Equally important, is the suit unoccupied?

Enquiring minds want to know.

CK MacLeod Collectibles at ckmac.com <http://ckmac.com/>
Kymar's on eBay <http://stores.ebay.com/Kymars-Stuff>

-----Original Message-----
From: MoPo List [mailto:mop...@sol03.american.edu]on Behalf Of Richard
Halegua Comic Art
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2009 01:46 PM
To: mop...@sol03.american.edu
Subject: Re: [MOPO] NEED HELP IN IDENTIFYING A STILL

is she naked when she climbs in??




At 01:16 PM 1/26/2009, Steven Hill wrote:


The Sea God definitely has diving suits. At one point, Fay Wray even climbs
into one.
-S


From: PJ Angel <p...@bigtownposters.com>
To: mop...@sol03.american.edu
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2009 2:13:21 PM
Subject: Re: [MOPO] NEED HELP IN IDENTIFYING A STILL

Sue,

Based upon the still depicting a jungle scene, by process of elimination, we
can scratch off Slightly Dangerous, Christmas in July, and Pittsburgh - not
a jungle scene in the bunch. This leaves The Sea God (1930) with Fay Wray.

User Comments from IMDB for The Sea God (1930) has this review...

The Sea God is an early sound melodrama about two men vying for Fay Wray and
wealth in the South Pacific. I bought this DVD in my unhealthy quest to see
every Fay Wray film available, and I was pleasantly surprised that this was
a fairly entertaining little film. Good locations, decent direction and
photography (in spots), and a couple of twists made it well worth its short
75 minute running time. It's a bit creaky, and some of the acting doesn't
hold up well, but overall not a bad effort. Fay looks great as the object of
affection of the two men. There is even a scene where she is snatched from a
boat by hostile dark skinned cannibals ala King Kong.

Sounds like a film that could have a diving suit, jungle scenes, arrows, and
natives...

pj


-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [MOPO] NEED HELP IN IDENTIFYING A STILL
From: Susan <s...@learnaboutmovieposters.com>
Date: Mon, January 26, 2009 10:16 am
To: mop...@sol03.american.edu
Hi Zeev

This is Sue from LearnAboutMoviePosters.com
<http://learnaboutmovieposters.com/> .  According to our research for the
U.S. Movie Studio Production Code book and our website, (we have gathered
approximately 22,000 different production code numbers so far), the number
"1271" was used by at least 3 major studios.  Here is the information we
have:

MGM - 1943 - Slightly Dangerous
Paramount - 1930 - Sea God (New York Series)
Paramount - 1940 - Christmas in July (L Series)
Universal - 1942 - Pittsburgh

I hope one of these matches your still.

Sue
  _____

From: MoPo List [ mailto:mop...@sol03.american.edu
<mailto:mop...@sol03.american.edu> ] On Behalf Of lobby card invasion
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2009 10:44
To: mop...@sol03.american.edu
Subject: Re: [MOPO] NEED HELP IN IDENTIFYING A STILL
Hi everybody,

I need your help in identifying a still.

It shows a jungle scene where a large number of natives are bowing to a man
dressed in what looks like an old fashioned deep diving suit.  The man in
the suit may have an arrow stuck in his chest?
The still has the number  1271-168
Anybody knows the title of this movie?

Is there already an available list cross referencing still numbers and movie
titles?

I vaguely remember Bruce H once purchased such a list, but I'm not sure it
was ever published.

Thank you,

Zeev


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