[MOPO] Part 5 ends tonite-100 Great Cheesecake/Beefcake photos in my Major 2012 still auction

2012-02-26 Thread glenndamato
Folks-Ending in about 11 hrs-Part 5 of my 2012 Major Photo Auction. This part 
features 100 of the best cheesecake/beefcake stills I have ever auctioned-Clint 
Walker (3 great ones!), Ava Gardner, Anne Francis, Natalie Wood, Gene Tierney 
(3 killers!),Anna Lee, Lyda Roberti, many more. All started @ $2.99. Some have 
no bids yet. There should be some bargains. Enjoy the luxury of bidding in a 
shill-free auction! Check out Ebay user ID FANG1959 or go to www.fang1959.com  
. Also, check out Part 6 of my auction-100 Great Film Noir photos-up now. Part 
7-Horror/Sci-fi/Fantasy starts on Thurs-thanks for looking-Glenn

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[MOPO] FA CLOSING! Psycho1-Sht,CultOfTheCobra1/2Sht,Thunderball/YOLT,StarWarsLCSet MORE

2012-02-26 Thread Rixposterz
Hi, Everyone,
 
  I have about 45 Auctions closing TONIGHT... right  in the middle of the 
Oscars!!  Lots and lots of outstanding  pieces.  Please take a look and be 
sure to get your bids in before the  ceremonies begin!
   Thanks  to all!  Enjoy the 
show!
  Rick
 
_http://www.ebay.com/sch/rixposterz/m.html?_nkw=_armrs=1_from=_ipg=50_ 
(http://www.ebay.com/sch/rixposterz/m.html?_nkw=_armrs=1_from=_ipg=50) 

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[MOPO] 3 1/2 Hrs to go in Part 5 (Cheesecake/Beefcake) of my 2012 Major Photo Auction! Best ever!

2012-02-26 Thread glenndamato
Folks-Only 3.5 Hrs to go in Part 5 (Cheesecake/Beefcake) of my 2012 Major Photo 
Auction. I believe this is the finest selection of 100 stills I have ever 
offered in this genre. Clint Walker (3 great ones!), Ava Gardner, Virginia 
Mayo, Debbie Reynolds, Natalie Wood (2 killers), Gordon Scott,  many more. 
Check out Ebay user ID FANG1959 or go to www.fang1959.com  Check out Part 6-100 
great Film Noir Stills-up now also. Horror/Sci-Fi/Fantasy (Part 7)start next 
Thurs..  Thanks for loking-Glenn

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[MOPO] FA: Heritage has Tom Mix, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Some Like it Hot, Bonnie Clyde, Carole Lombard, Goldfinger, Alamo, Rocketship X-M, Charade, more!

2012-02-26 Thread Carteron, Bruce - 1551
Heritage has 423 lots of some of the Best of vintage movie posters closing 
tonight, Feb. 26th, at 10pm CT!
www.ha.com/161209http://www.ha.com/161209


Featuring a great selection of affordable posters, lobby cards, photos, press 
books, and related Memorabilia!

Heritage has offered over 150,000 lots (all searchable with images, 
descriptions and prices in our free permanent auction 
archive)http://movieposters.ha.com/common/search_results.php?N=54+790+231+showHall=1ic=Center-Archives-althome1-102009
  of some of the very rarest and most desirable in the hobby. Serving over 
600,000 collectors, including 40,000 Movie Poster bidder-members, HA.com is the 
place to go to buy and sell your vintage movie posters!

Great Highlights this week include:

Tom Mix Circus Posters (Tom Mix, 1937) Two Posters
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51392
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51393

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof/Butterfield 8 Combo (MGM, R-1966). Three Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51062

Some Like It Hot (United Artists, 1959). French Grande
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51352

Carole Lombard (Paramount, 1930s). Eastman Kodak Safety Negative
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51057

Bonnie and Clyde (Warner Brothers-Seven Arts, 1967). Italian 2 - Foglio
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51033

Goldfinger (United Artists, R-1971). Japanese B2
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51157

The Alamo (United Artists, 1960). One Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51006

Rocketship X-M (Lippert, 1950). One Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51318

Outlaws of the Orient (Columbia, 1937). Insert
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51282

Rollin' Westward (Monogram, 1939). Three Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51320

From Russia with Love (United Artists, 1964). Three Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51145

Untamed Women (United Artists, 1952). Half Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51400

Passport to Destiny (RKO, 1944). One Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51286

Gun Law (Majestic, 1933). One Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51163

Screen Secrets (Fawcett Publications, March 1929) Magazine w/ Lupe Velez cover
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51331

Some Came Running (MGM, 1959). One Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51351

Thundering Frontier (Columbia, 1940). One Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51383

Love is a Many-Splendored Thing (20th Century Fox, 1955). Lobby Card Set of 8
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51227

