Null SLAUGHTER/MASSACRE

1972, French poster

Producer: Monroe Sachson

Director…
Description

SLAUGHTER/MASSACRE 1972, French poster Producer: Monroe Sachson Director: Jack Starrett Cast: Jim Brown, Stelle Stevens Printers : Lalande Courbet Pli 120 cm x 160 cm

320 

SLAUGHTER/MASSACRE 1972, French poster Producer: Monroe Sachson Director: Jack Starrett Cast: Jim Brown, Stelle Stevens Printers : Lalande Courbet Pli 120 cm x 160 cm

Auction is over for this lot. See the results

You may also like

PANHARD DYNA Z 16, 1959 1st registration: 19/06/1959 Type : VP Body : CI Serial number : 1203874 Fiscal power : Energy: ES Displayed mileage : 54 287 km (not guaranteed) With its "dolphin-nosed face", the Dyna Panhard is a concentrate of innovations. With a body made of Duralinox (a blend of aluminum, copper and manganese), it weighs no more than 650 kg, and its curvaceous shape, designed by Louis Bionier, favors aerodynamics. It features a curved windscreen (a feat of engineering by Saint-Gobain), and a unique fog lamp is fitted to the air-intake cover that doubles as the front grille. Nearly 155,000 examples were produced, all front-wheel drive, powered by an 850 cm3 air-cooled flat-twin. Our 1959 model features a steel body, the Duralinox alloy having been abandoned for economic reasons. This 1959 Panhard Dyna Z is not just a car, it's a piece of French automotive history. It embodies the craftsmanship and technical innovation for which the brand is renowned. Every line, every component transports you back to a time when driving was an art and cars were handcrafted with meticulous attention to detail. Technical specifications Engine : - Type: flat-twin, air-cooled - Displacement: 851 cm³ - Power: approx. 42 hp Performance : - Top speed: approx. 130 km/h - Acceleration: 0 to 100 km/h in around 27 seconds - Fuel consumption: approx. 5 to 6 liters per 100 km Drivetrain : - Type: front-wheel drive - Gearbox: 4-speed manual Dimensions : - Length: approx. 3.90 m - Width: approx. 1.55 m - Height: approx. 1.40 m - Wheelbase: approx. 2.35 m The engine could not be restarted, but is not blocked. Immobilized for several years in the dry, the car will need to be completely overhauled, including a check of its safety features. The paintwork has a few flaws, but is in perfect condition. Structural elements show little visible corrosion. The chromes show some pitting. The upholstery is in good condition. Belgian registration document, FFVE file to be completed. With technical inspection.

Barbra Streisand (2) Documents Signed for Yentl, with Working Draft of the Script Archive of three items related to Yentl, the 1983 musical drama starring, directed, co-written, and co-produced by Barbra Streisand. Includes: two DSs signed "Barbra Streisand," each one page, 8.5 x 11, [May] 1982, with identical text: "As the producer and director of 'Yentl,' I have examined and approved the final draft screenplay for 'Yentl' written by Jack Rosenthal and Barbra Streisand and have approved the shooting schedule and the budget which totals Fourteen Million Five Hundred Seventeen Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty-One Dollars ($14,517,721). In my professional opinion as a director, the shooting schedule that I have examined is adequate for the production of the picture based on aforesaid screenplay and budget." Also includes a working draft of the script, with the typed title ("An Untitled Barbra Streisand Film") struck through and amended to "Yentl" in black felt tip, 167 pages, 8.5 x 11.75, extensively annotated and amended throughout with numerous deletions and revisions to dialogue, presumably in Rosenthal's hand. In overall fine condition. Based on Isaac Bashevis Singer's short story 'Yentl the Yeshiva Boy,' Yentl, starring Barbra Streisand, is a 1983 musical drama about a young Jewish woman in early 20th century Poland who disguises herself as a man to receive an education in Talmudic law. Streisand not only played the lead role but also directed, co-wrote, and co-produced the film, making history as the first woman to win the Golden Globe for Best Director. The film explores themes of gender identity, religious tradition, and the pursuit of knowledge, all set to a memorable soundtrack featuring songs performed by Streisand herself.

NORMAN MAILER (New Jersey, 1923-New York, 2007) and BERT STERN (Brooklyn, 1929-Manhattan, 2013). "Marilyn Monroe." Taschen; Special Edition. 1907/1962 copy (+200 P.A). Preserves original box. Measurements: 49 x 40 cm. This book collects the photographs taken by Bert Stern of Marilyn Monroe in the session Last Sitting, which was one of the last in which the actress posed. The book is completed with the biography of Marilyn written by Norman Mailer in 1973. The last sitting is a collection of 2,571 photographs taken of Marilyn Monroe in 1962 at the Bel-Air Hotel in Los Angeles. This reportage was taken six months before her death and part of it was published in Vogue. The first edition of the book The Last Sitting was published in 1982 and in it Stern recounts the encounter in detail. Bert Stern began working as an art assistant to director Herschel Bramson. In 1951 he joined Mayfair magazine as art director and soon began collaborating with magazines such as Vogue, Squire, Look, Life, Glamour and Holiday. Among his works from that period is a 1959 portrait of Louis Armstrong taken for a Polaroid advertising campaign that was even considered too high quality for Polaroid. In the early seventies he closed his studio and moved to live in Spain until 1976. After his return to New York he dedicated himself to advertising photography and magazine collaborations. Among the famous women he has photographed are Audrey Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor, Madonna, Kylie Minogue, Drew Barrymore, Shirley MacLaine, Claudia Cardinale, Jacqueline Bisset, Brigitte Bardot and Catherine Deneuve. He also worked for the film industry: Lolita in 1962, Appointment with a very special angel in 1987 or in American masters in 2006; as a director and producer in Jazz on a Summer's Day (with Aram Avakian) in 1958 or as the protagonist in Becoming Bert Stern in 2009. He died at his residence in Manhattan, on June 26, 2013, at the age of 83 without the causes of his death having been clarified. Original box preserved.