release a small self-branded line of transforming toy robots under the ''Mutantes'' toyline (which, surprisingly, seem to bear no relation to the previously mentioned Glasslite ''Mutante'' toys) during this time. These were simple bulky figures that'd transform into either die cast vehicles or plastic dinosaurs,  with the molds consisting of basic budget toys repackaged from other non-Transformers toylines that you'd commonly find in budget toy shops during the 2000s.
**Estrela brought back the ''Mutantes'' line again in 2014, eight after their relationship with Hasbro had ended, with the introduction of the dinosaur-based ''Mutantes Dinossauros'' figures. Among these were a Velociraptor and a Deinonychus which, despite being heavily simplified, are nonetheless very clearly molded after the engineering of the original ''Beast Wars'' [[Dinobot (BW)/toys#Beast Wars|Dinobot]] toy <ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wqaPbruw8Nw</ref> - meaning that yes, Estrela technically became a [[Knockoff|bootleg]] distributor, albeit only briefly! The extent to which they were even aware of the similarities between these figures and the Hasbro originals is debatable since again, as with their first batch of ''Mutantes'', these were simple repackages of common budget toys licensed from other companies, but it is nonetheless interesting that a company would have both a relationship with Hasbro and yet also distribute Transformers knockoffs throughout their history. Even crazier that they were [[GiG|not the first to do so]], and [[Simba Dickie Group|neither would they be the last]].
**Estrela brought back the ''Mutantes'' line again in 2014, eight after their relationship with Hasbro had ended, with the introduction of the dinosaur-based ''Mutantes Dinossauros'' figures. Among these were a Velociraptor and a Deinonychus which, despite being heavily simplified, are nonetheless very clearly molded after the engineering of the original ''Beast Wars'' [[Dinobot (BW)/toys#Beast Wars|Dinobot]] toy <ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wqaPbruw8Nw</ref> - meaning that yes, Estrela technically became a [[Knockoff|bootleg]] distributor, albeit only briefly! The extent to which they were even aware of the similarities between these figures and the Hasbro originals is debatable since again, as with their first batch of ''Mutantes'', these were simple repackages of common budget toys licensed from other companies, but it is nonetheless interesting that a company would have both a relationship with Hasbro and yet also distribute Transformers knockoffs throughout their history. Even crazier that they were [[GiG|not the first to do so]], and [[Simba Dickie Group|neither would they be the last]].
{{-}}
{{-}}

Revision as of 19:18, 17 February 2025

Making children happy, and parents broke!

Estrela is a popular Brazilian toy manufacturer, being first founded in São Paulo in 1937 and remaining active until today.

They are best known internationally for holding the license to produce and market multiple Hasbro toylines during the 1980s like GI Joe (under the localized name of Comandos em Ação, i.e., "Commandos in Action"), My Little Pony (under the localized name of Meu Querido Pônei, i.e., "My Dear Pony") and, of course, The Transformers (under the localized name of, uh, "Transformers"). Although much of the Transformers mainline was ignored by Estrela, their aforementioned freedom to manufacture their own toys during this time resulted in multiple variants of existing molds - and even some entirely unique ones! - that remained exclusive to the Brazilian market.

Estrela also distributed most Transformers toylines in the country up until Cybertron, being later replaced by Hasbro's own Brazilian subsidiary.

Overview

Estrela's Transformers toyline

Being a kid in 1980s Brazil was a masterclass in repurposing. Red and blue robot? That's gonna be your Optimus Prime! Red sports car? Get used to calling it Sideswipe! Red and white vaguely jet-looking thing? Buy five and you have your Aerialbots!

Estrela's approach to localizing The Transformers was somewhat unusual. The cartoon would only premiere on Brazilian airwaves in 1986, however; Estrela decided to preemptively release their Transformers line in 1985, a year before domestic audiences had been introduced to the characters. This line was mainly made up of a small handful of Mini-Vehicle and Jumpstarter molds from the Hasbro toyline, renamed into Robocars and Salt-Man (the Salt here being a contraction of "salto", the Portuguese word for "jump"), and it was further bulked up by giving most toys two different decos. The fact that there was no known fiction for these figures within the Brazilian market left Estrela to name them after their alternate molds instead - and thus, the Bumblebee mold became known as Volks, the Cliffjumper mold as Carrera, and so on. The Topspin and Twin Twist molds were also renamed into, respectively; Salt-Man X and Salt-Man Z. The lack of a pre-established mythology also meant that this first batch of toys did not have faction insignia, instead featuring stickers identical to the original Micro Change and Diaclone versions of their respective molds. Notably, this line made repeated use of the "Bumper" mold (perhaps because of his shared engineering with Bumblebee and Cliffjumper) that was extremely rare in the US, and not released as a Transformer at all in Japan.