Barbara Stanwyck (RKO, 1936). Nitrate Negative
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51014

What's Your Reputation Worth? (Vitagraph, 1921). Title Lobby Card and Lobby 
Cards (5)
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51411

The Cheat (Paramount, 1923). Lobby Card
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51069

Who Cares? (Select, 1919). Lobby Cards (3)
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51413

Call of the Canyon (Republic, 1942) Gene Autry Autographed One Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51048

Sagebrush Trail (Monogram, 1933). Half Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51323

The Colossus of New York (Paramount, 1958). Half Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51084

The Lost City (Super Serial Productions, 1935). One Sheet Episode 2 -- Death 
Ray
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51226

Pigskin Parade (20th Century Fox, 1936). Silk Screen Poster (30 X 40)
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51293

Castle in the Sky (Toei Co. Ltd., 1986). Japanese B2s (2) A and B Styles
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51061

Das Boot (Neue Constantin Film, 1981). German A0
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51034

Claudette Colbert (Paramount, 1930s). Eastman Kodak Nitrate Negative
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51079

Along the Navajo Trail (Republic, 1945). One Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51007

Charade (Universal, 1963). Three Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51065

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (20th Century Fox, 1969). Three Sheet
http://movieposters.ha.com/c/item.zx?saleNo=161209lotNo=51039

And many, many more!!
.

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[MOPO] MY AUCTION ENDS ON LEAP YEAR THIS WEEK FEB 29th - Lots of Misc collectibles

2012-02-26 Thread Richard Halegua Comic Art

WOW!!!  This will not happen again for generations!
My Auction this week is going to end on Weds Feb 29th

Let's celebrate (which means you should go to www.movieposterbid.com 
right now and make bids)


This week we have Glass Slides for better titles, Exhibitor 
Magazines, Photoplay Edition Books, 8x10 Stills, Theatre Heralds, 
Promotional items and other miscellaneous collectibles. Note: our 
gallery has an additional group of still we could not get listed for 
this auction. Those stills will be added to teh next auction which 
will be lobby card sets  groups of 3-8 cards including lots of high 
quality titles.


http://www.movieposterbid.com/supersize/99cent/index.htmClick Here 
to See a Gallery of the posters being sold in this auction


http://www.movieposterbid.com/search.asp?nsearch=*comic-art.com*Click 
Here to Go to the Auctions www.movieposterbid.com


.. and here is a complete list with current bid price of the current auctions

  ALLEGHENY UPRISING 1939 Glass Slide .. Claire Trevor, John Wayne$0.99
  BOOM TOWN 1940 Glass Slide Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, Claudette 
Colbert$3.00
  CONGO MAISIE 1940 Glass Slide .. Ann Sothern, John Carroll, S. 
Strudwick$3.00

  DOOMED CARAVAN 1941 Glass Slide .. William Boyd, Russell Hayden$4.00
  DR. KILDARE GOES HOME 1940 Glass Slide .. Lew Ayres, Lionel 
Barrymore$4.00

  EDISON, the MAN 1940 Glass Slide .. Spencer Tracy, Rita Johnson$0.99
  GOLD RUSH MAISIE 1940 Glass Slide .. Ann Sothern, Lee Bowman$3.00
  GREAT LIE 1941 Glass Slide .. Bette Davis, George Brent, Mary 
Astor$0.99

  HOWARDS of VIRGINIA 1940 Glass Slide .. Cary Grant, Martha Scott$0.99
  MAN WHO CAME to DINNER 1942 Glass Slide .. Bette Davis, Ann 
Sheridan$0.99
  SAFARI 1940 Glass Slide .. Douglas Fairbanks Jr, Madeleine 
Carroll$0.99
  THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT 1940 Glass Slide .. George Raft, Humphrey 
Bogart$12.00
  INVADERS, the 1967 Big Little Book .. Cool comic adaptation of TV 
show$0.99

  A TALE of TWO CITIES 1935 Photoplay Edition A .. Ronald Colman$0.99
  A TALE of TWO CITIES 1935 Photoplay Edition B .. Ronald Colman$0.99
  ADVENTURE 1945 Photplay Edition .. Clark Gable, Greer Garson$0.99
  BIG CLOCK 1948 Photoplay Edition .. Charles Laughton, Ray Milland$6.02
  CAPE COD FOLKS 1924 Photoplay Edition .. Barbara Bedford, Renee 
Adoree $0.99
  CAPTAIN KIDD 1945 Photoplay Edition .. Randolph Scott, Charles 
Laughton $0.99
  CLUNY BROWN 1946 Photoplay Edition .. Charles Biyer, Jennifer 
Jones$0.99
  DADDY LONG LEGS 1919 Photoplay Edition .. Mary Pickford, Milla 
Davenport$0.99

