ACEFEST
HOME ABOUT E-MAIL CLUB SUBMIT YOUR FILM SPONSORS PARTIES CONTACT
Become a Fan on Facebook

FRIENDS OF ACEFEST
Golf Club Reviews

MOVIE STORE

Vintage Projectors
Antique Movie Collectibles
Vintage Movies
LaserDisc Movies
LED Projectors
Vintage Cameras
VHS Movies
HD Players


Facebook Twitter

99cents, Film-Noir, Burt Lancaster, Ava Gardner 16mm film THE KILLERS (1946) 4* For Sale


99cents, Film-Noir, Burt Lancaster, Ava Gardner 16mm film THE KILLERS (1946) 4*
When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Buy Now

99cents, Film-Noir, Burt Lancaster, Ava Gardner 16mm film THE KILLERS (1946) 4*:
$204.50

(The still pictures above are not from this print but are only a reminder of the star(s) and story and used as an illustration only. SEE THE VIDEO CLIPS BELOW TO GET AN IDEA OF THE PRINT QUALITY.)

4* Film-Noir Burt Lancaster, Ava Gardner 16mm film print THE KILLERS (1946) Edmond O\'Brien

Wonderful FUN! SO offer NOW, offer OFTEN AND offer HIGH! You won\'t see another print this nice on this great title come along so cheap...

PLEASE BE PATIENT WHILE ALL PICTURES LOAD After checking out this item please look at my other unique silent motion picture memorabilia and Hollywood film collectibles! WIN MORE THAN ONE sale AND SAVE ON SHIPPING COST AND HAVE THEM SHIPPED TOGETHER AND YOU = SAVE $ See a gallery of pictures of my other sales here

16mm motion picture film, movie on acetate not digital, not VHS, not a DVD. A real projectable moving image that would look great up on your big screen/wall.

DESCRIPTION:

The Killers uses Ernest Hemingway\'s short story as a springboard for a complex film noir. Two mysterious men (William Conrad and Charles McGraw) muscle their way into a small town and kill an aging boxer (Burt Lancaster, making his screen debut), who offers no resistance and seems to be welcoming his death. An insurance investigator (Edmond O\'Brien) is hired to locate the beneficiary to Lancaster\'s policy, and in the course of his investigation reopens a long-dormant robbery case. In a series of flashbacks, O\'Brien makes the connection between Lancaster and the robbery and tracks down the \"brains\" behind the operation. He also comes in contact with Lancaster\'s former girlfriend (Ava Gardner), whose duplicity played a big part in Lancaster\'s demise -- and his indifferent reaction to it. Siodmak\'s hard-edged, moody direction of the Oscar-nominated screenplay by Anthony Veiller, makes The Killers one of the definitive films noirs, including what is considered to be one of the greatest opening sequences in movie history.

CONDITION:

This Original print is in GOOD more than VERY GOOD condition (the beginning and ends of reels show much more wear) with some scratches/fine lines that come and go, occasional splices and minor dirt spots. Nice print with OK focus. No vinegar odor. Approximately 103-105m. Check below for a video I shot off the screen in my living room with the image about 9 foot diagonal. (Sorry again if the digital camera goes in and out of focus.)

SHIPPING:

Domestic USPSMedia shipping (depending on your USA locations) will be between $5-10 (plus insurance which I recommend). International shipping depends on the location and would be $25-75 and unfortunately cannot be insured. WEIGHT: 15 POUNDS, 12 OUNCES.

FAQ:Do I have to take the can?Yes (if it came with one other wise it will be shipped in a sturdy cardboard box), you do, both for shipping protection and for preservation. (It doesn\'t weigh that much compared to the film.)Is there a cheaper way to ship overseas?If you can find it let me know!Do I have to use Paypal?Yes, you do.Will you change the customs form?No, it will reflect the sale exactly.Can I take a long time to pay?That would be impolite, and can delay shipping turnover.Please communicate if payment is to be delayed.Do you accept returns?I do within 14 day of receipt of package. Please note that all photos and videos are part of the product disclosure. Return shipping is buyers responsibility andmustbe insured. If the package arrives damaged-do not accept it!

PAYMENTS:

Please pay PayPal! All of my items are unconditionally guaranteed. E-mail me with any questions you may have. This is Larry41, wishing you great movie memories and good luck…

BACKGROUND:

This is only a brief section of a short film I am listing on , so buyers can witness the condition of the film and offer accordingly. It does look and sound better than this shaky/fuzzy (cause of my lousy digital camera) image off my wavy screen. Thanks for looking.

