Here are a striking pair of French posters for this classic – and very British – war movie. Battle Of Britain was released in 1969 and depicts the RAF’s ultimately successful air war against the Luftwaffe at the height of WW2. The amazing cast represents a who’s who of British actors from the period. Renowned…
The Magnificent Ambersons
This poster is both a rarity and an oddity. It also illustrates the challenges one finds sometimes when trying to authenticate rare posters. Usually, if I am looking to buy a poster I can find a reference for it online from previous sales (for example, the eMovie and Heritage Auctions databases are both great resources)….
The Living Daylights
I thought Timothy Dalton was terrific as the new James Bond in The Living Daylights. In fact, I found the whole movie something of a breath of fresh air after the ludicrousness of the latter Roger Moore Bonds, where pretty much everything ended up being played for cheap laughs. In the movie’s gripping opening sequence…
Movie Make-up
When I was a kid I developed a nerdy fascination with movie special effects and make-up. There was a point at which I tried (and failed) to build a dinosaur model out of wire, rubber and papier-mâché, in the style of Ray Harryhausen’s much-loved stop-motion monsters. (Quite why I bothered I don’t know as I…
The Red Shoes / Tales Of Hoffmann
Here are a pair of very rare posters for Powell/Pressburger classics. This directing/producing team produced many beloved British movies in the 40s/50s, including A Matter Of Life And Death and Black Narcissus. Now, I first have to admit that I have seen neither The Red Shoes nor Tales Of Hoffmann, movies set in the worlds of…
Kill Bill
Kill Bill is my joint favourite Quentin Tarantino movie, along with Pulp Fiction. Tarantino movies tend to veer between breathlessly exhilarating and sluggishly unwatchable. His tendency to deliberately drag scenes and dialogue out to breaking point reached its nadir for me with The Hateful Eight which I, well, hated. Kill Bill Volume 2 was a…
The Thing
John Carpenter’s The Thing is one of those movies whose reputation has grown over the years. It got some stinky reviews when it came out and under-performed at the time, but it has since been reappraised and had a second life on DVD as a horror classic. Carpenter subsequently made some pretty rubbish movies (hello…
The Girl Can’t Help It / Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?
Time for a double blonde bombshell overload with this great pair….of posters. I wrote elsewhere about The Seven Year Itch, in which a middle aged man lusts after his younger sexy neighbour. Well, the same actor (Tom Ewell) does pretty much the same in The Girl Can’t Help It, only this time instead of Marilyn…
Terms Of Endearment
This is a movie I went into with very low expectations but ended up loving it. I’m not normally a fan of family drama ‘weepies’. (I generally will run a mile from anything by Nicholas Sparks, for example). But for Terms of Endearment I will make an exception. I saw this at the cinema in…
The Blues Brothers
I must admit I never I quite “got” the appeal of this cult movie. It grew out of a musical sketch on Saturday Night Live featuring comedians John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd and the movie’s plot (such as it is) – “a mission from God” to save an orphanage – is basically a loose…
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