  DAISY KENYON 1947 Photoplay Edition .. Joan Crawford, Henry Fonda$0.99
  HOLD BACK the DAWN 1941 Photoplay Edition .. C. Boyer, O. de 
Havilland$0.99
  HOUSEKEEPER'S DAUGHTER 1939 Photoplay Edition .. Joan Bennett, A. 
Menjou$0.99
  IF WINTER COMES 1923 Photoplay Edition .. Percy Marmont, Arthur 
Metcalfe$0.99

  KITTY 1945 Photoplay Edition .. Ray Milland, Paulette Goddard$0.99
  KITTY FOYLE 1940 Photoplay Edition .. Ginger Rogers, Dennis 
Morgan$0.99
  MISSION to MOSCOW 1943 Photoplay Edition .. Walter Huston, Ann 
Harding$0.99
  SORRELL and SON 1927 Photoplay Edition .. H.B. Warner, Anna Q. 
Nilsson$0.99
  TILL the END of TIME 1946 Photoplay Edition ..Dorothy McGuire, G. 
Madison$0.99
  COLLEGE LIFE September 1940 .. Champ swimmer Esther Williams at 17 
years$0.99
  MOVIE and RADIO GUIDE 3/16/1940 .. Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, Dorothy 
Lamour$0.99

  PIC 8/3/1943 .. Beautiful Gene Tierney in Navy uniform$0.99
  ROLLING STONE 8/8/1983 + 6/15/1978 .. John Travolta cover images$0.99
  SCREEN GUIDE March 1945 .. Gorgeous Lana Turner$0.99
  SCREEN GUIDE November 1946 .. Lovely image of Gene Tierney$0.99
  LIFE MAGAZINE 1/10/1944 .. Bob Hope the #1 Comedian$0.99
  LIFE MAGAZINE 12/3/1945 .. Spencer Tracy cover$0.99
  LIFE MAGAZINE 8/12/1946 .. Loretta Young looks prim in her 
pajamas$0.99

  LIFE MAGAZINE 2/28/1955 .. Beautiful Shelley Winters in bathtub$0.99
  LIFE MAGAZINE 10/3/1955 .. Rock Hudson, Hollywood's most handsome 
bachelor$0.99

  LIFE MAGAZINE 2/16/1962.. Rock Hudson cover$0.99
  LIFE MAGAZINE 6/15/1962 .. Natalie Wood at Cannes Film Festival$0.99
  LIFE MAGAZINE 5/7/1965 .. Portrait of John Wayne in Sons of Katie 
Elder$0.99

  LIFE MAGAZINE 5/29/1970 .. Brenda Vaccaro in Midnight Cowboy$0.99
  LIFE MAGAZINE 6/19/1970 .. Cool image of Dennis Hopper$0.99
  LIFE MAGAZINE 1/29/1971 .. Patriotic image of Bob Hope$0.99
  EMPRESARIO INTERNACIONAL March + May 1940 .. Cool trade magazines$0.99
  PACIFIC COAST EXHIBITOR BULLETIN 7/1/1930 .. Commander Byrd$0.99
  PACIFIC COAST EXHIBITOR BULLETIN 7/15/1930 .. Joan Crawford$0.99
  PACIFIC COAST EXHIBITOR BULLETIN 12/15/1930 .. Joan Crawford$0.99
  PACIFIC COAST EXHIBITOR BULLETIN 1/15/1931 .. Marie Dressler, 
Polly Moran$0.99
  PACIFIC COAST EXHIBITOR BULLETIN 

Re: [MOPO] MY AUCTION ENDS ON LEAP YEAR THIS WEEK FEB 29th - Lots of Misc collectibles

2012-02-26 Thread Evan Zweifel
What do you mean generations?  

I expect to be alive Feb 29, 2040 when this next happens.

Hopefully you will still be listing!

Evan

- Original Message -
From: Richard Halegua Comic Art sa...@comic-art.com
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Sent: Sun, 26 Feb 2012 22:38:34 - (UTC)
Subject: [MOPO] MY AUCTION ENDS ON LEAP YEAR THIS WEEK FEB 29th - Lots of Misc 
collectibles

WOW!!!  This will not happen again for generations!
My Auction this week is going to end on Weds Feb 29th

Let's celebrate (which means you should go to www.movieposterbid.com 
right now and make bids)

This week we have Glass Slides for better titles, Exhibitor 
Magazines, Photoplay Edition Books, 8x10 Stills, Theatre Heralds, 
Promotional items and other miscellaneous collectibles. Note: our 
gallery has an additional group of still we could not get listed for 
this auction. Those stills will be added to teh next auction which 
will be lobby card sets  groups of 3-8 cards including lots of high 
quality titles.

