Those are the three other Indiana Jones sets that I bought. I still have not bought the large sets, or the set with two trucks. I look at them in the LEGO Imagination Center and they don't seem to draw me. I don't think they are as good a deal, for interesting parts, and cool minifigs, as the smaller sets are. When the first batch of four sets came out I picked up the cheap one and as I said a couple of weeks ago, I really liked it. Indiana and his dad on a motorcycle is a nice set. And that fedora hat is really popular.
7621 Lost Tomb
Before long the urge to own a Marion Ravenwood minifig became too strong and I succumbed. She's pretty cute. Not Irina Spalko cute, but cute. Marion's got that great costume, nice hair, and that double sided head. Smiley and screamy. Plus, there's some cleavage. It's fairly common, that double sided head. The cleavage, no
t so much. I just realized that I am grateful that there are no minifig buttcracks. Really, it's those little things that make life good. There are several nice pieces in the box along with Indy and Marion. It's a nice compact set, just a one sided room with some moving parts. The statue falls over, knocks out a large wall panel, and Indy and Marion can escape. I don't know why they don't just walk out the room. There are no other walls. I never actually built the set I bought. I
don't build a lot of the sets I buy, and not just duplicate sets, the only copy often doesn't ever get built. The Batman sets are a good example. I didn't build any of the ones that I got. Spider-Man? I only built the Green Goblin's Glider, and mostly because it was tiny. I don't play with the sets like they were toys. I just like to look at them, mostly, like they are statues, and a picture is often good enough. Takes up less
space too. I do look through the instructions. I always find them interesting. I don't know why. There might be something to learn from looking at the pictures. I find I need to study more Techinics building techniques, and I can look at old intructions for ideas. Nowadays you can see most old instructions on line. That's so cool. I rarely keep a set intact, and I try to put all the instructions together. If the set's intact you can't use the pieces for anything. That seems a waste as parts are expensive. I have a few sets that I am keeping intact, not wanting to worry about missing a part when I want to rebuild them. Normally, I take all the pieces, sort them all out, pack them into containers, then have a nap. Once in a while I'll build something. This set has a lot of tan, and that's good for Harry Potter or Castle building, and other things too. There are a lot of small pearl gold pieces, seventeen in fact, that might come in handy for some build d
own the road. Statues or some building decorations. You never know. That's the tiny Ark of the Covenant. You can see it has a lot of bling on top. If you go back a couple of posts you can see Esther has taken the two Anubis statue's and the Ark from this set and put them in a bathroom for her mansion build. That's a fun idea, adapting something to your own concept. It works great for her. There is a big sheet of stickers. Huge sheet, size of a bath towel. Lots of Egyptian looking hieroglyphics to go on the large wall plates that crash out when the statue falls over. Stickers for the eyes
of the statues. There is a sticker in the picture on the left of R2D2 and C3po that repeats a joke from The Raiders of the Lost Ark. The pair appear briefly carved into a pillar in the movie. You can see a still from the movie at Gizmodo. There's a flaming carrot. It's pretending to be a burn
ing torch, but it's the carrot piece colored dark brown, with an orange flame on top. There used to be a weird comic called The Flaming Carrot and that caused the reference to pop into my head. It was about a guy with a carrot for a head. Instead of the green part sticking out of the end of the carrot head, he had some flame. It wasn't the greatest art but the stories were weird and funny. Back in the LEGO world I do like the orange flame. It's a different look from the neon-orange that is so common. It, and the dark brown carrot work pretty well as a torch. I'm thinking of using
them for my burning torch carrying mob moc. Make it look more authentic. "Burn 'em!" I like the dark brown pieces that are appearing in sets right now. There are more dark brown parts in other Indiana Jones sets. One of the other things that I liked about the set were the red and green snakes. Nice to get some more color. I'd seen a red one used, stuck in a minifig head, as the spinal cord hanging down. Funny,
7625 River Chase
This set, based on the new movie, has it's own Marion Ravenwood minifig in a new costume. She's hardly aged in the 27 years between movies. There's an Indy figure, with all the good things he has, and a couple of Russian Guards, #2 & 3, in sand-green uniforms. It's a nice dark green alligator. Since I like the LEGO animals so much I wanted one of those too. There a good mix of
light and dark bluish gray parts, and some nice dark brown arches. Good for trees. I used them in The Gildersleeve Uni-Tread Steam Wagon. The reddish brown slope is good for trees too. There's a rubber raft, with two brown paddles, that I am sure will turn up in lots of military or spy moc's. I'm not sure what to do with the one I have yet. It's got a nice little automatic pistol, lots of leaves, and a couple of those red snakes I liked from Lost Tomb. The vehicle has some dark green pieces and little by little I have gotten a nice, but small baggie filled
with them. What to do? What to do? Sometimes color can trigger an idea. I like the 1 x 4 tile that has some dials and a leaver. That's the three Russian guards below. They have nice looking uniforms, and nice hats, but I just want to slap the smirk off the face of that first guy. The third guard comes with a brown backpack.
7626 Jungle Cutter
I wasn't sure that I wanted to buy a copy of Jungle Cutter. Most of the time I don't care for sets that have vehicles in them. I don't need more wheels that I never use. But, this set has treads. It's got two giant saw blades, which I don't think I need. But, it's got treads. One of the guys I work with has some Star Wars LEGO, he's mostly interested in Star Wars, which he shares with his 5 year old son. The son got the Star Wars LEGO Sand Crawler for his birthday. Dad's been helping him build
it, making the son put the parts together, and it's been slow going. It's been more than a week. It seems there is a limited attention span at that age and many other toys that need their share of attention. Dad and I were talking about the set and it being hard to find all the parts in a huge box. It's old enough of a set that the parts are all in un-numbered bags. The instructions are the type that don't have the parts for each step pictured. That's gotten better in the last couple of years. But, what got my interest was the treads. That's
what tipped me over the edge into buying a set. I like those treads. I wound up making The Gildersleeve Uni-tread Steam Wagon with them. There are a couple of other interesting parts in the set. A weird green spine thing, 5 more ants, a frog, a couple of dark bluish rock panels, and 7 of the bamboo leaf parts, plus many other good parts for stock. There are almost a thousand parts in the three sets, and 11 minifigs.