The brand new Pantasy Popcorn Machine 85046 has officially been revealed, and this one leans hard into classic American cinema nostalgia.
This is pure 1950’s concession stand styling. Rounded chrome edges, bold red and white striping, and a big unapologetic POPCORN sign across the top.

A Working Mechanism
This is not just a static display model.
Pantasy has built in a full four-step interactive process:
- Open the access door and add the “Corn Kernels”
- Turn the hand crank to rotate the kettle
- Pull the internal lever
- Watch the popcorn drop into the dispensing chute
You get 50 popcorn elements included, which appear to use afro hair pieces as the popped corn. That is clever part usage and surprisingly convincing once piled up inside the chamber.
The crank mechanism looks simple but satisfying. Pantasy are very good at bringing movement into a lot of their sets, so it is no surprise to see it included here as well.

Metallic Finish & Printing Quality
The silver detailing is not basic flat grey.
Pantasy highlights that the machine uses silver spray coating first, followed by multi-colour pad printing. That should give the chrome sections a much more authentic shine compared to standard plastic colouring.
The POPCORN sign and Pantasy branding both appear crisp and well printed. From the close-up images, the finish looks clean and premium.
The Characters
There are two figures included.
First, the popcorn vendor. She comes with a megaphone and a mini popcorn bucket, and the outfit is fully themed in red and white stripes. The face print looks sharp, and she has a playful wink expression. It fits the cinema atmosphere nicely.
Then there is the anthropomorphic popcorn bucket character.
This is pure fun. Big eyes, striped box design, oversized red scoop accessory, and interchangeable arm pieces. It is slightly ridiculous, but in a good way. It adds personality rather than taking away from the display.


First Impressions
At $79.99, this sits in that mid-range novelty category.
It is not massive, but it is not small either. The mechanism, metallic finish, and included figures help justify the price.
The overall aesthetic is cohesive. The red and chrome pairing works well. The design clearly aims for nostalgic cinema vibes, and I think it achieves that.
It is colourful. It is interactive. And it definitely stands out.
Where to buy
Pantasy sell their products directly through their official website, and they also have a store on Amazon.
They do not appear to have a rewards programme that I can see. So honestly, I would just order from whichever store is cheaper.
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