Return of Count Yorga (1971) Pressbook
Here’s the pressbook for The Return of Count Yorga, a solid contemporary vampire story that adds 1970s grittiness.
See more movie pressbooks From Zombos’ Closet.
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Here’s the pressbook for The Return of Count Yorga, a solid contemporary vampire story that adds 1970s grittiness.
See more movie pressbooks From Zombos’ Closet.
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This Amicus movie is one of my favorite scares. I found this nifty pressbook and merchandising manual in Professor Kinema’s archives.
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Move over silent era, step aside talkies, hit the road 3D. Now we have Duo-vision. Duo-Vision was by no means ground-breaking. It was just a promotional marketing term to describe split screen.
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The 13 pages promoting The Legend of Hell House do not appear in their printed order, but this is the complete pressbook.
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Can your heart take the blood-letting? This heart-stopping moment courtesy of Professor Kinema. Don't skip the exploitation page at the end. It's got some nifty publicity gimmicks, especially the midnight menu.
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Vampire Circus and Countess Dracula
Double Bill PressbookRead More »
Vampire Circus and Countess Dracula
Double Bill Pressbook Read More »
My eyes popped out when I saw this 1923 souvenir program for The Hunchback of Notre Dame in Professor Kinema’s archives. After I put them back in so I could see better, I knew I had to share these fantastic 18 pages of movie history. And you don’t even need to pay the 25¢ cover charge!
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The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923)
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On a recent visit to Professor Kinema’s archives, I found quite a stash of horror movie promotional material. Lucky me. Lucky you.
This neat promotional "newspaper," created by the Columbia Tristar Marketing Group, was circulated before Silent Hill hit the movie theaters. Maybe I should have read it before seeing the movie.
See more movie pressbooks From Zombos' Closet.
And more from Professor Kinema’s archives: this time it’s The Uncanny Mr. Sardonicus. I can’t read what else it says, but it looks rather cool, so here it is.
Professor Kinema once again opens his files to share the following publicity material from 1959, for Columbia’s The Tingler…!