[MOPO] Postng Problem

2008-11-10 Thread Tom A. Pennock
Strange! I can't post to the list. Might post later. Possibly a server  
problem.
 
--TP 
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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Tom A. Pennock
Hi Bruce:
 
We are pretty close in age. I am 53. I think my Dad bought our first  color 
television in 1965. We were the first on our block to have a RCA  color TV. It 
was really exciting. I think many were buying them to see  Bonanza in color. 
Those were the good old days. My favorite show as a kid  was "Flipper". I liked 
the underwater aspects of it. Also I liked Sea Hunt but  that was not in 
color. Wish it had been.
 
I think some of these 16mm syndication prints were black and white of  color. 
Like "The Boy With Green Hair". It sure didn't make sense in black  and 
white. I think many of the stations had a glut of black and white of color  
titles 
and were running them forever. Even when color came in. 
 
Yes, the "horse of a different color" would not work when it changed it's  
colors on a black and white television. That reminds me of a book I read one  
time on the making of "The Wizard Of Oz". They could not paint that horse with  
paint of any kind because people were upset about it (early 1939 PETA???)  So 
they mixed up concentrated Jello and painted that horse with Jello. I  think 
it said in that book that in certain scenes you can possibly see the horse  
lick at the Jello.
 
Yes, OZ did have a sepia tone opening and closing. Good movies, tv  shows and 
memories!!!
 
All The Best Bruce!!!
 
--Tom 
 
 
 
 
 
In a message dated 11/10/2008 12:19:41 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Tom
 
We must be close to the same age (I just turned 56) as I remember this  being 
on all the time too!
 
My father was the last person in the world to get a color TV (he wanted  to 
be sure the process was "perfected" first) and I saw this movie over and  over 
in black and white and it made absolutely no sense, because Dean  Stockwell 
looked exactly the same with green hair as he did with brown  hair!
 
I also never understand the "horse of a different color" in The Wizard of  Oz 
(or that there was a difference between the opening of the movie and the  
rest of the movie) until I finally saw it in a theater (likely at an MGM  
Children's Matinee type showing in the later 1960s!
 
Bruce


On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 9:48 PM, Tom A. Pennock <[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
(mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) > wrote:


When I was kid in the 1960's they used to show a black and white print  ALL 
the time of "The Boy With Green Hair" with Dean Stockwell. I like this  movie 
very much but could not fully appreciate the movie until I saw the  color 
version on video. I also liked "Down To The Sea In Ships" with Dean  Stockwell 
as a 
child. This was shot in black and white. From what I  understand this title 
is now in the public domain and NOT available on any  video format except for 
bootlegs. 
 
--Tom Pennock 
 


 
In a message dated 11/9/2008 10:19:48 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  
writes:

I  got to thinking that when I was a kid, there were a few movies that   
were on television ALL THE TIME.  What was odd about this is  that  
these just weren't the kind of movies one would expect to  see  
constantly for years (during the 60s and 70s) in a market  like  
Phoenix, AZ.

One that seems really strange now is  SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER with Monty  
CLift, Liz Taylor, and  Katharine Hepburn.  I must have seen that film  
ten or  twenty times on local TV in Phoenix.  Another odd one was   
Joseph Losey's THE SERVANT with James Fox, Dirk Bogarde, and  Sara  
Miles.  Always on TV.

The weirdest film was one  called THE PICASSO SUMMER with Albert Finney  
and Yvette  Mimieux.  For some reason, that particular film played   
almost monthly for a few years.  It was an absolutely  unwatchable  
comedy/drama about a married couple driving around  Europe trying to  
run into Picasso.

Anyone else on MOPO  have such odd memories?

Channing Thomson in San  Francisco

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[MOPO] Fwd: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Tom A. Pennock
Bounced Back! Resending
 
 
  

 From: TAPennock
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED],  mopo-l@listserv.american.edu
Sent: 11/10/2008 2:34:49 A.M. Eastern Standard  Time
Subj: Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread


Hi Bruce:
 
We are pretty close in age. I am 53. I think my Dad bought our first  color 
television in 1965. We were the first on our block to have a RCA  color TV. It 
was really exciting. I think many were buying them to see  Bonanza in color. 
Those were the good old days. My favorite show as a kid  was "Flipper". I liked 
the underwater aspects of it. Also I liked Sea Hunt but  that was not in 
color. Wish it had been.
 
I think some of these 16mm syndication prints were black and white  of color. 
Like "The Boy With Green Hair". It sure didn't make sense in  black and 
white. I think many of the stations had a glut of black and white of  color 
titles 
and were running them forever. Even when color came in. 
 
Yes, the "horse of a different color" would not work when it changed it's  
colors on a black and white television. That reminds me of a book I read one  
time on the making of "The Wizard Of Oz". They could not paint that horse with  
paint of any kind because people were upset about it (early 1939 PETA???)  So 
they mixed up concentrated Jello and painted that horse with Jello. I  think 
it said in that book that in certain scenes you can possibly see the  horse 
lick at the Jello.
 
Yes, OZ did have a sepia tone opening and closing. Good movies, tv  shows and 
memories!!!
 
All The Best Bruce!!!
 
--Tom 
 
 
 
 
 
In a message dated 11/10/2008 12:19:41 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Tom
 
We must be close to the same age (I just turned 56) as I remember this  being 
on all the time too!
 
My father was the last person in the world to get a color TV (he wanted  to 
be sure the process was "perfected" first) and I saw this movie over and  over 
in black and white and it made absolutely no sense, because Dean  Stockwell 
looked exactly the same with green hair as he did with brown  hair!
 
