Published by United Artists, Beverly Hills, CA, 1961
Photograph
Vintage studio still photograph of Maximilian Schell from the 1961 film. A dramatization of the 1947 Judges' Trial, one of twelve US Nuremberg Military Tribunals held from 1946 to 1949 to decide the fate of individuals accused of crimes against humanity for their involvement in Nazi atrocities. The film was nominated for twelve Academy Awards, winning three, including Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Actor for Maximilian Schell. 10 x 8 inches. Very Good plus. National Film Registry. Twilight Time K1631.
Published by Twentieth Century-Fox, Los Angeles, 1965
Photograph
Vintage studio still photograph from the 1965 film. Provenance stamp on the verso. Based on the 1959 novel "Epitaph for an Enemy," by George Barr, and sequel to the 1962 film "The Longest Day." The film follows the days after the Invasion of Normandy, and of Allied attempts to "liberate" a nearby French village previously under the control of an uncommonly kind German commandant. Set in Normandy, France, shot on location in Normandy, and Manche, France. 10 x 8 inches.
Published by United Artists, Beverly Hills, CA, 1961
Photograph
Vintage studio still photograph from the 1961 film. Mimeo snipe on the verso. A dramatization of the 1947 Judges' Trial, one of twelve US Nuremberg Military Tribunals held from 1946 to 1949 to decide the fate of individuals accused of crimes against humanity for their involvement in Nazi atrocities. Nominated for twelve Academy Awards, winning three, including Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Actor for Maximilian Schell. Set in Nuremberg, shot on location in Nuremberg and Berlin. 10 x 8 inches. Very Good plus. National Film Registry. Twilight Time 1631.
Published by Stanley Kramer Productions, Los Angeles, 1965
Photograph
Vintage reference photograph of actor Michael Dunn from the 1965 film. With mimeo snipe affixed to the verso. Based on the 1962 novel by Katherine Anne Porter, about the varied passengers on an ocean liner bound for Germany from Mexico in 1933. Vivien Leigh's final film before her death in 1967. Nominated for eight Academy Awards, winning two. 8 x 10 inches. About Fine.
Vintage studio still photograph of Melvyn Douglas and Patricia Gozzi from the 1965 film. Not to be confused with the 1964 anthology film "La Fleur de L'Age, ou Les Adolescentes" directed by Jean Rouch, Hiroshi Teshigahara, Michel Brault and Gian Vittorio Baldi. Agnes (Gozzi) is a young, lonely teenager living with her widower father Frederick (Douglas) and caretaker Karen (Gunnel Lindblom) on an isolated farm on the Brittany coast and take in and befriend an escaped convict, Joseph (Dean Stockwell). Set in Brittany, France, shot on location in Brittany, Cotes-d'Armor, and Paris. 8 x 10 inches. Near Fine.
Published by Warner Brothers, Burbank, CA, 1967
Photograph
Three vintage studio still photographs from the 1967 film. Frank Sinatra's last film with Warner Brothers. Based on the 1966 novel by Francis Clifford, about an industrialist who is pulled into a Cold War espionage scheme. Shot on location in London and Copenhagen. 10 x 8 inches. Two Near Fine, one Very Good plus.
Published by N.p., N.p., 1961
Photograph
Vintage borderless reference photograph from the 1961 film, showing actors Marlene Dietrich and Spencer Tracy with director Stanley Kramer and other crew members on the set. Annotations in manuscript pencil on the verso. A dramatization of the 1947 Judges' Trial, one of twelve US Nuremberg Military Tribunals held from 1946 to 1949 to decide the fate of individuals accused of crimes against humanity for their involvement in Nazi atrocities. Nominated for twelve Academy Awards, winning three, including Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Actor for Maximilian Schell. Set in Nuremberg, shot on location in Nuremberg and Berlin. 9.5 x 7.5 inches. Neat pinhole at each corner, else Near Fine. National Film Registry. Twilight Time 1631.