dedeposter
Comments
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And then there's this, for the later New Line release. (But is it a poster or print artwork?)
in Hondo's Daybill and One Sheet Q&A [Re-Titled]
Comment by dedeposter
April 29
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Also, this is where it was released. A very limited first release that wouldn't have justified any large print run of posters.
in Hondo's Daybill and One Sheet Q&A [Re-Titled]
Comment by dedeposter
April 29
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(Quote) I just read your original post properly and agree about the mention of Picnic At Hanging Rock (obvious really). The NFSA description doesn't actually state that it's the original daybill. I suspect there wasn't one produced for its or…
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(Quote) Sounds like that might be the original poster.
This is a description from the NFSA.
in Hondo's Daybill and One Sheet Q&A [Re-Titled]
Comment by dedeposter
April 29
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I also thought that the poster for it was more like this style with the car pictured as a full image.
in Hondo's Daybill and One Sheet Q&A [Re-Titled]
Comment by dedeposter
April 29
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(Quote) That would certainly make sense for film society screenings.
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You either love or hate Norman Wisdom. He can be a polarising comic, personally I liked him when I was very young but nowadays I find his humour too forced. That's happened to a few comedy films I had fond memories of in my childhood.
I … -
Got it! C7 - at first I thought it was Kenneth More, but then realised it was Norman Wisdom. That's from The Early Bird (1965)
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I really enjoy the quizzes (mostly when I get a correct answer), I try to respond to threads when I have something to add, but most of the time I enjoy getting interesting information from collectors more knowledgable than me (and with better collec…
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Just sent you a link to my IMDB
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I'd say the difference in types of lobby cards from the same organisation would have been a budget related decision. Each film would have a certain amount of money allocated to marketing and publicity, so film that would have been expected to do bet…
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(Quote) One of my favourite P&P films too. If you're a fan of physical media then this might be for you. Criterion have released it on 4K (also available on BluRay)
in Yeah, so, I am watching this.., Comment by dedeposter April 27 -
Great clues. c6 is Abbott and Costello Meet the Keystone Cops (1955)
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Obviously cost was a factor in printing lobby cards here, there would have been smaller runs than US printed cards.
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I was thinking Tobor (because of Robots from the clue...), but haven't had time to keep looking.
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For some reason I'm thinking Forrest Gump for 665, but I don't think so.
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Interesting that they went to the trouble of printing the posters before knowing if they could show it or not.
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Did you know that the original plan was for him to have a different accent in each film? I'm glad they didn't go with that idea.
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C664 is Knives Out (2019). Great mystery film.
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Is 244 The Invisible Boy (1957)?
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Great examples of the wide range of cards produced over the years. At least in the US you had NSS producing cards of consistency, here it looks like each distributor had their own way of printing through whatever printer they happened to be using at…
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Look, it made lots of money, and made a lot of people laugh...but I find a lot of modern comedy very forced.
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Ah, The Hangover! (I thought this subject was about comedies?).....each to his own I guess.
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At last, a horror film I know!
350 is Lifeforce (1985) -
(Quote) That's what they remind me of, old hand coloured photos. My parents' wedding photo is like that.
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This is an example from NFSA to get the discussion started (which you probably already have).
No printer credits, which makes me think it's some kind of photographic process (which is then hand or machine coloured).in Rare Australian Posters Of Australian Films Comment by dedeposter April 18
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No, it felt like photographic paper, certainly not like US lobby cards.
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I really probably haven't seen that many in total, but more than I'd have expected to see over the years. Usually just singles in small amounts, not whole sets. They would just randomly appear in places that had daybills for sale (Like Space Age boo…
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But TIERNEY is what your eyes are drawn to, not Lawrence
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C662 is it Hobson's Choice from 1954?