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Stamps In The Movies!

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Pillar Of The Community
United States
2972 Posts
Posted 04/04/2011   3:21 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add stamperdude to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Great pics! Thanks for sharing. You don't see anything like that here in the US.
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Pillar Of The Community
Israel
6191 Posts
Posted 04/04/2011   4:05 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Londonbus1 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Great pics! Thanks for sharing. You don't see anything like that here in the US.



Nor here in Israel. But the atmosphere was great, and a real part of Paris Philatelic History.

Definitely not a Charade

Londonbus1
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Rest in Peace
Canada
6750 Posts
Posted 06/11/2011   1:24 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Puzzler to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
The movie 'The Narrow Margin' (1952) with Charles Mcgraw, Marie Windsor and Jacqueline White.


There is a scene, about 3/4 of the way through the movie, of the passenger train the actors are supposedly on steaming by at night on it's way from Chicago to L.A, picking up some mail bags hung on a mail crane pick-up post. I hadn't seen that action in action before.

Train and mail crane picture and description here:
http://www.catskillarchive.com/rrex...mailbag.Html

Nice market pictures londonbus1!
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Valued Member
United States
98 Posts
Posted 06/12/2011   12:46 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Duarte to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
For those who subscribe to Netflix, Charade is available on instant view.
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Pillar Of The Community
United Kingdom
658 Posts
Posted 06/13/2011   10:29 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add StampStudy to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
I can think of two films with stamps in them -

"The Reader" - The young boy sells his stamp collection to raise funds.
"Brewster's Millions" - A man has to spend $30 000 million dollars and have nothing to show for it. He buys an inverted jenny and posts it.

Drew
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Valued Member
United States
55 Posts
Posted 06/03/2012   8:06 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add davenumber40 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
I wanted to bring this thread back for the benefit of those who weren't aware of some of these movies.

I got the chance to see Charade this week at a local theater that shows classic movies. The stamp references were a nice surprise. Definitely worth the time to watch if you haven't seen it.
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
688 Posts
Posted 06/03/2012   9:22 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add centerstage98 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
"Black Book" is another movie with stamps. It's a minor role, but still an important role.
It is a recent WWII movie that is excellent, though, can be a bit rough at times because the violence is pretty realistic.

P.S. Also thanks for the pics of the stamp market - fascinating!
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Valued Member
United States
169 Posts
Posted 06/04/2012   10:28 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add klange to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
To add to Rod222 who showed this envelope earlier,




Here are some of those movie stamps which I have in my collection of cinderellas, taxpaids, and other unlisted oddball "stuff" that I tend to enjoy. These were apparently dummy stamps used in some early movies when they needed one as a prop.

















Kurt
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Valued Member
372 Posts
Posted 06/08/2012   7:42 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add matttodd1 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Another movie with a strong stamp element to the plot is NINE QUEENS. You can find it on Ebay or Amazon. There is a short bit in THE PAJAMA GAME with Doris Day that includes one of the characters showing his set of 1901 PanAmericans to another character. There is also a Charlie Ruggles movie, maybe EARLY TO BED (1936) that has stamps in the plot. I've seen it occasionally listed on Ebay.

Matt
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Edited by matttodd1 - 06/10/2012 10:38 am
Rest in Peace
Canada
6750 Posts
Posted 07/17/2012   8:32 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Puzzler to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
The 2011 Sherlock Holmes movie 'Game of Shadows'
has on DVD, at the 1 hour 59 minute mark (near the end)
Watson receiving a parcel, which he nicely looks at (and we nicely see) to see the three Switzerland (I believe) stamps and lovely markings on the top of the brown paper-wrapped box.

I do not have a screen capture program or I would have tried to snap a pic and I can't find one online so far.

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Pillar Of The Community
United States
845 Posts
Posted 07/17/2012   9:45 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add HungaryForStamps to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Charade was one of the best suspense movies ever made and should be watched by everyone immediately regardless of the stamp references!
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Bedrock Of The Community
Australia
38679 Posts
Posted 07/17/2012   11:01 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add rod222 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Hey! nice stamps Kurt, thanks for sharing
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Pillar Of The Community
Canada
737 Posts
Posted 07/21/2012   04:36 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Ryan to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
One of Woody Allen's New York City apartment life comedies has a friendly neighbour continually plaguing Woody with his insistence on showing off his stamp collection. Manhattan Murder Mystery? I can't remember for sure.

