Digital Comic Museum
General Category => Comic Related Discussion => Topic started by: bminor on April 13, 2015, 01:04:12 PM
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I can't find the thread this belongs in.
Was watching "Deadline at Dawn"w Susan Hayward. Took a few screen shots of this newstand. Couldn't recognize any comics, can anyone?
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Film from 1947. also this pic
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Thanks B!
I can only see a handful of the magazines - Liberty, Look, Modern Screen, Newsweek, Outdoor Life, Screen Song, Time.
I enjoy watching film noir as well but haven't seen this film yet.
-Yoc
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Anyone have any ideas on what the book at the top of the frame with the two elvish figures might be?
Pretty dog gone good film. It is in the "Film Noir Classic Collection" vol. 5, set. Eight great films!
"Cornered" (with Dick Powell), "Desperate," "The Phenix City Story", "Dial 1119", "Armored Car Robbery", "Crime in the Streets", "Deadline at Dawn", lastly "Backfire" (Virginia Mayo).
$20-34 on Ebay right now!
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Not sure what the title of the book may be , but that is Vernon Grant Artwork. He is one of my favorite artist that did a lot of commerical Illustrations in the 30s,40s & 50s. He also did the Kellogg's Rice Krispies illustrations. A number of years ago, there were a series of Vernon Grant posters released that are truly "art". I have a friend who collects Vernon Grant, he may be able to tell us more.
Ed
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It's a magazine called Liberty (you can see the title in the first pic), but search engine searches failed to bring up the exact issue, although Vernon Grant did do similar covers for the same magazine.
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The Liberty Issue is from October 14, 1944. "2 elves in a political discussion" :D Vernon Grant did a lot of covers and if anyone is interested I can post a list of covers done by Mr Grant. The information comes from a fellow comicbook collector and Vernon Grant fan.
Ed
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Just watched another good Noir. "Cry Danger" with Dick Powell, worth a watch, it is over on YouTube. A Noir film is worth watching if he is in it!
Well, saw a "Heddy" comic as well as a "Detective" in the background, take a look and see what you think!
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Another shot
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Despite the limited visuals I think I've identified the comics.
Hedy De Vine Comics #23 (October 1947) http://www.comics.org/issue/202899/cover/4/
Detective Comics #160 (June 1950) http://www.comics.org/issue/8320/cover/4/
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Man you guys are good. That is definitely the Detective. I am not so sure about Hedy.
Good work!
B
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Impressive guys!
But who is the beauty beside the Screenland magazine. ;)
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A guy is reading "Little Orphan Annie" at about 58 minutes into "The Enemy Below", Robert Mitchum as the destroyer captain hunting down a German U-boat in WWII.
I watched it on You Tube the other day. Many people commented that it most likely inspired the Star Trek TOS episode "Balance of Terror"
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Found this short little film over on www.archive.org, the gigantic public domain repository of the internet!
"The Cliche Family in Televisionland", 1965. Dad is reading a Casper comic to the family....
Go on over to archive.org and watch this little 10 minute gem. It is a parody of all the stereotypes of the American TV family of the 1950's. It really is pretty dog gone funny!
https://archive.org/details/cliche_family
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Thanks B.
And here's a new one from me I just found on a blog.
Holding Walt Disney's Comics and Stories v16#10 from July 1956 -
Lon Chaney Jr., Tor Johnson, John Carradine, and Bela Lugosi in a promo shot for The Black Sleep (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0049013/).
-Yoc
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I was just looking at the new Back to the Future 30th Anniversary Blu-Ray and spotted Prize's Headline Comics #67 (Sept.Oct. 1954) in the 1955 school cafeteria scene. I'll try to post a screen shot later, but it's being read by one of Biff's goons, the boy in the 3-D glasses, sitting at the table behind Loraine.
-Eric
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Ha, I missed that one. Thanks Eric.
:)
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http://boards.collectors-society.com/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=7498977&fpart=1
A whole thread on it modern and golden
My addition is the movie Breathless - richerd Gere early 1980 -
multiple Silver Surfer (vol 1) comics shown and read by actor
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Thanks HG.
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And you'll notice, whatever issue it is of the Surfer on the outside, when he gets to the inside, it's always issue #1.
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What got me about those shots of Breathless that are up at the other site, was the one where he's reading a pristine copy of Silver Surfer and on the magazine rack behind him can be seen an issue of Starlog (which started being published in the late 1970s).
That is one fantastically preserved copy of Silver Surfer he's just casually reading there. ;)
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Just viewed the latest episode of the U.S. version of The Mysteries of Laura. In the final scene Laura's ex-husband is shown reading a comic to their twin boys. The title is clearly Super-Friends. What little I could see of the cover seems to indicate the original run.
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I only watched the first episode of Laura. It was not the story or acting that drove me away. I just could not take her letting her kids run wild and do as they please. Maybe the comics will help straighten those kids out.
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The kids were that wild only in the pilot. I'd have dumped it, too, if changes had not been made.
The show mostly now tells good procedural stories, with some reasonable character development.
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Just ran across the film "London Belongs to Me", 1948. Starring a very young Richard Attenborough reading the British comic "Easy Pickings". You can easily see the Charles Atlas ad that we all know so well over here in the states.
Has anyone heard of this comic?
I did a a quick search and came up with nothing.
Brian