I previously featured a photoplay edition of the Harlow movie "The Beast of the City," but the two photoplays above are the true gems of my collection. Mach Tey is the illustrator again, and yet again, he does a stupendous job creating a striking, colorful image with an art deco look and composition. These are particuarly important collectibles, since the movie posters for these movies are impossible find and worth enormous sums of money. "Frankenstein" has extra appeal, as well, because Mary Shelley's original novel is similarly impossible to find and worth enormous sums of money.
Sunday, August 9, 2009
1930's Universal Monsters Photoplays
I previously featured a photoplay edition of the Harlow movie "The Beast of the City," but the two photoplays above are the true gems of my collection. Mach Tey is the illustrator again, and yet again, he does a stupendous job creating a striking, colorful image with an art deco look and composition. These are particuarly important collectibles, since the movie posters for these movies are impossible find and worth enormous sums of money. "Frankenstein" has extra appeal, as well, because Mary Shelley's original novel is similarly impossible to find and worth enormous sums of money.
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