Language: English
Published by Paramount British, United Kingdom, 1933
Seller: Walterfilm, Inc., ABAA, ILAB, West Hollywood, CA, U.S.A.
Softcover/Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Vintage original 11 1/2 x 9 1/2" (30 x 24 cm.) pressbook ("Press Sheet and AD-SALES Catalogue"), UK. Pictorial wrappers, 8 pp., pages partly coming loose, very good+. Pre-Code film based on William Faulkner's 1931 novel Sanctuary. An extremely rare film, only shown at festivals on occasion since its release, with only one known nitrate print in storage at UCLA. Along with Baby Face made the same year, The Story of Temple Drake is one of the most notorious of the films from the pre-Code area, so controversial that it was ordered never to be shown again after the Production Code Administration was instituted the following year. The controversy comes straight from Faulkner's source material, wherein a wealthy and neurotic Southern belle is trapped in a hideout with a gang of vicious criminal bootleggers. The leader of the gang, Trigger, lusts after the woman, and her subsequent rape is presented in a manner that was unheard of at the time. George Raft, under contract to Paramount, was assigned the part but found it repulsive and went to battle with the studio in a suit that nearly cost him his career. This British pressbook has extensive illustrations of the notorious advertising and poster campaign which eventually made the film's release such a troubled one. A rare piece from a film that is legendary in the history of literary adaptation and film censorship. It is very interesting to note a few references to Faulkner in the text, as he was not yet a well-known author, much less in the UK.
Published by 2 December On letterhead of Paramount British Productions Ltd Plaza Theatre Offices Jermyn Street London S.W.1, 1957
Manuscript / Paper Collectible Signed
US$ 166.02
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basket1p, 4to. Addressed to 'Dear Miss Cond' and signed 'G P Bachmann'. In fair condition, lightly aged and creased. Folded twice for postage. He apologises for the late reply to her 'nice note and the book-plate'. He gives details of two films he has been 'terribly busy making', 'neither of them stories I wrote': 'The Phoenix is to start in Berlin this winter as a very big film with three big stars. And The Lorelei is to be made this summer on the Rhine as a film.' He is sorry to learn that she has given up her restaurant in Honiton, 'Deer Park': 'It was a lovely place and without doubt the finest English cooking we've found.' He ends by informing her that his wife has returned to California for the winter, on account of her health. 'So I'm alone with the two poodles.' Eileen M. Cond was an enthusiastic collector of autographs.