Estrela's second batch of Transformers toys, generally known as "Optimus vs. Malignus", are their most well-known outside of Brazil. The six "Robocar" molds were trotted out again, each one getting two new color schemes, but this time they were split into proper good-vs-evil factions. These releases are particularly rare, and even loose samples are expensive, especially the (generally more gorgeous) Malignus.

The line-up was also supplemented by larger toys licensed from other companies which were not featured in any other of the many international Transformers toylines. These included the auto-transforming Bat-Robô figures with pullback motors (three years before the American line did the same) which were sourced from Asahi Tsusho KK's Attack Change Machine Powertron toyline, the also auto-transforming Eletrix figures that doubled as rudimentary remote-controlled vehicles (thirty five years before Robosen kind of did the same with uh, a marginal difference in quality) which were sourced from Yonezawa Toys' Remote Change Robo Series toyline, and... This was it, these are all the figures released under Estrela's Transformers toyline, and also the only ones available on domestic toy aisles throughout the following years as the show premiered. Noticeably absent from this line-up is nearly every single major Transformers character, therefore depriving Brazilian fans during the 1980s of some of the most important figures like Optimus Prime, Megatron, the Seekers, the Dinobots, the Diaclone Car Robots-derived characters like Jazz, Prowl, Sideswipe et al., and many, many, many more. A common part of the experience of being a young Transformers fan in Brazil, in fact, often involved filling in the ranks of missing characters with GoBots (which were actually localized twice in the country, first by toy company Glasslite as Mutante and then by Mimo as Convert), using toys like Road Ranger as a stand-in for Optimus or Leader-1 as a stand-in for Starscream!

The fiction of the toyline is... fuzzy. The cardback bios for the Robocars are direct Portuguese translations of their base molds' Hasbro bios (with the obvious exception of Bumper-mold Sedan), thus this wiki places those toys as those already-established characters. However, the Salt-Men have unique bios, placing them as all-new characters. Every other toy lacks a bio. While this is not so big a deal when it comes to the Bat-Robo and Eletrix (who have no Transformers analogues whatsoever), things get hinky when it comes to the Optimus and Malignus, who use the same names as their Robocar forebears; for simplicity (or as close as this can generally get), this wiki treats all of the Optimus and Malignus as new characters. Odder still, since none of the pre-Optimus/Malignus toys or packaging featured any faction symbols, their allegiance is mostly conjecture, but between the re-use of "Autobot" character bios on "Autobot" molds and all of them using the "Autobot" style packaging, plus the lack of any indication in what bios exist that any of the toys are villains, the general fandom assumption (and wiki default placement) is "Autobot".

Licensing and distribution in Argentina

Robots in disguise in disguise.

Estrela licensed out the Transformers toyline to Argentinian company Antex, who also released their Transformers toyline in 1985. Considering Hasbro's ownership of the brand, whether or not Estrela actually had the legal right to do so is... questionable, but regardless, neither company seemed to suffer for it, as both Estrela and Antex would go on to become official distributors of Transformers figures in their respective countries during later years. Antex's line-up was mostly similar to Estrela's pre-Optimus vs Malignus toys, featuring some of the Robocars (albeit in different colors) and the Salt-Men molds (retaining the Estrela colors), but no Bat-Robôs or Eletrix. They also reused the logo created for Estrela's toyline, as well as the unique character names.

