rawgabbit 10 hours ago
  • Barbing 7 hours ago

    >Goldfinger

    “Miss” Galore they say :)

    Apparently leaking her name to the press prevented big wigs from forcing it to be changed.

  • noir_lord 10 hours ago

    They have Day of the Triffids and The Omega Man as well - it's a neat collection, I've spent a couple of years not deciding what I want on the walls of my home office but some of those kitsch older sci-fi posters are a strong candidate - I saw a fair few of them as a kid.

  • datahack 3 hours ago

    I always wondered if the south by southwest conference was an homage to this movie somehow.

    Great finds.

  • garbuhj 8 hours ago

    The ten commandments link just opens the other poster again

  • eterm 9 hours ago

    Weird, the date and "National Screen Service Number" on North by Northwest is wrong, it's showing 1949 instead of 1959.

    • boomboomsubban 9 hours ago

      I'm assuming entries were done by hand, aa I've noticed a couple typos in my casual browsing.

shermantanktop 8 hours ago

If you’re ever in Manhattan and you like this stuff, I recommend https://www.posterhouse.org/

Fantastic graphic art and poster museum. Not focused on movies per se but we had a great time there.

  • asah 7 hours ago

    +1000 every time I swing by PH I'm impressed. Unlike other NYC museums, there's never a line and you can be in/out in 30-45mins. Also, located on 23rd st right near 3 subway stations serving a slew of lines. It's a regular stop when I have a few minutes to kill on my way to other things.

d99kris 11 hours ago

On a vaguely related note, two accomplished film poster artists passed away in the past month: Renato Casaro [1] and Drew Struzan [2].

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renato_Casaro

[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drew_Struzan

  • hydrogen7800 7 hours ago

    I recently sold a bunch of movie posters for a relative's estate, and only just came across the name Drew Struzan. Several of his posters were in the collection, including this one [0], and I was stunned by the sale price.

    [0]https://auctions.emovieposter.com/Bidding.taf?_function=deta...

    • drfuchs an hour ago

      The high sale price was due to the fact that this was a rare "REVENGE of the Jedi" rather than the normal "RETURN of the Jedi" poster. The back-story is that the movie title was originally going to be "Revenge..." but then there was pushback because Yoda had said "A Jedi craves not revenge" in the previous episode, so it got changed.

      • hydrogen7800 9 minutes ago

        And there are 2 varieties of this "revenge" poster, too. Both of which were in this collection. One with the date, and one without which sells for ~1/3 as much. Even though these were printed in reasonably high quantity and distributed straight to the collector market at the time of the movie's promotion, since the franchise was by then quite popular.

      • teddyh 31 minutes ago

        > Yoda had said "A Jedi craves not revenge" in the previous episode

        No, he never said that.

        • hydrogen7800 7 minutes ago

          In the lore of this early title, I heard that George Lucas said something to that effect, that a Jedi would not seek revenge.

layer8 10 hours ago
ssenssei 11 hours ago

I was looking to add a few posters to my room, and this came at the right time. The only one that interested me was: Colossus: The Forbin Project, as I love Michael Colombier's OST in that. Other than that, it's hard for me as a 23-year-old to find movies I've seen here. The earliest I can think of is Indiana Jones, and The Rocketeer, and those are in the 90s.

  • andrehacker 4 hours ago

    ++ for reference to "Colossus: The Forbin Project"

    I only discovered that film about a decade ago, and it quickly became a favorite.

    What’s wild is how it’s shifted from pure sci-fi to something that feels eerily plausible, especially with how tech has evolved in just the last five years.

    Colossus: In time you will come to regard me not only with respect and awe, but with love. Dr. Forbin: NEVER!

    Never ?

  • mrep 7 hours ago

    You can just google image search the poster, save the image, upload it to a poster printing website and print it.

    I've done it 9 times and I've even gotten a 10 x 5 foot poster made of the park city ski map.

    • kingforaday 6 hours ago

      Recommendation on a solid online printing shop?

      • throwanem 6 hours ago

        Bay Photo, https://bayphoto.com. Good prices, great service; I use them for my own work, at sizes beyond what I can do in my own shop. Next time they disappoint will be the first.

  • berkes 8 hours ago

    The first Indiana Jones was released in 1981. Still not 70's but it has stood the time pretty well. Maybe except for some special effects.