I also never understand the "horse of a different color" in The Wizard  of Oz 
(or that there was a difference between the opening of the movie and  the 
rest of the movie) until I finally saw it in a theater (likely at an MGM  
Children's Matinee type showing in the later 1960s!
 
Bruce


On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 9:48 PM, Tom A. Pennock <[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
(mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) > wrote:


When I was kid in the 1960's they used to show a black and white  print ALL 
the time of "The Boy With Green Hair" with Dean Stockwell. I  like this movie 
very much but could not fully appreciate the movie until I  saw the color 
version on video. I also liked "Down To The Sea In Ships"  with Dean Stockwell 
as a 
child. This was shot in black and white. From  what I understand this title 
is now in the public domain and NOT available  on any video format except for 
bootlegs. 
 
--Tom Pennock 
 


 
In a message dated 11/9/2008 10:19:48 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  
writes:

I  got to thinking that when I was a kid, there were a few movies  that  
were on television ALL THE TIME.  What was odd about  this is that  
these just weren't the kind of movies one would  expect to see  
constantly for years (during the 60s and 70s) in  a market like  
Phoenix, AZ.

One that seems really  strange now is SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER with Monty  
CLift, Liz  Taylor, and Katharine Hepburn.  I must have seen that film   
ten or twenty times on local TV in Phoenix.  Another odd one  was  
Joseph Losey's THE SERVANT with James Fox, Dirk Bogarde,  and Sara  
Miles.  Always on TV.

The weirdest film  was one called THE PICASSO SUMMER with Albert Finney  
and  Yvette Mimieux.  For some reason, that particular film played   
almost monthly for a few years.  It was an absolutely  unwatchable  
comedy/drama about a married couple driving around  Europe trying to  
run into Picasso.

Anyone else on MOPO  have such odd memories?

Channing Thomson in San  Francisco

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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Bruce Hershenson
What years was that during? I clearly remember them showing The Jolson Story
and Mighty Joe Young over and over and over but don't really remember them
showing Yankee Doodle Dandy much.

Bruce

On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 6:30 AM, Franc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I lived in Brooklyn and I remember the Million Dollar Movie showing The
> Jolson Story,Yankee Doodle Dandy and Mighty Joe Young every other week.
> FRANC
>
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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Franc
I lived in Brooklyn and I remember the Million Dollar Movie showing The
Jolson Story,Yankee Doodle Dandy and Mighty Joe Young every other week.
FRANC

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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread McDaniel Kirby
All of this brings to mind the first (to the best of my knowledge)  
feature films to be broadcast on network TV
in the U.S.  This was on NBC (I THINK) and was programmed as SATURDAY  
NIGHT AT THE MOVIES.  It was a package of only 20th Century Fox films,  
including THERE'S NO BUSINESS LIKE SHOW BUSINESS, TITANIC, THE STARS  
AND STRIPES FOREVER, DEMETRIUS AND THE GLADIATORS - there were a bunch  
more.  This telecast

was sometimes in color, depending on the film.

see this:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NBC_Saturday_Night_at_the_Movies

K.
On Nov 10, 2008, at 7:18 AM, Bruce Hershenson wrote:

What years was that during? I clearly remember them showing The  
Jolson Story and Mighty Joe Young over and over and over but don't  
really remember them showing Yankee Doodle Dandy much.


Bruce

On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 6:30 AM, Franc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I lived in Brooklyn and I remember the Million Dollar Movie showing  
The
Jolson Story,Yankee Doodle Dandy and Mighty Joe Young every other  
week.

FRANC

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Kirby McDaniel
MovieArt Original Film Posters
P.O. Box 4419
Austin TX 78765-4419
512 479 6680  www.movieart.net
mobile 512 589 5112


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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread jbirddouglass
In the San Francisco Bay Area in the 50s & 60s, they showed THE SNOW 
CREATURE and KILLERS FROM SPACE incessantly. I watched them both far too 
many times to be considered normal psychologically as a child.

Greg Douglass
Franc wrote:

I lived in Brooklyn and I remember the Million Dollar Movie showing The
Jolson Story,Yankee Doodle Dandy and Mighty Joe Young every other week.
FRANC

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[MOPO] inserts: different styles ???

2008-11-10 Thread Michael B

half sheets often have 2 styles.? one sheets as much as four.

but, how rare were inserts from the 40s/50s with two stylrs?



thanks
michael

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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Susan Heim

I pretty much grew up here in Los Angeles. There use to be a program on called 
"The Million Dollar Movie" and the same movie played every night at 8:00 p.m., 
twice on Saturday and twice on Sunday. Every week brought a new movie.  I had 
always been a movie fan but this really got me into viewing every nuance. I saw 
movies that I probably would have never seen otherwise, and often watched them 
all nine times they were on in a week. Great movies like Damn Yankees, The 
Searchers, alot of old westerns and so many more. One in particular was Boy on 
a Dolphin that I thought was so great when I was a kid but when watching it 
years later, while it had some nostalgic moments for me,  the film was not as 
great as I remembered it. Ah...those were the good ol' days.
 
