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KILLER THAT STALKED NEW YORK KILLER THAT STALKED NEW YORK 1sh OR search current auctions Auction History Result 7w147 KILLER THAT STALKED NEW YORK linen Spanish/U.S. 1sh '50 Evelyn Keyes standing on ledge of building! Date Sold 10/15/2009Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Linenbacked One-Sheet Movie Poster (SpanUS 1sh; printed in Spanish in the U.S. for Spanish speaking audiences; measures 27" x 41") (Learn More) The Killer That Stalked New York (also released as "Frightened City"), the 1950 Earl McEvoy New York City crime film noir ("One woman brings terror to 8,000,000 people!"; "Unseen killer stalks 8,000,000 people!"; "8,000,000 people hunt one woman!"; "Drama with the shattering impact of on-the-spot realism!"; "The shot-on-the-spot story!"; "Based upon a Cosmopolitan Magazine article by Milton Lehman"; about a smallpox carrier who is also smuggling diamonds in New York City, and the police and doctors searching for her) starring Evelyn Keyes, Charles Korvin, William Bishop, Dorothy Malone, Lola Albright, Carl Benton Reid, and Ludwig Donath NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography. If you know who did the art (if any), please let us know. Important Added Info: Note that this poster was printed in the United States for use at theaters with Spanish speaking audiences (this was done most by MGM, starting in the 1930s, but it was done by the other major studios as well, and often the posters would have the exact same image as the English language poster, except the writing would be in Spanish, and often there would be an added "Toda en Espanol!", meaning "Entirely in Spanish!", printed within the image). Condition: good. This poster has been linenbacked, but it was not very well done, either because the restorer did not do a very good job, or because the years since it has been linenbacked have not been kind to the poster. Overall, the poster was in good condition prior to linenbacking. Generally, it had creases, tears, and tiny paper loss scattered down the center of the poster and some pinholes, creases, and tears around the edges of the poster, and the entire poster had darkened somewhat. The poster was not that well backed, because you can see signs of the above general defects and the restoration of the defects (in some cases, as should be immediately evident in our image, the linenbacker did no restoration to some of the defects). I would think few collectors would want to display it as it is, without someone performing some additional restoration. Certainly, a talented restorer could perform additional restoration (either with or without re-backing the poster), but it might be fairly expensive to have this done, so bear that in mind before you place a bid. Learn More about condition grades
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