http://www.movieposterbid.com/supersize/99cent/index.htmClick Here 
to See a Gallery of the posters being sold in this auction

http://www.movieposterbid.com/search.asp?nsearch=*comic-art.com*Click 
Here to Go to the Auctions www.movieposterbid.com

.. and here is a complete list with current bid price of the current auctions

   ALLEGHENY UPRISING 1939 Glass Slide .. Claire Trevor, John Wayne$0.99
   BOOM TOWN 1940 Glass Slide Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, Claudette 
Colbert$3.00
   CONGO MAISIE 1940 Glass Slide .. Ann Sothern, John Carroll, S. 
Strudwick$3.00
   DOOMED CARAVAN 1941 Glass Slide .. William Boyd, Russell Hayden$4.00
   DR. KILDARE GOES HOME 1940 Glass Slide .. Lew Ayres, Lionel 
Barrymore$4.00
   EDISON, the MAN 1940 Glass Slide .. Spencer Tracy, Rita Johnson$0.99
   GOLD RUSH MAISIE 1940 Glass Slide .. Ann Sothern, Lee Bowman$3.00
   GREAT LIE 1941 Glass Slide .. Bette Davis, George Brent, Mary 
Astor$0.99
   HOWARDS of VIRGINIA 1940 Glass Slide .. Cary Grant, Martha Scott$0.99
   MAN WHO CAME to DINNER 1942 Glass Slide .. Bette Davis, Ann 
Sheridan$0.99
   SAFARI 1940 Glass Slide .. Douglas Fairbanks Jr, Madeleine 
Carroll$0.99
   THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT 1940 Glass Slide .. George Raft, Humphrey 
Bogart$12.00
   INVADERS, the 1967 Big Little Book .. Cool comic adaptation of TV 
show$0.99
   A TALE of TWO CITIES 1935 Photoplay Edition A .. Ronald Colman$0.99
   A TALE of TWO CITIES 1935 Photoplay Edition B .. Ronald Colman$0.99
   ADVENTURE 1945 Photplay Edition .. Clark Gable, Greer Garson$0.99
   BIG CLOCK 1948 Photoplay Edition .. Charles Laughton, Ray Milland$6.02
   CAPE COD FOLKS 1924 Photoplay Edition .. Barbara Bedford, Renee 
Adoree $0.99
   CAPTAIN KIDD 1945 Photoplay Edition .. Randolph Scott, Charles 
Laughton $0.99
   CLUNY BROWN 1946 Photoplay Edition .. Charles Biyer, Jennifer 
Jones$0.99
   DADDY LONG LEGS 1919 Photoplay Edition .. Mary Pickford, Milla 
Davenport$0.99
   DAISY KENYON 1947 Photoplay Edition .. Joan Crawford, Henry Fonda$0.99
   HOLD BACK the DAWN 1941 Photoplay Edition .. C. Boyer, O. de 
Havilland$0.99
   HOUSEKEEPER'S DAUGHTER 1939 Photoplay Edition .. Joan Bennett, A. 
Menjou$0.99
   IF WINTER COMES 1923 Photoplay Edition .. Percy Marmont, Arthur 
Metcalfe$0.99
   KITTY 1945 Photoplay Edition .. Ray Milland, Paulette Goddard$0.99
   KITTY FOYLE 1940 Photoplay Edition .. Ginger Rogers, Dennis 
Morgan$0.99
   MISSION to MOSCOW 1943 Photoplay Edition .. Walter Huston, Ann 
Harding$0.99
   SORRELL and SON 1927 Photoplay Edition .. H.B. Warner, Anna Q. 
Nilsson$0.99
   TILL the END of TIME 1946 Photoplay Edition ..Dorothy McGuire, G. 
Madison$0.99
   COLLEGE LIFE September 1940 .. Champ swimmer Esther Williams at 17 
years$0.99
   MOVIE and RADIO GUIDE 3/16/1940 .. Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, Dorothy 
Lamour$0.99
   PIC 8/3/1943 .. Beautiful Gene Tierney in Navy uniform$0.99
   ROLLING STONE 8/8/1983 + 6/15/1978 .. John Travolta cover images$0.99
   SCREEN GUIDE March 1945 .. Gorgeous Lana Turner$0.99
   SCREEN GUIDE November 1946 .. Lovely image of Gene Tierney$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 1/10/1944 .. Bob Hope the #1 Comedian$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 12/3/1945 .. Spencer Tracy cover$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 8/12/1946 .. Loretta Young looks prim in her 
pajamas$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 2/28/1955 .. Beautiful Shelley Winters in bathtub$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 10/3/1955 .. Rock Hudson, Hollywood's most handsome 
bachelor$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 2/16/1962.. Rock Hudson cover$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 6/15/1962 .. Natalie Wood at Cannes Film Festival$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 5/7/1965 .. Portrait of John Wayne in Sons of Katie 
Elder$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 5/29/1970 .. Brenda Vaccaro in Midnight Cowboy$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 6/19/1970 .. Cool image of Dennis Hopper$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 1/29/1971 .. Patriotic image of Bob Hope  

Re: [MOPO] MY AUCTION ENDS ON LEAP YEAR THIS WEEK FEB 29th - Lots of Misc collectibles

2012-02-26 Thread Richard Halegua Comic Art

I'll be on holiday that year

: - )



At 02:51 PM 2/26/2012, Evan Zweifel wrote:

What do you mean generations?