Sue
www.hollywoodposterframes.com> Date: Sun, 9 Nov 2008 19:19:19 -0800> From: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread> To: 
MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU> > I got to thinking that when I was a kid, there 
were a few movies that > were on television ALL THE TIME. What was odd about 
this is that > these just weren't the kind of movies one would expect to see > 
constantly for years (during the 60s and 70s) in a market like > Phoenix, AZ.> 
> One that seems really strange now is SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER with Monty > 
CLift, Liz Taylor, and Katharine Hepburn. I must have seen that film > ten or 
twenty times on local TV in Phoenix. Another odd one was > Joseph Losey's THE 
SERVANT with James Fox, Dirk Bogarde, and Sara > Miles. Always on TV.> > The 
weirdest film was one called THE PICASSO SUMMER with Albert Finney > and Yvette 
Mimieux. For some reason, that particular film played > almost monthly for a 
few years. It was an absolutely unwatchable > comedy/drama about a married 
couple driving around Europe trying to > run into Picasso.> > Anyone else on 
MOPO have such odd memories?> > Channing Thomson in San Francisco> > Visit the 
MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com> 
___> How to 
UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List> > Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]> In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L> > The author of 
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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Craig Miller

At 09:14 PM 11/9/2008, Bruce Hershenson wrote:
In New York in the 1950s and early 1960s they had "The Million 
Dollar Movie" on local Channel 9 (with the theme music from "Gone 
With the Wind" which was rumored to have been shown as the first 
"The Million Dollar Movie" but had been too expensive and that was 
merely urban legend), and every day at 1 PM, 7 PM, 9 PM and 11 PM 
they would show the same movie for an entire week, 20 times each!


The Million Dollar Movie was syndicated or maybe a format or
a package; I don't really know how it was done at that time but
it existed in many different cities around the country, with the
same title, theme music, and multiple airings of a film for the
week.  I remember once, when I was a kid, that on a particular
Sunday, the only thing I could find on the TV was religion, golf,
and The Crawling Eye, which aired *three* times that day.
There really was no escape from that eye.

Craig.




~
Craig MillerWolfmill Entertainment  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~

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[MOPO] over 10x the estimate

2008-11-10 Thread Walton, Jeffrey
Anybody know why the half sheet to X- the Man With the X-Ray Eyes
  sold at heritage for $4331.88?

 

Was it signed by Abe Lincoln, did it use to hang on Napoleon's wall, was
it printed on a copy of the Magna Carta, what's the dealio?   

 

 

I have 10 of them rolled and will sell the lot for $30k...going
once...going twice

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Re: [MOPO] over 10x the estimate

2008-11-10 Thread David Lieberman
 
 
I want to know what the deal is with the yellow submarine one sheet  for 
$4780.00
 

_http://movieposters.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=695&Lot_No=85154_ 
(http://movieposters.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=695&Lot_No=85154) 


David  Lieberman 



_CineMasterpieces.com_ (http://www.cinemasterpieces.com/)  |  15721 N. 
Greenway Hayden Loop, Suite 105 -- Scottsdale, Az  85260
Vintage Original Movie Posters | 602 309  0500 | Office/Gallery Open By  
Appt. Only.
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Re: [MOPO] over 10x the estimate

2008-11-10 Thread Bubba Despres
No idea, all I know is that I was the only bidder on "The Meanest Gal In Town" 
mini-WC!

Louie


>>> David Lieberman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 11/10/2008 1:48 PM >>>
 
 
I want to know what the deal is with the yellow submarine one sheet  for 
$4780.00
 

_http://movieposters.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=695&Lot_No=85154_ 
(http://movieposters.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=695&Lot_No=85154) 


David  Lieberman 



_CineMasterpieces.com_ (http://www.cinemasterpieces.com/)  |  15721 N. 
Greenway Hayden Loop, Suite 105 -- Scottsdale, Az  85260
Vintage Original Movie Posters | 602 309  0500 | Office/Gallery Open By  
Appt. Only.
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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Tom A. Pennock
Ari:
 
The color DVD on this title is very good. I bought it from overseas.  Very 
reasonable. Also I wish they would put out "Down To The Sea In Ships". I  think 
I might as well buy a DVD-R because it fell into the public domain. I was  
quite moved by this film with Dean Stockwell and his grandfather Lionel  
Barrymore when I was a child. I was going to buy a 16mm print at one  point.
 
Best, Tom 
 
 
In a message dated 11/10/2008 12:39:46 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

well  whats stranger is I am only 35, and I have ONLY seen this film in black 
and  white, and it also played in rural western Australia TV each year in the 
70's.  I always loved it, but wished i could SEE his green  hair.

