Imperial Star Destroyer from "Star Wars" (1977)

Imperial Star Destroyer - MPC - 1

MPC Logo

SCALE: 1/4200

INITIAL RELEASE: 1980

MEDIUM: Polystyrene

RARITY: (2)

 

Imperial Star Destroyer - MPC - 2

 

Imperial Star Destroyer - MPC - 3

Imperial Star Destroyer - MPC - 4

  Imperial Star Destroyer - MPC - 5

 

ABOUT THE DESIGN

ABOUT THE KIT

While Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey" (1968) may have set the modern standard for sci-fi spacecraft design, George Lucas' "Star Wars" (1977) took that ethos to the next level, creating a wholly credible future that not only looked lived-in but, thanks to major breakthroughs in computer-aided motion-control photography, also moved in ways never before seen on the silver screen.

George Lucas' rule for designing spacecraft for his evil Galactic Empire was simple: Keep them rigidly geometric.  There's plenty of geometry overload here as the Lucasfilm designers combine triangles, rectangles and geodesic spheres to produce a simple but sinister interstellar battlewagon.  The Star Destroyer's first appearance -- flying overhead in what seemed like an endless tracking shot that made the ship look five miles long -- was the visual signature that announced that computer-aided special effects had arrived -- and that the movies would never be the same.

First released in conjunction with "The Empire Strikes Back," this was a large but only minimally accurate kit widely criticized by many for its lack of surface detail.  The kit came both in this standard form and, later, in a fiber-optic version with internal lighting.

This model was built from an original 1980 issue.

Motion Picture Photo

 

Imperial Star Destroyer - MPC - Box Art

Original Box Art

 

Imperial Star Destroyer - MPC - Fiber Optic Box Art

Fiber Optic Box Art

 

Imperial Star Destroyer - MPC - Re-Release Box Art

Imperial Star Destroyer - AMT/Ertl Box Art

Re-Release Box Art by H. Ed Cox

2005 Box Art

 

Pop Culture

1900-1930

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Home   X-Planes   Concept Aircraft   Spacecraft & Missiles   Concept Spacecraft   Science Fiction   Grab Bag