I expect to be alive Feb 29, 2040 when this next happens.

Hopefully you will still be listing!

Evan

- Original Message -
From: Richard Halegua Comic Art sa...@comic-art.com
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Sent: Sun, 26 Feb 2012 22:38:34 - (UTC)
Subject: [MOPO] MY AUCTION ENDS ON LEAP YEAR THIS WEEK FEB 29th - 
Lots of Misc collectibles


WOW!!!  This will not happen again for generations!
My Auction this week is going to end on Weds Feb 29th

Let's celebrate (which means you should go to www.movieposterbid.com
right now and make bids)

This week we have Glass Slides for better titles, Exhibitor
Magazines, Photoplay Edition Books, 8x10 Stills, Theatre Heralds,
Promotional items and other miscellaneous collectibles. Note: our
gallery has an additional group of still we could not get listed for
this auction. Those stills will be added to teh next auction which
will be lobby card sets  groups of 3-8 cards including lots of high
quality titles.

http://www.movieposterbid.com/supersize/99cent/index.htmClick Here
to See a Gallery of the posters being sold in this auction

http://www.movieposterbid.com/search.asp?nsearch=*comic-art.com*Click
Here to Go to the Auctions www.movieposterbid.com

.. and here is a complete list with current bid price of the current auctions

   ALLEGHENY UPRISING 1939 Glass Slide .. Claire Trevor, John Wayne$0.99
   BOOM TOWN 1940 Glass Slide Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, Claudette
Colbert$3.00
   CONGO MAISIE 1940 Glass Slide .. Ann Sothern, John Carroll, S.
Strudwick$3.00
   DOOMED CARAVAN 1941 Glass Slide .. William Boyd, Russell Hayden$4.00
   DR. KILDARE GOES HOME 1940 Glass Slide .. Lew Ayres, Lionel
Barrymore$4.00
   EDISON, the MAN 1940 Glass Slide .. Spencer Tracy, Rita Johnson$0.99
   GOLD RUSH MAISIE 1940 Glass Slide .. Ann Sothern, Lee Bowman$3.00
   GREAT LIE 1941 Glass Slide .. Bette Davis, George Brent, Mary
Astor$0.99
   HOWARDS of VIRGINIA 1940 Glass Slide .. Cary Grant, Martha Scott$0.99
   MAN WHO CAME to DINNER 1942 Glass Slide .. Bette Davis, Ann
Sheridan$0.99
   SAFARI 1940 Glass Slide .. Douglas Fairbanks Jr, Madeleine
Carroll$0.99
   THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT 1940 Glass Slide .. George Raft, Humphrey
Bogart$12.00
   INVADERS, the 1967 Big Little Book .. Cool comic adaptation of TV
show$0.99
   A TALE of TWO CITIES 1935 Photoplay Edition A .. Ronald Colman$0.99
   A TALE of TWO CITIES 1935 Photoplay Edition B .. Ronald Colman$0.99
   ADVENTURE 1945 Photplay Edition .. Clark Gable, Greer Garson$0.99
   BIG CLOCK 1948 Photoplay Edition .. Charles Laughton, Ray Milland$6.02
   CAPE COD FOLKS 1924 Photoplay Edition .. Barbara Bedford, Renee
Adoree $0.99
   CAPTAIN KIDD 1945 Photoplay Edition .. Randolph Scott, Charles
Laughton $0.99
   CLUNY BROWN 1946 Photoplay Edition .. Charles Biyer, Jennifer
Jones$0.99
   DADDY LONG LEGS 1919 Photoplay Edition .. Mary Pickford, Milla
Davenport$0.99
   DAISY KENYON 1947 Photoplay Edition .. Joan Crawford, Henry Fonda$0.99
   HOLD BACK the DAWN 1941 Photoplay Edition .. C. Boyer, O. de
Havilland$0.99
   HOUSEKEEPER'S DAUGHTER 1939 Photoplay Edition .. Joan Bennett, A.
Menjou$0.99
   IF WINTER COMES 1923 Photoplay Edition .. Percy Marmont, Arthur
Metcalfe$0.99
   KITTY 1945 Photoplay Edition .. Ray Milland, Paulette Goddard$0.99
   KITTY FOYLE 1940 Photoplay Edition .. Ginger Rogers, Dennis
Morgan$0.99
   MISSION to MOSCOW 1943 Photoplay Edition .. Walter Huston, Ann
Harding$0.99
   SORRELL and SON 1927 Photoplay Edition .. H.B. Warner, Anna Q.
Nilsson$0.99
   TILL the END of TIME 1946 Photoplay Edition ..Dorothy McGuire, G.
Madison$0.99
   COLLEGE LIFE September 1940 .. Champ swimmer Esther Williams at 17
years$0.99
   MOVIE and RADIO GUIDE 3/16/1940 .. Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, Dorothy
Lamour$0.99
   PIC 8/3/1943 .. Beautiful Gene Tierney in Navy uniform$0.99
   ROLLING STONE 8/8/1983 + 6/15/1978 .. John Travolta cover images$0.99
   SCREEN GUIDE March 1945 .. Gorgeous Lana Turner$0.99
   SCREEN GUIDE November 1946 .. Lovely image of Gene Tierney$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 1/10/1944 .. Bob Hope the #1 Comedian$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 12/3/1945 .. Spencer Tracy cover$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 8/12/1946 .. Loretta Young looks prim in her
pajamas$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 2/28/1955 .. Beautiful Shelley Winters in bathtub$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 10/3/1955 .. Rock Hudson, Hollywood's most handsome
bachelor$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 2/16/1962.. Rock Hudson cover$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 6/15/1962 .. Natalie Wood at Cannes Film Festival$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 5/7/1965 .. Portrait of John Wayne in Sons of Katie
Elder$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 5/29/1970 .. Brenda Vaccaro in Midnight Cowboy$0.99
   LIFE MAGAZINE 6/19/1970 .. Cool image of Dennis Hopper$0.99
   LIFE 