On another odd note, Estrela's original versions of the Sedan, Camaro, and Pick-Up molds were also sold across some locations in Argentina in 1985 under unusual circumstances by an unknown company. The toys and their bubbles were manually cut off the Transformers branded cards and then attached to new cards featuring the logo "Invasion Galactica" and art of a flying saucer. The original design of the Transformers cards was still plainly visible beneath the bubble, with the distinct red background elements now depicted as part of a newly-drawn fireball. Collectors from South America have long maintained that these packaging swaps were done by legitimate retailers and toy stores in Argentina, who were attempting to find a way to move their Transformers merchandise during a time when protectionist laws forbade selling products that had been manufactured in foreign countries. [1]

Later partnership with Hasbro and lawsuit

Eventually, as the 90s came and the Transformers brand proved itself to be a reliable long-term investment for Hasbro worldwide, Estrela went from being a manufacturer to a distributor for the post-Generation 1 toylines, with figures from Beast Wars, Beast Machines, and all the way into the 2000s with Transformers: Universe and the Unicron Trilogy getting Estrela-branded releases in Brazil. Other Hasbro toylines, like the then recently-obtained Star Wars license (formerly belonging to Kenner before it was absorded into Hasbro), were also similarly distributed by Estrela. In contrast, multiple popular Hasbro-owned board games like Monopoly (sold in Brazil as Banco Imobiliário, i.e., "Real-Estate Bank") and Cluedo (sold in Brazil as Detetive) that had been provided through similar licensing deals kept on being manufactured locally by Estrela, as well as a few other toys like Play-Doh (sold in Brazil as Super Massa, i.e., "Super Dough").

By 2007, Hasbro had stopped renewing their distribution contract with Estrela in favor of a self-owned South American distribution chain - thus, future Transformers figures, starting from the 2007 movie toyline and beyond up until today, were released in Brazil directly by Hasbro. Still, Estrela kept manufacturing Super Massa and the aforementioned board games under their own localized titles, which led to Hasbro suing Estrela for royalties in 2008 and culminated in a long legal battle lasting a whole 15 years. Eventually, the Court of Justice of São Paulo ruled in 2021 that while some of these brands, like Detetive and Super Massa, still belonged to Hasbro, others, like Banco Imobiliário, had been made sufficiently legally distinct to belong to Estrela instead [2]: thus, to this day, both the original Monopoly and its localization as Banco Imobilário can be found for sale in Brazilian stores. Interestingly, this court ruling also determined that Comandos em Ação / Brazil's localization of G.I. Joe was also a property of Estrela rather than Hasbro, although nothing with the Comandos em Ação brand has been done by Estrela since.


Toys

Transformers

Robocars Salt-Man Bat-Robô Eletrix
Eletrix Esporte
Malignus Camaro
Optimus Malignus

Merchandise

Board Games
  • Jogo dos Transformers (The Transformers Game)
    (featuring miniature vehicle mode versions of Volks, Camaro, Carrera, and Sedan)

Notes

  • Surprisingly, the Bat-Robô molds were also simultaneously released in Brazil by rival toy company Glasslite as the Crash Tron figures Blocker and Turborg, under the GoBots-localized Mutante toyline.
  • Despite still owning the distribution rights to Transformers in the early 2000s, Estrela would also release a small self-branded line of transforming toy robots under the Mutantes toyline (which, surprisingly, seem to bear no relation to the previously mentioned Glasslite Mutante toys) during this time. These were simple bulky figures that'd transform into either die cast vehicles or plastic dinosaurs, with the molds consisting of basic budget toys repackaged from other non-Transformers toylines that you'd commonly find in budget toy shops during the 2000s.
    • Estrela brought back the Mutantes line again in 2014, eight after their relationship with Hasbro had ended, with the introduction of the dinosaur-based Mutantes Dinossauros figures. Among these were a Velociraptor and a Deinonychus which, despite being heavily simplified, are nonetheless very clearly molded after the engineering of the original Beast Wars Dinobot toy [3] - meaning that yes, Estrela technically became a bootleg distributor, albeit only briefly! The extent to which they were even aware of the similarities between these figures and the Hasbro originals is debatable since again, as with their first batch of Mutantes, these were simple repackages of common budget toys licensed from other companies, but it is nonetheless interesting that a company would have both a relationship with Hasbro and yet also distribute Transformers knockoffs throughout their history. Even crazier that they were not the first to do so, and neither would they be the last.


See also

References