Diary of a Lost Girl [Tagebuch Einer Verlorenen] original film program
Berlin/ Düsseldorf, 1929. In original paper. Original program for the legendary 1929 silent film. Directed by Pabst, George Wilhelm. More
Berlin/ Düsseldorf, 1929. In original paper. Original program for the legendary 1929 silent film. Directed by Pabst, George Wilhelm. More
Budapest: 1940. Gilded publishing folder decorated with the Hungarian coat of arms, with spiral lacing inside. 15 p. The catalogs was created by the Hungarian Hunia Filmgyár RT for its distribution partners, in which it presents current Hungarian films belonging to its own portfolio, as well as American (R.K.O. Radio..... More
Budapest: Mokep, 1981. 32 p. It was written and drawn by Ernő Zórád based on the novel of Pierre Boulle. More
Budapest: Projectograph, 1913. In original paper. 8 p. illustrated with 7 full page filmstill. Hungarian filmprogram for the italian silent movie. More
Budapest: Güttler Antal (Universum nyomda), (1941). 14 plates separated with coloured cellophane. First editon. In publisher’s cover, originally only front cover: a transparent plastic sheet with gilt title and publisher’s information, and two blue leaves. 14 plates. Antal Güttler was a Hungarian film producer and the director of Palatinus Film..... More
[Helsinki]: Otava, 1927. First edition. In publisher’s illustrated wrappers. 86 [2] p. Finnish cultural periodical including a 10-page article mentioning Metropolis, published the same year as Lang’s expressionist science-fiction drama was released. The article by Olavi Paavolainen includes a reproduction of the poster of Metropolis and a still from..... More
New York: Edward B. Davis, (ca. 1955). Original, vintage, black and white photograph. Davis’ imprint on verso. 205 × 255 mm. Portrait of Melchior Lengyel (1880–1974) the Hungarian writer, dramatist and film screenwriter, the author of several scripts for successful Hollywood movies. He was nominated for the Academy Award for..... More
Budapest: Radó, (1943 or 1944). Lithographic poster. Printed in black. Notes in blue pencil on the verso. 95 × 31 cm. Advertisement poster of the 1943 UFA film, the Titanic. Showing the letters of the word Titanic as if they were sinking into the deep dark, while bubbles of air..... More
Poland: March 1949 to December 1950. In original papers. Each number approx. 50 pages, "In order to provide High School of Film students with a review of the most accurate works of foreign film press and book publishers, the Film Institute Publishing House began to edit the" Review "for the..... More
1958. Vintage photo. Black and white film still. Inscribed by Baker. 206 × 289 mm. Poss.: Ferenc Simon Gy. was a Hungarian journalist, collector of autographs. He was the editor of “Magyar Ifjúság” (Hungarian Youth), this photo was published in the magazine in the ‘50s, although the film was screened..... More
Budapest: Mokep, 1982. All 3 is 32p. Star Wars comics were first published in Hungary in 1982 thanks to the legendary couple Tibor Cs. Horváth and Attila Fazekas. The Empire Strikes Back's Hungarian premiere was in January 1982, the Youth Publishing Company, brought out the comic versions of the first..... More
(Ca. 1920.). Original, vintage black and white photography. 215 × 155 mm. Vintage still from the legendary German Expressionist horror movie, “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari”. The image shows the scene when the scary looking, black clothed Cesare (Conrad Veidt) is kidnapping Jane (Lil Dagover) who is sleeping in..... More
Cannes: 1972.05.07. 6 p. ''Après plusieurs années de travail sur les deux plus grands sujets mémoriaux : Christophe Colomb et Voilà l'Homme (fresque moderne et biblique de mon oeuvre) [...] que je voulais réaliser avant de disparaître pour clore mon destin de cinéaste en apothéose - j'en terminais les découpages..... More
Moscow: Kinopechat, 1926. With six photographic illustrations. First edition. In publisher's illustrated wrappers. 14, (2) p. Early Soviet-Russian, illustrated biographical pamphlet on Konrad Veidt in constructivist cover. In the 1920s Kinopechat, the Soviet state publishing house for cinema, published a series of booklets focusing on the popular foreign film..... More
Budapest: Hungária Hírlapnyomda Rt, [1936]. First edition. Film advertisement published as a newspaper. Text in Hungarian. 3 [1] p. Extremely scarce advertisement for H. G. Wells’ film, Things to Come, published as a newspaper. The black-and-white science fiction film was released in 1936. The film sets out a future..... More
[Warszawa]: Czytelnik Spóldzielnia Wydawnicza, 1948. First edition. In publisher’s printed wrappers. 334, (2) p. First edition of Andrzejewski’s most famous novel, Ashes and Diamonds. Popiól i diament describes the political and moral conflicts between the Polish patriots of the Home Army and the evolving communist regime during the last..... More
Budapest: Benkő Gyula (Rovó Aladár), 1918. First edition. With printed dedication to Georg (György) Lukács. In original paper. 47, (1) p. Balázs’ theoretical book on theatre, an antecedent to his books about film. This treatise was originally written to be lectured on a series of public talk that was..... More
Budapest: Márkus Samu Nyomdája, 1911. Press proof of an unpublished book. Printed only on rectos. With corrections in ink on several versos and on almost every printed pages. Numerous inset leaves with holograph corrections. Balázs’s name and address in ink on flyleaf by his hand. In original green cloth. 179..... More
[Hungary?]: [1940s]. Original, vintage photographic portrait. Singed by Balázs in blue ink. 48 × 60 mm. Signed photographic portrait of the elder Balázs. Béla Balázs (1884–1949) was a Hungarian-Jewish film critic and aesthete, also a writer and poet. He is known, besides for his film-theoretical writings, as the librettist..... More
Budapest: Balazs Bela Studio, 1977. Mimeograph (front wrapper printed with offset duplication). Rectos only. 54 p. Vintage post-production promotional script for the 1977 Hungarian film. This was the first film by Tarr. More
Budapest: Mokep, 1977. 16 x 23 cm. One page original film program for Bela Tarr's debut film). More
Faro: 1976. In original paper binging. 150 p. Original script. Provenance: Ingmar and Ingrid Bergman. (Ilsholmen estate in the Roslagen archipelago north of Stockholm, Sweden. Ingrid spent many summers on the large country estate in Roslagen that her father Selim Karlebo acquired in the 1930s. It also became one of..... More
Budapest: Thalia-Kultura, (1928). Original, vintage, printed movie poster. Printed in black on yellow paper. 85 × 21,5 cm. Printed poster of the “Omnia” cinema in Budapest, for Nils Olaf Chrisander’s 1927 movie, “The Heart Thief”, written by Lajos Biró starred by Josef Schildkraut and Lya de Putti. More
[Budapest]: [Chaplin Studió], 1958. Complete run. First edition. Carbon copy. An original black and white photographic image is mounted on the front cover of each issue. The first issue contains two photographic illustrations. 14; (13 [with text]), (3 [blank]) p. Semi-underground film magazine by the independent Chaplin Amateur Film Studio..... More