eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 7m183 NUDE KISSES 11x20 Mutoscope card 1920s wild image of man with many naked women at orgy! Date Sold 6/18/2017Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Mutoscope Card (WC; measures 10 3/4" x 19 3/4" [27 x 50 cm]) (Learn More) Nude Kisses, the 1920s or 1930s historical romantic melodrama. The only item we have seen from this movie is a Mutoscope card (see below) that seems to be from the 1920s or 1930s. The name of the movie seems to be a re-titling of another movie (likely non-U.S.), and clearly one where it showed naked women. The photo on the Mutoscope card shows a fully clothed Casanova-like lover laying on a bed with many sleeping nude women! If anyone knows more about this, please e-mail us and we will post it here. If you know who did the art (if any), please let us know. Important Added Info: Note that this is a Mutoscope card. You may not be familiar with the word, but you have almost surely seen a Mutoscope machine, if not in person, then in a movie set in the distant past. The machines stood on metal legs and had a circular core. Many hundreds of still pictures were attached to the core (like a later day Rolodex). The pictures were encased within the machine, and there was a crank on the side, and a viewing area in the front, and a person would put money in the machine, and then it would light up, and you would turn the crank, and the pictures (which were sequential of a moving picture sequence) would move by at a speed that gave the illusion of watching a moving picture! The machines were first invented in 1895, and for the next 20 years or so, they were very popular. But as modern day movies became more prevalent and better quality, Mutoscopes fell by the wayside. However, clever promoters realized their potential for showing naked women to people who could not otherwise see them, and they started buying used machines and using them that way. They hung on all the way until the 1950s or so, eventually mostly only found in Scandinavian countries, where they could be used to show pornography. Very few of them survive today. Each machine had a roughly 11" x 20" card mounted in a frame above it, which showed you the name and an image from the movie you were going to be watching (sometimes they were highly edited versions of feature films). Often, these Mutoscope cards were separated from the machines when they broke and sold to collectors. Because the machines were in use for half a century, it is nearly impossible to date the cards! Ones that were made at a later time were purposely made to look "old fashioned", so as to seem in keeping with the machine itself. Our best guess on this particular card is that it might be from the 1920s or 1930s, but that is purely a guess. If anyone knows more about this, please e-mail us and we will post it here. Note that this item contains some nudity, so we have placed a white bar over those areas for those who are bothered by such images. Of course, the actual item does not have the white bars. Condition: good to very good. There is paper loss in the bottom left corner and some tears, surface paper loss, and tiny paper loss around the edges (see our image). Learn More about condition grades
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