Ari


--- On Mon, 10/11/08, Bruce Hershenson  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> From: Bruce Hershenson  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO  Thread
> To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
> Received: Monday, 10  November, 2008, 4:19 PM
> Tom
> 
> We must be close to the  same age (I just turned 56) as I
> remember this being
> on all  the time too!
> 
> My father was the last person in the world to  get a color
> TV (he wanted to
> be sure the process was  "perfected" first) and I
> saw this movie over and
> over in black  and white and it made absolutely no sense,
> because Dean
>  Stockwell looked exactly the same with green hair as he did
> with brown  hair!
> 
> I also never understand the "horse of a  different
> color" in The Wizard of Oz
> (or that there was a  difference between the opening of the
> movie and the
> rest of  the movie) until I finally saw it in a theater
> (likely at an  MGM
> Children's Matinee type showing in the later 1960s!
>  
> Bruce
> 
> On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 9:48 PM, Tom A.  Pennock
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> >   When I was kid in the 1960's they used to show a
> black and white  print
> > ALL the time of "The Boy With Green Hair"
> with Dean  Stockwell. I like this
> > movie very much but could not fully  appreciate the
> movie until I saw the
> > color version on  video. I also liked "Down To The
> Sea In Ships" with Dean
> >  Stockwell as a child. This was shot in black and
> white. From what  I
> > understand this title is now in the public domain and
>  NOT available on any
> > video format except for bootlegs.
>  >
> > --Tom Pennock
> >
> >
> >   In a message dated 11/9/2008 10:19:48 P.M. Eastern
> Standard  Time,
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>  >
> > I got to thinking that when I was a kid, there were  a
> few movies that
> > were on television ALL THE TIME.   What was odd about
> this is that
> > these just weren't the  kind of movies one would
> expect to see
> > constantly for  years (during the 60s and 70s) in a
> market like
> > Phoenix,  AZ.
> >
> > One that seems really strange now is SUDDENLY,  LAST
> SUMMER with Monty
> > CLift, Liz Taylor, and Katharine  Hepburn.  I must have
> seen that film
> > ten or twenty  times on local TV in Phoenix.  Another
> odd one was
> >  Joseph Losey's THE SERVANT with James Fox, Dirk
> Bogarde, and  Sara
> > Miles.  Always on TV.
> >
> > The  weirdest film was one called THE PICASSO SUMMER
> with Albert  Finney
> > and Yvette Mimieux.  For some reason, that  particular
> film played
> > almost monthly for a few  years.  It was an absolutely
> unwatchable
> >  comedy/drama about a married couple driving around
> Europe trying  to
> > run into Picasso.
> >
> > Anyone else on  MOPO have such odd memories?
> >
> > Channing Thomson in San  Francisco
> >
> >  Visit  the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at
> www.filmfan.com
>  >   
>  ___
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> List
> >
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>  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >   In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF
> MOPO-L
>  >
> > The author of this message is solely  responsible
> for its content.
> >
> >
>  >
> >
> >  --
>  > AOL Search: Your one stop for directions, recipes and
> all other  Holiday
> > needs. Search
>  
Now
>  > .
> >   Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site  at
> www.filmfan.com
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[MOPO] Heritage's outrageous prices

2008-11-10 Thread Mark Heller
A few years ago a friend of mine had problems
with Heritage and their pre-bid system.
I'm sure the winners of some of these outrageously
priced auctions will one day find themselves losers!
Since then I am always suspicious of Heritage.
**AOL Search: Your one stop for directions, recipes and all other 
Holiday needs. Search Now. 
(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/10075x1212792382x1200798498/aol?redir=http://searchblog.aol.com/2008/11/04/happy-holidays-from
-aol-search/?ncid=emlcntussear0001)

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Re: [MOPO] over 10x the estimate

2008-11-10 Thread Glenn Taranto
The one thing I wanted in the Heritage Auctions, take a guess what it was, went 
for slightly less than my monthly nut.

I can only justify spending so much for a small piece of cardboard. There's got 
to be another one out there and with one less interested bidder...

Glenn T.


  - Original Message - 
  From: Bubba Despres 
  To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU 
  Sent: Monday, November 10, 2008 10:52 AM
  Subject: Re: [MOPO] over 10x the estimate


  No idea, all I know is that I was the only bidder on "The Meanest Gal In 
Town" mini-WC!

  Louie


  >>> David Lieberman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 11/10/2008 1:48 PM >>>
   
   
  I want to know what the deal is with the yellow submarine one sheet  for 
  $4780.00
   

  _http://movieposters.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=695&Lot_No=85154_ 
  (http://movieposters.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=695&Lot_No=85154) 


  David  Lieberman 



  _CineMasterpieces.com_ (http://www.cinemasterpieces.com/)  |  15721 N. 
  Greenway Hayden Loop, Suite 105 -- Scottsdale, Az  85260
  Vintage Original Movie Posters | 602 309  0500 | Office/Gallery Open By  
  Appt. Only.
  **AOL Search: Your one stop for directions, recipes and all other 
  Holiday needs. Search Now. 
  
(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/10075x1212792382x1200798498/aol?redir=http://searchblog.aol.com/2008/11/04/happy-holidays-from
  -aol-search/?ncid=emlcntussear0001)

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Re: [MOPO] over 10x the estimate

2008-11-10 Thread Andrea Kanter
The paper that made that particular one came from the cherry tree  
George Washington cut down.

Can't believe you didn't know that.

Andrea


Waste Not, Want Not - RECYCLE

On Nov 10, 2008, at 1:48 PM, David Lieberman wrote:

I want to know what the deal is with the yellow submarine one sheet  
for $4780.00



http://movieposters.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=695&Lot_No=85154


David Lieberman
CineMasterpieces.com | 15721 N. Greenway Hayden Loop, Suite 105 --  
Scottsdale, Az 85260
Vintage Original Movie Posters | 602 309 0500 | Office/Gallery Open  
By Appt. Only.




AOL Search: Your one stop for directions, recipes and all other  
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Re: [MOPO] inserts: different styles ???

2008-11-10 Thread Bruce Hershenson
"how rare were inserts from the 40s/50s with two stylrs"

Even MORE rare than an eBay seller saying a poster looks WORSE than his
digital image!

I vaguely remember one or two inserts from the 1930s where there were two
different, and there are a few 1970s ones that are marked "Style B", and of
course there are titles like "The Long Goodbye" where there are two
different inserts, both with great images, but that's about all I can think
of.

Maybe some experts in rare styles, like Tony Nourmand or Joe Burtis can
remember some examples.