Ryan
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Pillar Of The Community
Canada
1084 Posts
Posted 09/08/2012   7:44 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add cynical to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Stamps were a focal point in an episode of the BBC television program Heartbeat that aired on TVO (Ontario, Canada) last night. Series centres on an English "bobby" in a small village at about 1960. Show is worth watching just to see the machinations surrounding the "Greengrass" character. Check Youtube if you've never seen it.
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Bedrock Of The Community
Australia
38679 Posts
Posted 09/09/2012   12:07 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add rod222 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Re Klanges gang.......

Old post from years ago, links may not work




Article appearing in the June 1, 1946 issue of STAMPS.

"Movie" Stamps

BILL O'HARA sends us a set of "movie stamps" which are used in
Hollywood (bearing a mail train as the design), and about which be
writes:

"In my business of tax accountant for a number of the studio people
here in Hollywood, I had occasion to write in the interest of an
independent producer to the Postmaster-General in regards to the
photographing of U.S. postage stamps on envelopes which must be
pictured in close-ups for the movies. This question came up inasmuch
as the former law has been changed in reference to the photographing
of U.S. postage stamps.

"Joseph J. Lawler, the 3rd Assistant Postmaster General, in charge of
the Division of Stamps, wrote me that my letter had been referred to
the Chief, Secret Service Division, Treasury Department, as this
matter came under his jurisdiction. In due time I received a reply
from Frank J. Wilson, Chief, U.S. Secret Service, in which he stated
that the law had been relaxed only on the grounds that the
photographing was done for philatelic or historical purposes, in
albums, newspapers, circulars, etc., and then only in black and white
and of a size less than three-quarters or more than one and one-half
of the original. While photographing for historical purposes might
possibly be stretched to cover the making of motion pictures, there
was no way that it could be guaranteed that the actual enlargement of
the image on varied sized screens would always insure the stamp being
reproduced in a size larger than one and one-half as great as the
original.

"Hence, the continued use in motion pictures of 'movie stamps,' on
envelopes which must be photographed in close-up. The enclosed stamps
are used by M-G-M, R-K-O, Columbia and other studios for this purpose.
With a picture of a mail train, 'postage' across the top, and 3 cents
at the bottom, it becomes a unique facsimile.

"If any readers of STAMPS would be interested in getting a copy of
this stamp for their collection, just seed a request with a
self-addressed stamped envelope enclosed to Bill O'Hara, P.O. Box 101,
Hollywood 28, Calif. I would appreciate it if those who write for the
stamps would favor me by putting a commemorative on the cover to me."


Follow up article that appeared in the August 31, 1946 issue of
STAMPS.

Movie Stamps Banned

BILL O'HARA writes that he received 488 requests from readers for the
"movie" stamp mentioned in our June 1st issue. They came from all but
five states in the Union, and from Canada, Puerto Rico, Alaska,
England, and Holland.

To the latest requests, however, he has been unable to send more than
"regrets," as a result of one recipient's efforts to get an "unusual"
cover for himself by sending himself a cover bearing no other stamp
than the "movie" stamp. Detected by the Post Office Department, it
started an investigation which led to the confiscation by the U. S.
Secret Service of all the stamps and the plates. It had been purposely
made not too different from a usual U.S. design, advises Mr. O'Hara,
so that when it was used as a prop in the movies, the chances of its
being detected as a "play" stamp would be slight. The Secret Service
contention, we under stand, is that it too closely resembles the 1912
5c Parcel Post stamp. Mr. O'Hara is trying to get a change of
decision, but if unsuccessful, will design another stamp for similar
use, and this time will get the okay from the Post Office Department
first. In the meantime, says he, collectors who obtained the movie
stamps should treasure them.

Scan of the "movie stamps" with a copy of the 5c parcel post for
comparison.
http://www.stamps4collectors.com/pi...-movie7b.jpg

Blair Stannard (TC)
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