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| The Fantastic 'Robinson' Spy Case | 
Here's Ken with a review of the Rare & Wonderful 'Robinson' Spy Case.
 Looking at pictures of the Italian Robinson spy attache case on eBay 
made me wonder a lot about two things:  The first was exactly what most 
of the items in the set (the two black objects, the red box, the silver 
rod, the clear plastic thingy) were supposed to be.  My best guess was 
that one of the black plastic items probably combined with the silver 
rod to make a shoulder stock for the little pistol.  The second mystery 
was why the makers of this case, and apparently no others, thought that a
 secret agent needed a first aid kit (the little blue box with the red 
cross).   When I finally got my hands on the case and opened the box, I 
saw that it contained, not bandages and ointment, but what looked like a
 bar of clear facial soap.  And when I looked over the illustrated 
instruction sheet, the Italian word for "narcotic" was close enough to 
English for me to figure out that that was what the "soap"was intended 
to be;  a little drawing made clear that one was supposed use the 
syringe-like clear plastic device to extract a small pellet from the 
bar, then insert it into the muzzle of the pistol so that it could be 
fired at ones adversaries.  I wasn't sure how to take this 
revelation.   On the one hand,  it was no doubt laudable for the 
manufacturer to come up with a non-lethal weapon for the spy that 
children were supposed to be imitating, on the other hand, they would be
 running around pretending to shoot people full of drugs--not nearly as 
bad as killing them, certainly, but still a bit worrisome.  
     A quick look at the diagrams on the next page answered my 
other mystery.  The silver rod screwed into the red box, one of the two 
black antennas was then attached to it, and if you happened to have a 
4.5 volt battery (unknown in the US), the assembly would spin 
around: the box was some sort of communication device.  The motor that 
turned the silver rod also rotated the black disk on the front of the 
box, revealing one picture at a time on a colour transparency disk, two 
more of which were stored in a pocket inside the lid of the case, 
which also held a passport, two kinds paper money,  and coins.
    In addition to the instructions, there was an illustrated 
booklet titled Robinson's Story, also in Italian.  Most of pictures 
seemed to depict typical scenes of espionage; only the one on the cover 
really drew my attention:  a man and woman holding a young boy between 
them.  This seemed to indicate to me that Robinson rather oddly and 
unadvisedly took his wife and son with him on his spy adventures.   
There was also a brochure for other Robinson spy toys available from the
 manufacturer Uniwerk.  In addition to the "Valigetta Robinson" that I 
had, they had also offered a smaller set with just the pistol and the 
dope, a "Libroradio Robinson" or book transmitter that I would really 
have liked to have seen a better picture of, a Geiger counter, and a 
remote-controlled boat.
    About a year later, when I figured out where I had stashed the 
attache case and determined to give its contents a second going-over, a 
few more details stood out.  Unlike most passports in these sets, this 
one was filled out for you.  You were posing as a European ambassador, 
or, if you decided to use a handy insert to change your identity, you 
were a financial director named John G. Smith born in Montreal and 
living in the US.  And in either case, your identifying feature was a 
bullet wound in the leg, cited in four different languages.  Taking a 
closer look at the picture disks, I discovered that frame by frame they 
related a sequence of events:  one depicted a car chase ending in a gun 
battle, another showed a helicopter pursuing and firing at a boat.  The 
back of the ad brochure, which before I had missed completely, revealed 
that Uniwerk also sold games: one had something to do with bicycle 
racing, the other was "Il Gioco Di Robinson," which from the 
illustration and what I could make out of the text was supposed to be 
really darn exciting.
    The last and most important step of this re visitation was to 
put the text of that booklet into the Google translator and learn the 
details of Robinson's Story.  And one heck of a story it is.  For one 
thing, the little boy in that picture is Robinson himself, born Joseph 
Leonard M. in Bolivia and living in countries all over the world as his 
father followed work as an engineer, finally settling for good in 
Boston, Mass, where Joseph entered Harvard at the age of seventeen and 
went on to graduate with honours with degrees in science, medicine, 
chemistry, and law.  He then became a doctor and opened his own centre 
for research.  Meanwhile, his father became one of the most celebrated 
and successful engineers in the world, but after he did some work at a 
secret government facility in Nevada, foreign agents pursued him and 
attempted to gain information from him using bribes, threats, and 
blackmail.   When he nobly refused to betray his adopted country and his
 own ideals, he was ambushed at the port in Boston and mortally 
wounded.  He managed to escape his pursuers and was taken by a passing 
motorist to the nearest hospital where, as fate would have it, his son 
Joseph was working in the emergency room.   Unable to save his father's 
life, he underwent a spiritual crisis, gave up the practise of medicine,
 and became a trainee at the intelligence service Uniwerk, easily 
passing all the exams and becoming a secret agent dedicated to peace in 
the world, aiding "those countries that were struggling in intricate 
situations against atrocious injustice and extortion."   The image of 
his dying father in his memory made him resolve never to kill;  he would
 help the weak but would never resort to extreme violence.  And Joseph 
L.M. would from now on have no name other than ROBINSON: "a name that 
shakes the vile and violent, a name that  victims of abuse can call on 
anywhere."
      To aid in his mission, Robinson used his great knowledge to 
create several useful inventions.   The first was a transmitter 
concealed in an encyclopedia, which he used to communicate with Uniwerk 
headquarters as well as agents in the field, equipped with small 
receivers concealed in harmless-looking cigarette packages.  The 
second was the RADARSONAR,  which allowed "visual and acoustic soundings
 of large areas, even in adverse weather conditions."  The third and 
most important was a gun that fired a pellet made from a special plastic
 narcotic developed by his research facility, which, when it entered the
 body, rendered a person instantly unconscious.   Everyone came to know 
that "Robinson leaves his mark, but does not kill."
UPDATE:   I found an Italian site that had some information about the Robinson toys, including some pictures I have attached.
The site's URL is :    www.claudioconstantini.it/ricordi/index.asp?index=Giochi1
In commenting on the Robinson Libroradio, the writer says that the 
book transmitter could be used to communicate with two receivers 
concealed in packs of cigarettes, but what you didn't know until you 
actual got the toy was that the communication involved wires and that it
 was only a matter of flashing lights or beeps...i.e. Morse code.  
(There are also some other spy type guns on this page.)
Looking at the better pictures, I have to say this particular spy 
toy, its functional limitations notwithstanding, is incredicool in my 
opinion and a must have.  I found some evidence that a couple got sold 
on the UK eBay a while back, but nothing current.
 



 
That is brilliant!Love the Ciggarette, Imagine that being in a kids toy today, A great addition to any spy toy collection.
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