Bruce

On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 11:17 AM, Michael B <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> half sheets often have 2 styles.  one sheets as much as four.
>
> but, how rare were inserts from the 40s/50s with two stylrs?
>
>
>
> thanks
> michael
>
> --
> Instant access to the latest & most popular FREE games while you browse
> with the Games Toolbar - Download 
> Now!
> Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Franc
I forgot to mention one of my favorite very bad Million Dollar movies
which is CAGED. That one ran on alternate weeks with Yankee Doodle
Dandy. Everyone loved the scene in which Hope Emerson as the mean and
nasty Matron gets it.  FRANC

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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Bruce Hershenson
As a pre-teen in New York in the late 1950s/early 1960s, they showed ALL the
Shirley Temple movies on Saturday mornings, as well as most of the Bowery
Boys, and the Charlie Chans. So I knew all those series inside and out, but
oddly, they never seemed to show hardly any Twentieth Century Fox musicals,
and to this day I don't know that I have ever seen even one movie with Alice
Faye or Betty Grable (major gaps in my film education, I am sure).

I watched the Bowery Boys every week. and somehow never got tired of them. I
was amazed years later to learn that the little Sweet Shop owner, Louie, was
actually Loe Gorcey's father! Here was Leo slapping and abusing his own
father in every movie. I guess there wasn't something Freudian going on
there!

Bruce

On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 12:02 PM, Susan Heim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I pretty much grew up here in Los Angeles. There use to be a program on
> called "The Million Dollar Movie" and the same movie played every night at
> 8:00 p.m., twice on Saturday and twice on Sunday. Every week brought a new
> movie.  I had always been a movie fan but this really got me into viewing
> every nuance. I saw movies that I probably would have never seen otherwise,
> and often watched them all nine times they were on in a week. Great movies
> like Damn Yankees, The Searchers, alot of old westerns and so many more. One
> in particular was Boy on a Dolphin that I thought was so great when I was a
> kid but when watching it years later, while it had some nostalgic moments
> for me,  the film was not as great as I remembered it. Ah...those were the
> good ol' days.
>
> Sue
> www.hollywoodposterframes.com
>
> > Date: Sun, 9 Nov 2008 19:19:19 -0800
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread
> > To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
> >
>  > I got to thinking that when I was a kid, there were a few movies that
> > were on television ALL THE TIME. What was odd about this is that
> > these just weren't the kind of movies one would expect to see
> > constantly for years (during the 60s and 70s) in a market like
> > Phoenix, AZ.
> >
> > One that seems really strange now is SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER with Monty
> > CLift, Liz Taylor, and Katharine Hepburn. I must have seen that film
> > ten or twenty times on local TV in Phoenix. Another odd one was
> > Joseph Losey's THE SERVANT with James Fox, Dirk Bogarde, and Sara
> > Miles. Always on TV.
> >
> > The weirdest film was one called THE PICASSO SUMMER with Albert Finney
> > and Yvette Mimieux. For some reason, that particular film played
> > almost monthly for a few years. It was an absolutely unwatchable
> > comedy/drama about a married couple driving around Europe trying to
> > run into Picasso.
> >
> > Anyone else on MOPO have such odd memories?
> >
> > Channing Thomson in San Francisco
> >
> > Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
> > ___
> > How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
> >
> > Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L
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> > The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.
>
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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Richard Halegua Comic Art

wel I did see the Alice Faye musicals in the 1960s
Alexander's Ragtime Band was one of them.

between Million Dollar Movie & Chiller Theatre.. I was in weekly film heaven




At 01:20 PM 11/10/2008, Bruce Hershenson wrote:
As a pre-teen in New York in the late 1950s/early 1960s, they showed 
ALL the Shirley Temple movies on Saturday mornings, as well as most 
of the Bowery Boys, and the Charlie Chans. So I knew all those 
series inside and out, but oddly, they never seemed to show hardly 
any Twentieth Century Fox musicals, and to this day I don't know 
that I have ever seen even one movie with Alice Faye or Betty Grable 
(major gaps in my film education, I am sure).


I watched the Bowery Boys every week. and somehow never got tired of 
them. I was amazed years later to learn that the little Sweet Shop 
owner, Louie, was actually Loe Gorcey's father! Here was Leo 
slapping and abusing his own father in every movie. I guess there 
wasn't something Freudian going on there!


Bruce

On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 12:02 PM, Susan Heim 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I pretty much grew up here in Los Angeles. There use to be a program 
on called "The Million Dollar Movie" and the same movie played every 
night at 8:00 p.m., twice on Saturday and twice on Sunday. Every 
week brought a new movie.  I had always been a movie fan but this 
really got me into viewing every nuance. I saw movies that I 
probably would have never seen otherwise, and often watched them all 
nine times they were on in a week. Great movies like Damn Yankees, 
The Searchers, alot of old westerns and so many more. One in 
particular was Boy on a Dolphin that I thought was so great when I 
was a kid but when watching it years later, while it had some 
nostalgic moments for me,  the film was not as great as I remembered 
it. Ah...those were the good ol' days.


Sue
www.hollywoodposterframes.com

> Date: Sun, 9 Nov 2008 19:19:19 -0800
> From: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

> Subject: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

> To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
>
> I got to thinking that when I was a kid, there were a few movies that
> were on television ALL THE TIME. What was odd about this is that
> these just weren't the kind of movies one would expect to see
> constantly for years (during the 60s and 70s) in a market like
> Phoenix, AZ.
>
> One that seems really strange now is SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER with Monty
> CLift, Liz Taylor, and Katharine Hepburn. I must have seen that film
> ten or twenty times on local TV in Phoenix. Another odd one was
> Joseph Losey's THE SERVANT with James Fox, Dirk Bogarde, and Sara
> Miles. Always on TV.
>
> The weirdest film was one called THE PICASSO SUMMER with Albert Finney
> and Yvette Mimieux. For some reason, that particular film played
> almost monthly for a few years. It was an absolutely unwatchable
> comedy/drama about a married couple driving around Europe trying to
> run into Picasso.
>
> Anyone else on MOPO have such odd memories?
>
> Channing Thomson in San Francisco
>
> Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at 
www.filmfan.com

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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Susan Heim

I totally remember Chiller Theater. Just like Bruce, my early years, growing up 
in Columbus, Ohio, we hard Tarzan Theater, Shirley Temple, Charlie Chan, Abbott 
and Costello, and the 3 Stooges every Saturday morning. I use to watch the 
cartoon line up, then Sky King and Roy and Dale (Happy Trails to You!!) and 
then some old movie series. Then onto L.A. and, not only the Million Dollar 
movie, but another one every Saturday and Sunday afternoon with Bob somebody 
(his last name escapes me) in my later teen years and so on.  It's funny how we 
all were growing up in different parts of the country watching the same things 
and here we are, all these years later, still into those same movies. Great, 
huh!!
 
