eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 4w285 ENDLESS SUMMER linen 1sh '67 Bruce Brown surfing sports classic, art of surfers on beach! Date Sold 9/13/2011Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Linenbacked One-Sheet Movie Poster (1sh; measures 27" x 41") (Learn More) The Endless Summer, the classic 1964 Bruce Brown surfing sports documentary ("A true motion picture about surfing!"; "Filmed in Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Tahiti, Hawaii and California"; "A Bruce Brown Film in Color"; "On any day of the year it's summer somewhere in the world. Bruce Brown's latest color film highlights the adventures of two young American surfers, Robert August and Mike Hynson who follow this everlasting summer around the world. Their unique expedition takes them to Senegal, Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Tahiti, Hawaii and California. Share their experiences as they search the world for that perfect wave which may be forming just over the next Horizon.") featuring Mike Hynson, Robert August, Lord 'Tally Ho' Blears, Terence Bullen, and Bruce Brown (as narrator). Note that when Bruce Brown first made this documentary, he had already made similar documentary surfing films (first with an 8mm camera, and then with a 16mm camera), starting in the late 1950s. None of those received a nationwide release, but instead were shown wherever Bruce Brown could get them booked (mostly in small venues in southern California)! In 1963, Brown began filming this movie, and it was completed in 1964, and he began showing it in small venues, just like his previous films. He continued showing it to enthusiastic audiences throughout 1965, and in 1966, Columbia Pictures made a deal to give the film a nationwide release, and the first one-sheets for the movie were printed at that time, using the same John Van Hamersveld art that had been on the small posters used in small venues (Bruce Brown was friends with John Van Hamersveld in 1964, and Brown hired him to do the art for the first release small venue posters, because, as Brown has been quoted saying, "He was the only artist I knew"). He paid Van Hamersveld $150 for the art, and it was one of the greatest deals ever made, because it is certainly one of the most iconic images of the 1960s, and this poster image is one of the single most recognizable movie poster images ever made! If you know who did the art (if any), please let us know. Important Added Info: Note that when Bruce Brown first made this documentary, he had already made similar documentary films, and they did not receive a nationwide release, but instead were shown wherever Bruce Brown could get them booked (mostly in small venues in southern California)! He had printed a small 11" x 17 1/4" poster that was distributed for those small venue showings (there was also a small herald-like poster), and after the movie was picked up by a national distributor, this "silkscreen one-sheet" poster was used for that national release (the one-sheet has the same image as the 11" x 17 1/4" poster, but it has different text and adds reviews at the top above the image). What IS linenbacking? Learn More Overall Condition and Pre-Restoration Defects with Quality of Restoration: good to very good. The poster has an unusual printing defect in that it was printed slightly off center, at a slight "tilt" (meaning that the image is slightly leaning to the right, so that the right blank border is smaller at the top and grows larger by a tiny bit as you go down, and the reverse is true of the left blank border. I would think this occurred because it was a tiny printer doing the job, and their "quality control" was not the best, and being 1967 and southern California, there might have been other factors involved! I have seen other examples of the poster that do not have this, so it is definitely not on every example. In addition, the poster had small paper loss at the top and bottom crossfolds and some minor wear on the foldlines, with some extra horizontal creases and some staple holes around the edges. Overall, the poster was in good to very good condition prior to linenbacking. The poster was pretty well backed, but you can see signs of the above defects and the restoration of the above defects. Learn More about condition grades
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