  • ghaff 10 hours ago

    I'm fairly familiar with films and I would say a lot of that is relatively obscure. I've certainly seen some but definitely a minority.

  • cormullion 7 hours ago

    The poster for Colossus:Forbin was very disappointing. The title sequence graphics for the movie were great - but the poster doesn’t show a computer at all, although the movie is all about them.

JKCalhoun 12 hours ago

This reminds me, so many films, so little time.

I confess, I like the style of a lot of the earlier movie posters.

  • bdz 11 hours ago

    >so many films, so little time

    I've started watching one film every day 3 years ago. Much less time investment than one would imagine. It all comes down to finding a good system to plan what to watch not just sit down and have an analysis paralysis. Once (after a few months) I’ve figured out my current plan where I _have to_ watch certain films it became incredibly easy to keep up.

    • JKCalhoun 6 hours ago

      There's the "1001 Movies to See Before You Die", the "AFI 100"…

      Neither of these are bad lists to start with. The "AFI 100" is going to be all American films (some Hitchcock films get a pass because they were filmed in the U.S.?).

      "1001 Movies…" has a number of film critics contributing — and all the usual suspects are on the list. Fortunately it includes a good deal of foreign films, silent films, art-house films… So it covers a larger gamut of course.

      The wife and I are now up to the 1980's and finishing up a Turkish film from 1982. I suppose we're 5 years into this, perhaps a couple years still before we've done the 1000.

      Why go in order? Partly context — you can see how films have "evolved", see when new ideas show up. But also there is some pragmatism: if left to my own devices, skipping around, I might leave until last the silent films, the French New Wave (sorry, I've been only slowly coming to enjoy them), the several-hours-long films, Warhol's films, etc.

    • ghaff 10 hours ago

      The nice thing about films is that they're generally pretty much self-contained. A lot of modern TV series are serialized and committing to a multi-season set of episodes is a big chunk of time.

      • bdz 8 hours ago

        Yeah I could never really get into any TV show at all for this very reason

    • pwython 10 hours ago

      So now having watched over 1k movies in the past 3 years, what are you favorites?

      • JKCalhoun 6 hours ago

        (I know you didn't ask me.)

        To pick a decade, the 1930's surprised me with a number of good films that I had not seen. It's also the first "modern" decade in a sense — the films are starting to have the kind of narrative you expect from a film (and have sound).

        "Love Me Tonight" (1932), "Stella Dallas" (1937) were new to me and enjoyable.

        It was the era of the classic big-spectacle Hollywood dance numbers that I knew of but had not seen. These greats from 1933 alone: "42nd Street", "Footlight Parade", "Gold Diggers of 1933".

        Fritz Lang's "M" (1931) if you have not seen it. The infamous "Freaks" (1932) that, by its reputation, I thought would disturb me more than it did. "Captain Blood" and the "The Adventures of Robin Hood" are Errol Flynn in his prime…

        Bonus link: Ginger Rogers in the classic opening to "Gold Diggers" — and her impromptu Pig Latin verse: https://youtu.be/UJOjTNuuEVw

      • bdz 8 hours ago

        Honestly there are just too many good ones, I could give a list of at least 50 films I'd recommend without any hesitation at all. But I try to watch as little Hollywood as possible, mostly asian and european cinema.

        Right now I'd say Tokyo Story (1953) is the best film I've ever seen.

        • skylurk 3 hours ago

          > Tokyo Story

          I watched it because it's on every list of best films, so expectations going in were high. It's not overrated. I don't cry from movies but I did when watching this one. Very subtle and relatable.

          Edit: Since we're here, "The Fall" (2006) and "City of God" (2002) are some of my other favorites.

      • layer8 10 hours ago

        It’s all a blur. ;)

        (not the OP)

  • ghaff 10 hours ago

    I'm not sure that art deco is really the right term but there's definitely a 30s/40s poster styleI find quite attractive. You also see it wit a lot of travel/national park/etc. posters from that era.

    • EvanAnderson 9 hours ago

      The National Parks poster style is often called the Work Progress Administration (WPA) style. There was a series of these done for astronomy education in the early 2010's that are wonderful examples of the style: https://www.wired.com/2013/12/nordgren-planetary-posters/

      • ghaff 8 hours ago

        Yeah, definitely WPA style for the US but there's a lot of other poster art that is similar.