Sue



Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2008 13:26:07 -0800From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Re: [MOPO] Fun 
MOPO ThreadTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED] I did see the Alice Faye musicals in the 
1960sAlexander's Ragtime Band was one of them.between Million Dollar Movie & 
Chiller Theatre.. I was in weekly film heavenAt 01:20 PM 11/10/2008, Bruce 
Hershenson wrote:
As a pre-teen in New York in the late 1950s/early 1960s, they showed ALL the 
Shirley Temple movies on Saturday mornings, as well as most of the Bowery Boys, 
and the Charlie Chans. So I knew all those series inside and out, but oddly, 
they never seemed to show hardly any Twentieth Century Fox musicals, and to 
this day I don't know that I have ever seen even one movie with Alice Faye or 
Betty Grable (major gaps in my film education, I am sure). I watched the Bowery 
Boys every week. and somehow never got tired of them. I was amazed years later 
to learn that the little Sweet Shop owner, Louie, was actually Loe Gorcey's 
father! Here was Leo slapping and abusing his own father in every movie. I 
guess there wasn't something Freudian going on there! BruceOn Mon, Nov 10, 2008 
at 12:02 PM, Susan Heim <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > wrote:

I pretty much grew up here in Los Angeles. There use to be a program on called 
"The Million Dollar Movie" and the same movie played every night at 8:00 p.m., 
twice on Saturday and twice on Sunday. Every week brought a new movie.  I had 
always been a movie fan but this really got me into viewing every nuance. I saw 
movies that I probably would have never seen otherwise, and often watched them 
all nine times they were on in a week. Great movies like Damn Yankees, The 
Searchers, alot of old westerns and so many more. One in particular was Boy on 
a Dolphin that I thought was so great when I was a kid but when watching it 
years later, while it had some nostalgic moments for me,  the film was not as 
great as I remembered it. Ah...those were the good ol' days.
 
Sue
www.hollywoodposterframes.com
> Date: Sun, 9 Nov 2008 19:19:19 -0800
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread 
> To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
> 
> I got to thinking that when I was a kid, there were a few movies that 
> were on television ALL THE TIME. What was odd about this is that 
> these just weren't the kind of movies one would expect to see 
> constantly for years (during the 60s and 70s) in a market like 
> Phoenix, AZ.
> 
> One that seems really strange now is SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER with Monty 
> CLift, Liz Taylor, and Katharine Hepburn. I must have seen that film 
> ten or twenty times on local TV in Phoenix. Another odd one was 
> Joseph Losey's THE SERVANT with James Fox, Dirk Bogarde, and Sara 
> Miles. Always on TV.
> 
> The weirdest film was one called THE PICASSO SUMMER with Albert Finney 
> and Yvette Mimieux. For some reason, that particular film played 
> almost monthly for a few years. It was an absolutely unwatchable 
> comedy/drama about a married couple driving around Europe trying to 
> run into Picasso.
> 
> Anyone else on MOPO have such odd memories?
> 
> Channing Thomson in San Francisco
> 
> Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
> ___
> How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
> 
> Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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[MOPO] on a Thanksgiving Poster

2008-11-10 Thread Chris Cloutier
While not a movie poster, this original World War Two Poster has many of the 
same condition issues
that are commonly asked about by people, how to neutralize acids, flatten folio 
folds, and rematch missing color.

See this link.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfO72BDF7d0

Chruis Cloutier


Kind Regards, 

Chris Cloutier

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Re: [MOPO] inserts: different styles ???

2008-11-10 Thread Evan Zweifel

I know for a FACT, that "Apocalyps Now" and a few other titles from that era 
come in 2 distict styles.  Its easy to tell them apart as one style (the B 
style) is on a glossy minty white paper with subtle color differences from the 
other style (the A style).

Evan.



PS.  For those of you who are humor impaired -- this was a joke.
-- Original message -- 
From: Bruce Hershenson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

"how rare were inserts from the 40s/50s with two stylrs"

Even MORE rare than an eBay seller saying a poster looks WORSE than his digital 
image!

I vaguely remember one or two inserts from the 1930s where there were two 
different, and there are a few 1970s ones that are marked "Style B", and of 
course there are titles like "The Long Goodbye" where there are two different 
inserts, both with great images, but that's about all I can think of.

Maybe some experts in rare styles, like Tony Nourmand or Joe Burtis can 
remember some examples.

Bruce


On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 11:17 AM, Michael B <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

half sheets often have 2 styles.  one sheets as much as four.

but, how rare were inserts from the 40s/50s with two stylrs?



thanks
michael



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Re: [MOPO] inserts: different styles ???

2008-11-10 Thread Bruce Hershenson
That might not be a joke! Maybe all the "minty whites" are rare "style B's"?

