International Black Star Promo (Movie Cards)

Let me start by stating which languages these WB promo cards were released in:

  • English: all four, with stamp - Nov. 10th, 1999
  • French: all four, without stamp - Apr. 5th, 2000
  • German: all four, without stamp - Apr. 13th, 2000
  • Spanish: all four, without stamp - Apr. 14th, 2000 (Spain); Dec. 23, 1999 (Argentina); Dec. 25th, 1999 (Peru); Aug. 4th, 2000 (Mexico); ?? (Chile)
  • Italian: all four, without stamp - Apr. 20th, 2000
  • Korean: only the Mewtwo, without stamp, and with different promo number - Dec. 23rd, 2000
  • Dutch: only the Pikachu, without stamp - Oct. 2002

For the German, French, Italian, Spanish, and Korean versions: yes. A.f.a.i.k., those were indeed given at cinemas/theaters of the first Pokémon movie, just like the English ones. The German, French, and Italian promos came sealed like the English ones; and the Spanish promo cards were given raw without plastic seal nor insert. The Korean Mewtwo was also given at cinemas/theaters for the first Pokémon Movie in South Korea.

The Dutch Pikachu came in Dutch DVDs and VHSs of the second Pokémon movie. (There is also a second Dutch version of this card, released inside the Pikachu World Collection 2000 nonet.)

The Korean Base Set was printed in the US by WotC and exported to South Korea, so I assume the same was done with the Mewtwo promo. It wasn’t until 2004 that the Daewon Media Company in South Korea started printing the Korean Pokémon TCG cards, which in 2010 was taken over by Pokemon Korea, Inc. which still prints the modern Korean Pokémon TCG cards to this day.
Why it has #14 I honestly have no idea. Especially since this Korean Mewtwo is the only Korean WotC era promo, so it would have made more sense if it was #1 instead.

European WotC era cards were all printed in Belgium, and then distributed within Europe to their respective countries. Which might explain why the US version does have a stamp, and the European versions do not. The English WB promos distributed in the UK, Australia, and other countries (e.g. The Netherlands and Scandinavian countries) were very likely also just printed in the US by WotC, and then exported to those countries. I’m Dutch, and although I haven’t seen the first Pokémon movie in cinemas, I have traded for a WB Mewtwo as a kid, which was English and with stamp.

Spanish cards that went to Latin American countries (Mexico, Argentina, Chile, and Peru) instead of Spain were printed in the US by WotC in the early days, but I’m not sure if they received these promos at cinemas. They probably have tbh, since I do know they have for the legendary birds for the second Pokémon movie.

Why the Belgium factory didn’t put the stamp on the WB promos I don’t know. If I had to guess: the first Pokémon Movie of course has a different name in different languages, so it probably didn’t felt right putting an English stamp on let’s say a French promo card, and it was too much work to make a separated stamp for each separated language.

Greetz,
Quuador

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