“Along with Billy Wilder\'s \"Double Indemnity,\" this is the one that established what film noir was all about.Robert Siodmak\'s classic thriller, along with \"Criss Cross\" are two of his best pieces of work, proof positive that crime dramas could rise above the mundane and the clichéd.Based on one of Hemingway\'s Nick Adams short stories, it tells the intriguing tale of two hit men who show up in a small town (the film moves it from the Midwest to New Jersey), where they take over a diner and tell its terrified occupants they intend to murder a nobody of a gas station attendant when he comes in for dinner. When he doesn\'t show, they hunt him down at the rooming house where he lives and do the job there. That\'s where the short story ends, but the script by Anthony Veiller picks it up from there, pursuing the fascinating story of what makes a man give up on life to the point where he passively waits for a pair of gunmen to show up and blow him to smithereens.The protagonist,called the Swede, is a guy who isn\'t a criminal by nature, just a guy who fell upon hard times, but sees a way out by committing one more crime. And of course, as in any good film noir, his greed is fueled more by lust than anything else. There\'s a girl involved and in order to get her, he has to get the loot.Burt Lancaster, in his first staring role, comes off very well here, as does Ava Gardner, also top billed for the first time. Strong supporting performances by the great Albert Dekker as the top hood and Sam Levine as a cop with a heart of gold. And we cannot forget Charles McGraw and William Conrad as two of the most frightening cold blooded killers in film history.Siodmak does a great job in the director\'s chair in this Mark Hellinger (The Roaring Twenties) produced drama, but it is cinematographer Woody Bredell who steals the show. His use of lighting goes beyond spectacular. All of the clichés we think of in film noir lighting spring from this one film, where they were done right. And watch for one of the longest tracking shots in film history, as Nick Adams flees the diner and races to the Swede\'s rooming house to warn him. It\'s an amazing, unbroken shot that runs more than a minute.Watch, too, for the brilliant shoot \'em up scene in a restaurant at the end of the movie when the two gunmen reappear. It is just a textbook blend of all the movies are supposed to be about, great acting, camera movement that means something, and brilliantly layered music by Miklos Rozsa. Film-making doesn\'t get any better than this.A four star film and one of the godfathers of the genre. Don\'t miss this one.Maybe I\'ve just seen too many old movies, but for me, other than the period fedoras and suits, nothing about this movie would really give away that it\'s almost 60 years old. The plot is solid and keeps you guessing until the end, with many twists and turns along the way, and is told asynchronously (perhaps necessary for today\'s audiences, which may be why it holds up so well). The acting is great, quite realistic, and for the most part avoids the maudlin sentiment and overacting that characterizes some older films. The Killers is an incredibly enjoyable crime film, perhaps the perfect crime film. I haven\'t seen the remake, so I can\'t comment on that, but I hold this film in high regard.Universal International\'s THE KILLERS (1946) is arguably the finest Noir ever to come out of Hollywood. It certainly has the most effective opening scene of anything that was ever seen in a film of this type before or after. Bright street lighting throws long dark shadows on the street that emanate from the two wanton and pernicious hit men of the title as they stealthily walk to a diner in the small town of Brentwood seeking their prey. With stunning monochrome cinematography by Elwood Bredell and underscored by the ominous pulsating music of Miklos Rozsa it is one of the most perfectly conceived sequences ever seen on the screen. From a short story by Ernest Hemingway THE KILLERS was beautifully adapted and written for the screen by Anthony Vieller and bracingly directed by master craftsman Robert Siodmak. This was the second of three high tension crime thrillers produced for the studio by Mark Hellinger - the other two being \"Brute Force\" (1947) and \"Naked City\" (1948)A brooding Burt Lancaster, in his first starring role, plays ex prizefighter Ole Anderson known as the \"Swede\" who has buried himself in the unknown town of Brentwood where he works at a filling station. But the \"Swede\" is a man with a past! Years before he was involved in a robbery and after double crossing the gang he absconded with the loot. Now it\'s payback time and two hit men (Charles McGraw and William Conrad) have been sent to Brentwood to \"take him out\".(\"Why do you want to kill the \"Swede\" asks the barman in the diner \"We\'re killing him for a friend\" replies Conrad coldly). But the \"Swede\" doesn\'t run and is strangely reticent about his impending fate. Even his friend Nick Adams (Phil Brown) warns him about the two strangers in the diner intending to kill him. \"Why do they want to kill you\" Nick asks.........