*NOT*

Bruce

On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 4:10 PM, Evan Zweifel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:

>
> I know for a FACT, that "Apocalyps Now" and a few other titles from that
> era come in 2 distict styles.  Its easy to tell them apart as one style (the
> B style) is on a glossy minty white paper with subtle color differences from
> the other style (the A style).
>
> Evan.
>
>
>
> PS.  For those of you who are humor impaired -- this was a joke.
>
> -- Original message --
> From: Bruce Hershenson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> "how rare were inserts from the 40s/50s with two stylrs"
>
> Even MORE rare than an eBay seller saying a poster looks WORSE than his
> digital image!
>
> I vaguely remember one or two inserts from the 1930s where there were two
> different, and there are a few 1970s ones that are marked "Style B", and of
> course there are titles like "The Long Goodbye" where there are two
> different inserts, both with great images, but that's about all I can think
> of.
>
> Maybe some experts in rare styles, like Tony Nourmand or Joe Burtis can
> remember some examples.
>
> Bruce
>
> On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 11:17 AM, Michael B <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> half sheets often have 2 styles.  one sheets as much as four.
>>
>> but, how rare were inserts from the 40s/50s with two stylrs?
>>
>>
>>
>> thanks
>> michael
>>
>> --
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Re: [MOPO] Heritage's outrageous prices

2008-11-10 Thread Jeff Potokar

hi all,

i am curious.. what is the heritage suspicion about?  and why will  
current winning bidders "find themselves losers?" it is interesting  
that a number of items that sold for premiums are being questioned,  
when before the auction, people were commenting on possible low  
priced items due to the economy. are people simply surprised that  
items did better than expected?


anyone have a thought about this? the bottom line is bidders are  
the ones at any auction the drive the price up, regardless of an  
item's starting price.


best.

jeff


On Nov 10, 2008, at 11:47 AM, Mark Heller wrote:


A few years ago a friend of mine had problems
with Heritage and their pre-bid system.
I'm sure the winners of some of these outrageously
priced auctions will one day find themselves losers!
Since then I am always suspicious of Heritage.



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Re: [MOPO] inserts: different styles ???

2008-11-10 Thread Ari Richards
I have a genuine Minty Blade runner insert authenticated by Professor Powers, 
so I KNOW I HAVE A REAL ONE.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v33/posterfreak/FORUM/BRMINTY.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v33/posterfreak/FORUM/COA.jpg


I know your all jealous.

Ari

--- On Tue, 11/11/08, Bruce Hershenson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> From: Bruce Hershenson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: [MOPO] inserts: different styles ???
> To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
> Received: Tuesday, 11 November, 2008, 9:29 AM
> That might not be a joke! Maybe all the "minty
> whites" are rare "style B's"?
> 
> *NOT*
> 
> Bruce
> 
> On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 4:10 PM, Evan Zweifel
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
> 
> >
> > I know for a FACT, that "Apocalyps Now" and
> a few other titles from that
> > era come in 2 distict styles.  Its easy to tell them
> apart as one style (the
> > B style) is on a glossy minty white paper with subtle
> color differences from
> > the other style (the A style).
> >
> > Evan.
> >
> >
> >
> > PS.  For those of you who are humor impaired -- this
> was a joke.
> >
> > -- Original message --
> > From: Bruce Hershenson
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > "how rare were inserts from the 40s/50s with two
> stylrs"
> >
> > Even MORE rare than an eBay seller saying a poster
> looks WORSE than his
> > digital image!
> >
> > I vaguely remember one or two inserts from the 1930s
> where there were two
> > different, and there are a few 1970s ones that are
> marked "Style B", and of
> > course there are titles like "The Long
> Goodbye" where there are two
> > different inserts, both with great images, but
> that's about all I can think
> > of.
> >
> > Maybe some experts in rare styles, like Tony Nourmand
> or Joe Burtis can
> > remember some examples.
> >
> > Bruce
> >
> > On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 11:17 AM, Michael B
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >> half sheets often have 2 styles.  one sheets as
> much as four.
> >>
> >> but, how rare were inserts from the 40s/50s with
> two stylrs?
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> thanks
> >> michael
> >>
> >> --
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> FREE games while you browse
> >> with the Games Toolbar - Download
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[MOPO] FA CLOSING! ButchCassidy,CarRacing,Undersea1Shts,PinkPanther,SeaWife6ShtBARGAINS

2008-11-10 Thread Rixposterz
Hi, Everyone,
 
  I have about 20 Auctions closing WITHIN 3 TO 4 HOURS, ALL original  Posters 
at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, including:
_http://shop.ebay.com/merchant/rixposterz_W0QQ_nkwZQQ_armrsZ1QQ_fromZQQ_mdoZ_ 
(http://shop.ebay.com/merchant/rixposterz_W0QQ_nkwZQQ_armrsZ1QQ_fromZQQ_mdoZ) 
SEA WIFE (Joan Collins, Richard Burton,1957) Orig US 6 SHEET!! GREAT ART!  
RARE! NM! $24.99!!!
BUTCH CASSIDY + THE SUDANCE KID--- US Lobby Card BEST NEWMAN  CLOSE-UP!  ONLY 
$19.99!!
THE DEEP, BEYOND THE POSEIDON ADV + ORCA---ALL 3 Orig US 1-Sheets FOR ONLY  
$19.99!!!
FIREFOX (Clint Eastwood, Fighter Jets. 1982) Orig US 1-SHEET Plus  Orig 
BRITISH QUAD---BOTH 
  
  FOR ONLY $19.99!!!
I SHOT ANDY WARHOL---Orig ADVANCE US Poster MINT! RARE! ONLY  $19.99!!!
BEHIND THE HIGH WALL (Prison Escape Classic, 1956) Orig US 6-SHEET  
INCREDIBLE ART!! 
  