[MOPO] the artist

2012-02-26 Thread Alan Heimann
ran out to see this before the awards..just home..storyline
predictable..acting excellent..nice odes to this and that...some things i
liked besides the dog..actually the william powell\ astor relationship was
nice.. I also liked the fred astaire dance moves at the end..Only
distraction for me (besides the idiot w the popcorn bag sitting behind me)
was it seemed like the last 1/3 of the movie sported the score for
vertigo..probably intentional..once u recognize that music its a
distraction...Have not seen many of the nominated films..so no predictions
here..happy oscar night..Alan

 Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
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Re: [MOPO] the artist

2012-02-26 Thread Phillip W. Ayling
As long as the score for Vertigo is mentioned again, I'm finally going to jump 
in and comment. It distracted me in a way too, though maybe for different 
reasons than most of the rest of you. The music used in the film is not from 
the original film itself as conducted by Bernard Hermann, but rather is a later 
suite recording made by the Royal Philharmonic conducted by Elmer Bernstein. 
The orchestra sounds fantastic and Elmer's conducting approach as contrasted 
with Bernard's is different, by really rather elegant. By comparison the 
Brussels Philharmonic, which plays the rest of the score for The Artist just 
sounds dreadful to me; out of tune, poor solo playing and lame mix. I'm not 
making a comment on the compositions themselves. I have opinions, but that 
isn't what I'm talking about here. Nonetheless the score itself has been 
nominated for an Academy Award. 

There is a Red Nichols recording used in the film that is right from the time 
of The Artist, as well as Duke Ellington and Rose Murphy recordings from about 
a decade after the time period in which The Artist is set. If the intent of the 
score was to mimic the sound quality of a late 1920's orchestra they didn't 
come close to getting it right, if not...then it sounds lame without any 
pretense driving it, in my opinion.

Anyway, I found that far more distracting than noticing Vertigo.
  - Original Message - 
  From: Alan Heimann 
  To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU 
  Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2012 3:34 PM
  Subject: [MOPO] the artist


  ran out to see this before the awards..just home..storyline 
predictable..acting excellent..nice odes to this and that...some things i liked 
besides the dog..actually the william powell\ astor relationship was nice.. I 
also liked the fred astaire dance moves at the end..Only distraction for me 
(besides the idiot w the popcorn bag sitting behind me) was it seemed like the 
last 1/3 of the movie sported the score for vertigo..probably intentional..once 
u recognize that music its a distraction...Have not seen many of the nominated 
films..so no predictions here..happy oscar night..Alan

  Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
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  How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
  Send a message addressed to: lists...@listserv.american.edu
  In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L
  The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.

