Published by American International, 1966
Seller: AcornBooksNH, New Harbor, ME, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: VGF. A VGF or better pressbook with no cuts or missing pages. Size: 11" X 14". Book.
Published by Filmsonor, Paris, 1962
Photograph
Vintage black-and-white still photograph from the 1962 French-Italian film. Featuring French actor and comedian, Pierre Repp on the set, mounted on a Boxer. Printed on Agfa-Brovira paper. Repp (1909-1986) was a French film actor and comedian, noted for his stuttering speech, and particularly popular in Parisian music halls and cabaret. Notable film credits include "Hello Smile!" (1956), Truffaut's "The 400 Blows" (1959), Giono's "Croesus" (1960), and Demy's "Donkey Skin" (1970). 7 x 9.25 inches. Small bruise to one edge, else Near Fine.
Published by United Artists, Beverly Hills, CA, 1964
Photograph
Three vintage studio still photographs and one vintage borderless reference photograph from the 1964 film. One photograph with mimeo snipe affixed to the verso. Based on the 1962 novel, "The Light of Day" by Eric Ambler. Two ex-lovers plan to steal from Topkapi Palace in Istanbul. They hire a man to drive explosives for the burglary, but when the police stop him they assume he is part of an assassination attempt. Winner of one Academy Award for Peter Ustinov as Best Actor. Set in Istanbul, shot on location in Istanbul, Turkey, Kavala, Greece, Paris, France, and Hauts-de-Seine, France. Two photographs 10 x 8 inches, one photograph 7 x 9 inches. Very Good plus, with one photograph with pins holes at the corner and a tear at the bottom right corner. Lee, The Heist Film. Penzler 101.
Language: German
Published by Splendid Film/WVG 0.
Seller: Versandantiquariat Felix Mücke, Grasellenbach - Hammelbach, Germany
dvd. Condition: Gut. Seiten; HÃlle und CD in gutem Zustand, Artikel stammt aus Nichtraucherhaushalt! NB2-6729 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 500.
Published by N.p., N.p., 1962
Photograph
Vintage matte-finish reference photograph from the 1962 film, showing director Éric Rohmer at the far right. Annotations in manuscript ink and provenance label on the verso. Upon hearing his promised inheritance has been given to a cousin, a man sinks into despair and indigence-only to later hear that the cousin has passed away, and he will finally receive the inheritance. Rohmer's first feature film, shot in the summer of 1959 but not released until 1962, and much-lauded by other luminaries of the French New Wave. Set and shot on location in Paris. 7 x 5 inches. Very Good plus, lightly age toned.
Published by N.p., N.p., 1962
Photograph
Collection of eleven vintage borderless reference photographs from the 1962 French-Italian film. A peplum (sword-and-sandal) swashbuckler set in 1700s France, about a highwayman who forms a band of knaves who steal from the rich and give to the poor. The second of three films starring Jean-Paul Belmondo and Claudia Cardinale, following Mauro Bolognini's "La viaccia" (1961), and preceding José Giovanni's "Scoumoune" (1972). Shot on location in Aveyron, Hérault, Seine-et-Marne, and Oise, France. 9.25 x 7 inches. One moderately faded, else Near Fine.
Published by Filmsonor, Paris, 1962
Photograph
Collection of 67 original single weight borderless film stills for the 1962 French-Italian film, here under the original French title, "Cartouche." Action sequences, men in military regalia, and romantically charged images of Belmondo and Cardinale, with most representing Belmondo either charming people or dueling with swords. Housed in original brown envelope, noted as "CARTOUCHE" on the flap. Numerical annotations in manuscript pencil on the versos. Also included are a few leaves of French press material, on stationery from the film's distributor, Cinedis. A riveting Peplum (sword-and-sandal) swashbuckler set in 1700s France, where a gang member named Cartouche (Belmondo) forms his own band of knaves, deciding his former gang to be too unethical. He steals from the rich to give to the poor, enlists in the army to escape capture, and meets Venus (Cardinale), a gypsy prisoner who joins his new gang. Venus' love proves fatal, and Cartouche rolls her into a lake in a stolen carriage, vowing revenge, knowing it will likely lead him to the gallows. Belmondo and Cardinale's interaction is palpable, but they would star in only two other films together, Mauro Balognini's "La viaccia" (1961), and José Giovanni's "Scoumoune" (1972). Photos 6.75 x 9 inches. Very Good plus overall, with light curling, a few short creases, and a few slightly discolored. Press material corner-stapled and paper-clipped, Very Good plus overall. Complete collation upon request.