   ONLY $24.99
RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER (Sellers, 1975) Orig 3 SHEET MINT!!! ONLY  
$19.99!!!
HEAVEN'S GATE (Cimino, Kristofferson, 1981) Orig ADVANCE US 1-SHEET Plus  
Orig STYLE A 
 US 
1-SHEET---BOTH FOR ONLY $19.99!!!
_http://shop.ebay.com/merchant/rixposterz_W0QQ_nkwZQQ_armrsZ1QQ_fromZQQ_mdoZ_ 
(http://shop.ebay.com/merchant/rixposterz_W0QQ_nkwZQQ_armrsZ1QQ_fromZQQ_mdoZ) 
  And there's MUCH MORE!!! CLOSING SOON!!!  Thanks again for  looking!!   Rick
 
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[MOPO] FA Burn Witch Burn - Texas Chainsaw - Clint Eastwood and more

2008-11-10 Thread JOHN REID Vintage Movie Memorabilia
Hi to all

I recently picked up a large collection of lobby cards US one sheets daybills 
and international posters. I will be gradually listing them for auction or in 
my store on eBay over the coming weeks and I have already listed some of the 
posters including...

JOE LOUIS V. JERSEY JOE WALCOTT 1948 Boxing RKO poster

BURN WITCH BURN aka MARK OF THE DEVIL 1970 1st poster

TWO MULES FOR SISTER SARAH 1970 Clint Eastwood poster

TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 1974 Tobe Hooper RARE poster

TARZANS SAVAGE FURY 1952 Lex Barker RKO Movie poster

SCARFACE 1983 Al Pacino BEST ART Rare Movie poster

THE PARTY 1968 Peter Sellers RARE Movie poster

THE ITALIAN JOB 1969 Michael Caine RARE Movie poster

DEMENTIA 13 1963 Coppola Rare HORIZONTAL Movie poster

ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET THE KILLER 1949 Lobby Card

BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID Original daybill

TALES FROM THE TUBE 1975 Rare ORIGINAL Surfing poster

You can find the complete list of auctions here
http://stores.ebay.com/JOHN-REID-Original-Movie-Posters_W0QQcolZ4QQdirZ1QQfclZ3QQfsubZ0QQftidZ2QQsclZ2QQtZkm

and my store items here
http://stores.ebay.com/JOHN-REID-Original-Movie-Posters

and I also have a huge selection of memorabilia on my website
http://www.moviemem.com 

including the most comprehensive selection of Country of Origin posters for 
Australian films and some newly listed James Bond posters.

Thanks for taking a look
Regards
John

 
JOHN REID VINTAGE MOVIE MEMORABILIA
PO Box 92
Palm Beach
Qld 4221
Australia

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Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread

2008-11-10 Thread Phil Edwards
I remember two great things about BOY ON A DOLPHIN seeing it when it first came 
out.

And while the movie doesn't hold up so well, they do.

Phil


  - Original Message - 
  From: Susan Heim 
  To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU 
  Sent: Tuesday, November 11, 2008 5:02 AM
  Subject: Re: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread


  I pretty much grew up here in Los Angeles. There use to be a program on 
called "The Million Dollar Movie" and the same movie played every night at 8:00 
p.m., twice on Saturday and twice on Sunday. Every week brought a new movie.  I 
had always been a movie fan but this really got me into viewing every nuance. I 
saw movies that I probably would have never seen otherwise, and often watched 
them all nine times they were on in a week. Great movies like Damn Yankees, The 
Searchers, alot of old westerns and so many more. One in particular was Boy on 
a Dolphin that I thought was so great when I was a kid but when watching it 
years later, while it had some nostalgic moments for me,  the film was not as 
great as I remembered it. Ah...those were the good ol' days.
   
  Sue
  www.hollywoodposterframes.com

  > Date: Sun, 9 Nov 2008 19:19:19 -0800
  > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  > Subject: [MOPO] Fun MOPO Thread
  > To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
  > 
  > I got to thinking that when I was a kid, there were a few movies that 
  > were on television ALL THE TIME. What was odd about this is that 
  > these just weren't the kind of movies one would expect to see 
  > constantly for years (during the 60s and 70s) in a market like 
  > Phoenix, AZ.
  > 
  > One that seems really strange now is SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER with Monty 
  > CLift, Liz Taylor, and Katharine Hepburn. I must have seen that film 
  > ten or twenty times on local TV in Phoenix. Another odd one was 
  > Joseph Losey's THE SERVANT with James Fox, Dirk Bogarde, and Sara 
  > Miles. Always on TV.
  > 
  > The weirdest film was one called THE PICASSO SUMMER with Albert Finney 
  > and Yvette Mimieux. For some reason, that particular film played 
  > almost monthly for a few years. It was an absolutely unwatchable 
  > comedy/drama about a married couple driving around Europe trying to 
  > run into Picasso.
  > 
  > Anyone else on MOPO have such odd memories?
  > 
  > Channing Thomson in San Francisco
  > 
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[MOPO] New Posters on Twilight

2008-11-10 Thread channinglylethomson
Someone recently posted that they had some posters on TWILIGHT.  Can  
you send me a reminder e-mail about that. I was wondering how many  
there are now and hat the styles are.  Thanks, Channing Thomson


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[MOPO] WTB- new original double sided 27x40 Day the Earth Stood Still Posters

2008-11-10 Thread Jeff Jewett
Anybody have these for a reasonable price? Thanks much, jeff

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