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   Send a message addressed to: lists...@listserv.american.edu
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Re: [MOPO] the artist

2012-02-26 Thread Doug Taylor
I loved the film.  If for no other reason than it reminded me that drama and 
emotion are not limited to dialogue.
Regards

DBT

Sent via mobile device

-Original Message-
From: Phillip W. Ayling mro...@earthlink.net
Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2012 00:20:40 
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: Re: [MOPO] the artist

As long as the score for Vertigo is mentioned again, I'm finally going to jump 
in and comment. It distracted me in a way too, though maybe for different 
reasons than most of the rest of you. The music used in the film is not from 
the original film itself as conducted by Bernard Hermann, but rather is a later 
suite recording made by the Royal Philharmonic conducted by Elmer Bernstein. 
The orchestra sounds fantastic and Elmer's conducting approach as contrasted 
with Bernard's is different, by really rather elegant. By comparison the 
Brussels Philharmonic, which plays the rest of the score for The Artist just 
sounds dreadful to me; out of tune, poor solo playing and lame mix. I'm not 
making a comment on the compositions themselves. I have opinions, but that 
isn't what I'm talking about here. Nonetheless the score itself has been 
nominated for an Academy Award.  
  
There is a Red Nichols recording used in the film that is right from the time 
of The Artist, as well as Duke Ellington and Rose Murphy recordings from about 
a decade after the time period in which The Artist is set. If the intent of the 
score was to mimic the sound quality of a late 1920's orchestra they didn't 
come close to getting it right, if not...then it sounds lame without any 
pretense driving it, in my opinion. 
  
Anyway, I found that far more distracting than noticing Vertigo. 
- Original Message - 
From: Alan 
  Heimann mailto:alanheim...@gmail.com  
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU mailto:MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU  
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2012 3:34 PM 
Subject: [MOPO] the artist 

ran out to see this before the awards..just home..storyline predictable..acting 
excellent..nice odes to this and that...some things i liked besides the 
dog..actually the william powell\ astor relationship was nice.. I also liked 
the fred astaire dance moves at the end..Only distraction for me (besides the 
idiot w the popcorn bag sitting behind me) was it seemed like the last 1/3 of 
the movie sported the score for vertigo..probably intentional..once u recognize 
that music its a distraction...Have not seen many of the nominated films..so no 
predictions here..happy oscar night..Alan
 
 Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com 
___ How to 
UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List Send a message addressed to: 
lists...@listserv.american.edu In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L 
The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.

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[MOPO] the artist

2012-02-26 Thread David Kusumoto

The predictable storyline and the pulling from other sources is a function of, 
1) this is a mostly silent film constrained by its format, and, 2) it's a 
homage and not a message picture.  It is filled with hokey clichés ON 
PURPOSE!  My goodness, this is not supposed to be Eugene O'Neill - and it's not 
plagiarism when sources are properly credited.  

With minutes to go before Billy Crystal, here's what I see:

 WILL WIN  COULD WIN --- ROOTING FOR
Best Picture The ArtistThe Help  The Artist  The 
Tree of Life
Director The ArtistHugo  The Artist  The 
Tree of Life
ActorJean Dujardin George ClooneyGeorge Clooney
Actress  Viola Davis   Meryl Streep  Meryl Streep
Supporting Actor Christopher Plummer   Max Von Sydow Both
Supporting Actress   Octavia Spencer   Octavia Spencer   Octavia Spencer
 
Original Screenplay  Midnight in Paris A Separation  The Artist  
Margin Call
Adapted Screenplay   The Descendants   Tinker Tailor The Descendants

-Original Message-
Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2012 00:33:32 +
From: douglasbtay...@hotmail.com
Subject: Re: the artist
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU

I loved the film.  If for no other reason than it reminded me that drama and 
emotion are not limited to dialogue.
Regards
 
DBT
 
Sent via mobile device
 
-Original Message-
From: Phillip W. Ayling mro...@earthlink.net
Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2012 00:20:40 
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: Re: [MOPO] the artist
 
As long as the score for Vertigo is mentioned again, I'm finally going to jump 
in and comment. It distracted me in a way too, though maybe for different 
reasons than most of the rest of you. The music used in the film is not from 
the original film itself as conducted by Bernard Hermann, but rather is a later 
suite recording made by the Royal Philharmonic conducted by Elmer Bernstein. 
The orchestra sounds fantastic and Elmer's conducting approach as contrasted 
with Bernard's is different, by really rather elegant. By comparison the 
Brussels Philharmonic, which plays the rest of the score for The Artist just 
sounds dreadful to me; out of tune, poor solo playing and lame mix. I'm not 
making a comment on the compositions themselves. I have opinions, but that 
isn't what I'm talking about here. Nonetheless the score itself has been 
nominated for an Academy Award.  
  
There is a Red Nichols recording used in the film that is right from the time 
of The Artist, as well as Duke Ellington and Rose Murphy recordings from about 
a decade after the time period in which The Artist is set. If the intent of the 
score was to mimic the sound quality of a late 1920's orchestra they didn't 
come close to getting it right, if not...then it sounds lame without any 
pretense driving it, in my opinion. 
  