\"I did something wrong ......once\" responds a resigned \"Swede\". Later after the killers fulfil their grisly contract (a brilliantly intense heart stopping scene) an insurance investigator (Edmond O\'Brien) is assigned to find out the whole story about the Swede. And in flashback we see how he fell in love with the beautiful Kitty Collins (Ava Gardner) wife of gang boss (Albert Dekker) and the series of events and double crosses that occurred before and after the heist that ultimately led to his killing.Performances are excellent from all concerned. Lancaster is terrific as the ill-fated \"Swede\" and Ava Gardner never looked more ravishing than she does here. But superb are those in smaller parts such as gang members Albert Dekker, Jack Lambert, Jeff Corey, Sam Lavene as a cop and not forgetting the perfect casting of William Conrad and the chilling Charles McGraw as the title characters. Carrying the whole thing along is the extraordinary nominated atmospheric score by the great Miklos Rozsa. His raw biting music with terse rhythms and musical hammer blows adds immeasurably to the picture. ( Curiously his motif for the two killers was \"stolen\" and used without permission as the theme for the long running TV series \"Dragnet\" in the early fifties.) Rozsa\'a music for films came in three distinct phases. The first phase was his writing for fantasy films which included \"Thief Of Bagdad\" (1940) and \"Jungle Book\" (1942). THE KILLERS came from the second phase which covered his output for psychological and crime thrillers like \"Spellbound\" (1946), \"Lost Weekend\" (1945) and \"Brute Force\" (1947). Then finally his third phase - for which he is best known - covered his work on historical and epic subjects like \"Quo Vadis\" (1951), \"Ivanhoe\" (1952),\"Ben Hur\" (1959) and \"El Cid\" (1962).These films all had unequalled rich highly textured vibrant scores.Rozsa\'s powerful music is but one aspect alongside editing, cinematography, directing, writing and great performances that makes THE KILLERS an exceptional work of cinematic art. Here is a movie that maintains a palpable dramatic thrust throughout its running time. Few films achieve this. THE KILLERS does ....in spades!This is a beautifully made improvisation on a Hemingway story that screenwriters Tony Veiller, John Huston and Richard Brooks, along with director Robert Siodmak, have somehow turned into baroque film noir. The movie starts out with a couple of hired gunmen looking for a character named Swede in a small New Jersey town. They tie up some people they encounter in a diner where they expect the Swede to be, then go and look for him, as he has not turned up at his usual time. A young man they tied up breaks loose and goes and warns the Swede, who thanks him but does nothing, remaining in bed, smoking a cigarette, waiting for the killers to show, which in time they do. The rest of the movie is an exploration, conducted by an insurance investigator, into the murky issue of why the Swede allowed himself to be murdered, and who ordered the killing in the first place.I can\'t say the movie\'s exploration of the Swede\'s character runs deep, or even that it\'s satisfactory in its psychology. It works so well because it\'s excellently written, photographed (by Woody Bredell), and acted (by Burt Lancaster, Ava Gardner, Edmond O\'Brien and Albert Dekker, among many others), and consists of flashbacks, and in some cases flashbacks within flashbacks, as its labyrinthine plot, full of double crosses and unexpected turns, drives the film with a relentless urgency that in the end has less to do with psychology than the workings of fate. There is an overwhelming feeling in this film that people behave the way they do because they are driven by forces they cannot understand. In this sense the story in itself is, as presented, shallow and depressing, and yet the movie is so well-crafted, with the action at times seeming to be choreographed, that the end result is akin to an existential roller-coaster ride, if not much to think about.I absolutely love this film! It\'s in my favorite genre, film noir, and it ranks among my favorites in that genre along with Out of the Past and Double Indemnity to name a few. Although there are a series of coincidences in the plot that stretch credibility, I believe they were necessary to maintain the pathos. In his first star turn, Burt Lancaster was excellent as the naive hood and Edmond O\'Brien is likewise in his portrayal of the insurance investigator. He is almost always in a supporting role but that in no way diminishes his talent. But this movie is really Ava Gardner\'s. She never again had a role that fully realized her talents as much as Kitty Collins. Her portrayal of the manipulative and seductive but not altogether unsympathetic mistress is one the greatest of its kind. The last scene with her and Colfax shows this type of character in its most ignominous glory. Using Ernest Hemingway\'s short story as the foundation for the film, Siodmak and cinematographer Elwood Bredell create a dark, brooding and brilliant looking character study of Ole \"The Swede\" Andersen (Burt Lancaster), a quiet unassuming man who is hunted and shot by two killers who enter the small town he inhabits. Indeed, the opening shots are textbook examples of how to use shadows and light effectively in film. The central idea behind the short story and Siodmak\'s film, is the very masculine concept of dignity in the face of death. The fact that \"the Swede\" apparently knew of his fate but did not try to flee puzzles the insurance investigator (Edmond O\'Brien) assigned to the case. He becomes obsessed with resolving this mystery, and through the testimony of people that had various associations with the dead man, facts start illuminating the gray areas but ultimately end up darkening the reality. Lancaster plays the proud, tough, handsome but intellectually limited Olle \"the Swede\" Anderson convincingly, and Ava Gardner as the sultry femme fatal never looked better.”


Buy Now

Other Related Items:



Related Items:
Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in /home/acefest/public_html/moviestore/relateditems.php on line 72
home | about | past events | tickets | judges | faq | screenplay competition | press | support us | contact
Copyright ©2010-2011 All Rights Reserved.

This organization is in no way associated with American Cinema Editors, Inc.