        • JKCalhoun 6 hours ago

          Minimal palette for easy screening…

          • ghaff 2 hours ago

            That's probably fair given silk screening.

sfblah 4 hours ago

How can I have a rotating version of this in a poster-sized digital frame in the easiest possible way?

  • alias_neo 2 hours ago

    I'm not sure if you're asking seriously, but a smart TV usually has a USB drive and in portrait orientation it should be able to play them as a slide show.

    If you want less expensive and thus less easy, a decent size monitor and a Raspberry Pi or similar playing them as a slide show is also an option.

noefingway 7 hours ago

Very cool stuff. Brings back a lot of memories from my youth spent in movie theaters on Saturday afternoons watching the sci-fi/horror double features. I have several posters printed by the S2 Art Group (they used to have their lithograph machine in the Paris hotel in Las Vegas), one of my favorites: https://www.cinemasterpieces.com/62014/s2frankteaser.jpg the eyes follow you everywhere.

sizzzzlerz 9 hours ago

I really want to see The Shoemaker and the Elves!

  • shermantanktop 8 hours ago

    For a moment the art style on that one made me think of Maurice Sendak.

999900000999 9 hours ago

Good find, already added Shaft in Africa to my wallpaper.

How much is a large digital picture frame,I guess just mounting a tv sideways could work.

  • myself248 8 hours ago

    The coolest way to display these is to have them sublimation-printed onto fabric (not silkscreened; silkscreening applies the ink heavily enough to reflect sound, while sublimation printing leaves the fabric still soft and porous), then wrap them onto frames containing sound-absorbing material. Hang them around the place and they improve your acoustics and aesthetics simultaneously.

    https://www.avsforum.com/threads/diy-custom-printed-movie-po...

    • 999900000999 3 hours ago

      Very cool, but this looks a little outside of my skill set, is there a service I can just pay for?

  • CaptainOfCoit 8 hours ago

    LED walls are cool (and cheap via China) otherwise, and you can start small and then expand if you want since it's relatively modular, just a bunch of square LED panels linked together. You would need a driver though which you may or may not be able to hide behind/somewhere else, makes it kind of bulky compared to just a vertical TV :)

riazrizvi 8 hours ago

“The Soul of - “, who now? My lord, different times for sure.

tumdum_ 5 hours ago

How boringly US centric :(

jauntywundrkind 10 hours ago

Different subject matter (space), but if anyone has recommendations, I would love love love the chance to see a poster form childhood.

It was sometime around international space year ish (1992), and was a poster of a hybrid ship, part Space Shuttle and part large sailing ship, a gallon or what not.

I kept it for many years as it fell apart but ultimately got rid of it. I love the motif, the idea of endless exploration. Every now and then I do a little web-searching for it, but no luck. Any suggestions welcome!

EugeneOZ 6 hours ago

Many of them seem to be trying to exploit women’s or men’s sexuality.

  • baobabKoodaa 4 hours ago

    Because sexuality equals exploitation?

    • krapp 4 hours ago

      In the commercial context of movies and advertising, yes?

      Particularly where depictions of non-white women and "degenerate" lesbians are concerned, depictions of female sexuality are almost always exploitative.

      • empthought 4 hours ago

        Precisely how do you define "exploitative?" In the commercial context of movies and advertising, every depiction of anything is "exploitative," in that it is leveraging the depiction to make money for the movie financiers or advertisers.

        • krapp 3 hours ago

          I mean, precisely, the phenomenon of the male gaze[0].

          [0]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Male_gaze

          • rpdillon 23 minutes ago

            I have a hard time getting on board with that paper.

            > The paradox of phallocentrism in all its manifestations is that it depends on the image of the castrated woman to give order and meaning to its world. An idea of woman stands as lynch pin to the system: it is her lack that produces the phallus as a symbolic presence, it is her desire too make good the lack that the phallus signifies.

          • empthought 2 hours ago

            That isn't exploitation. If you read that entire article, the concept of "exploitation" doesn't occur once.

troupo 8 hours ago

I honestly feel like switching to photography imperceptibly destroyed the art of the poster compared to elaborate detailed posters (theater, circus, ads) of the 19th century. And this continues to this day.