Anyway, I found that far more distracting than noticing Vertigo. 

- Original Message - 
From: Alan Heimann mailto:alanheim...@gmail.com  
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU mailto:MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU  
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2012 3:34 PM 
Subject: [MOPO] the artist 
 
ran out to see this before the awards..just home..storyline predictable..acting 
excellent..nice odes to this and that...some things i liked besides the 
dog..actually the william powell\ astor relationship was nice.. I also liked 
the fred astaire dance moves at the end..Only distraction for me (besides the 
idiot w the popcorn bag sitting behind me) was it seemed like the last 1/3 of 
the movie sported the score for vertigo..probably intentional..once u recognize 
that music its a distraction...Have not seen many of the nominated films..so no 
predictions here..happy oscar night..Alan
 
  
 Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
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  How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List

   Send a message addressed to: lists...@listserv.american.edu
In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L

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Re: [MOPO] the artist

2012-02-26 Thread Doug Taylor
The Artist did seem heavily influence by Cinema Paradiso.

 

Regards

 

DBT

 http://www.linkedin.com/in/douglasbtaylor Profile

 

From: MoPo List [mailto:mopo-l@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU] On Behalf Of David
Kusumoto
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2012 8:29 PM
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: [MOPO] the artist

 

The predictable storyline and the pulling from other sources is a function
of, 1) this is a mostly silent film constrained by its format, and, 2) it's
a homage and not a message picture.  It is filled with hokey clichés ON
PURPOSE!  My goodness, this is not supposed to be Eugene O'Neill - and it's
not plagiarism when sources are properly credited.  

With minutes to go before Billy Crystal, here's what I see:

 WILL WIN  COULD WIN --- ROOTING FOR
Best Picture The ArtistThe Help  The Artist 
The Tree of Life
Director The ArtistHugo  The Artist 
The Tree of Life
ActorJean Dujardin George ClooneyGeorge Clooney
Actress  Viola Davis   Meryl Streep  Meryl Streep
Supporting Actor Christopher Plummer   Max Von Sydow Both
Supporting Actress   Octavia Spencer   Octavia Spencer   Octavia Spencer

Original Screenplay  Midnight in Paris A Separation  The Artist 
Margin Call
Adapted Screenplay   The Descendants   Tinker Tailor The Descendants

-Original Message-
Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2012 00:33:32 +
From: douglasbtay...@hotmail.com
Subject: Re: the artist
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU

I loved the film.  If for no other reason than it reminded me that drama and
emotion are not limited to dialogue.
Regards
 
DBT
 
Sent via mobile device
 
-Original Message-
From: Phillip W. Ayling mro...@earthlink.net
Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2012 00:20:40 
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: Re: [MOPO] the artist
 
As long as the score for Vertigo is mentioned again, I'm finally going to
jump in and comment. It distracted me in a way too, though maybe for
different reasons than most of the rest of you. The music used in the film
is not from the original film itself as conducted by Bernard Hermann, but
rather is a later suite recording made by the Royal Philharmonic conducted
by Elmer Bernstein. The orchestra sounds fantastic and Elmer's conducting
approach as contrasted with Bernard's is different, by really rather
elegant. By comparison the Brussels Philharmonic, which plays the rest of
the score for The Artist just sounds dreadful to me; out of tune, poor solo
playing and lame mix. I'm not making a comment on the compositions
themselves. I have opinions, but that isn't what I'm talking about here.
Nonetheless the score itself has been nominated for an Academy Award.  
  
There is a Red Nichols recording used in the film that is right from the
time of The Artist, as well as Duke Ellington and Rose Murphy recordings
from about a decade after the time period in which The Artist is set. If the
intent of the score was to mimic the sound quality of a late 1920's
orchestra they didn't come close to getting it right, if not...then it
sounds lame without any pretense driving it, in my opinion. 
  
Anyway, I found that far more distracting than noticing Vertigo. 

- Original Message - 
From: Alan Heimann mailto:alanheim...@gmail.com  
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU mailto:MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU  
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2012 3:34 PM 
Subject: [MOPO] the artist 
 
ran out to see this before the awards..just home..storyline
predictable..acting excellent..nice odes to this and that...some things i
liked besides the dog..actually the william powell\ astor relationship was
nice.. I also liked the fred astaire dance moves at the end..Only
distraction for me (besides the idiot w the popcorn bag sitting behind me)
was it seemed like the last 1/3 of the movie sported the score for
vertigo..probably intentional..once u recognize that music its a
distraction...Have not seen many of the nominated films..so no predictions
here..happy oscar night..Alan
 

Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com

___

How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List

Send a message addressed to: lists...@listserv.american.edu

In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L

The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.


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   Send a message addressed to: lists...@listserv.american.edu
In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L

The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.