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48 x 68 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster Sand is a 1949 American Western film directed by Louis King and starring Mark Stevens, Coleen Gray, and Rory Calhoun. It was nominated at the 22nd Academy Awards for Best Cinematography (color)-which Charles G. Clarke was nominated for.

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48 x 68 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster, AFFICHE de FILM Who`s That Girl is a 1987 American screwball comedy film directed by James Foley and written by Andrew Smith and Ken Finkleman. It stars Madonna and Griffin Dunne, and depicts the story of a street-smart girl who is falsely accused of murdering her boyfriend and is sent to jail. After getting released, she meets a man, who is supposed to make sure she gets on her bus back to Philadelphia, and convinces him to help her catch those responsible for her confinement. While searching for the embezzler, they fall in love with each other. After the failure of her 1986 film Shanghai Surprise, Madonna decided to sign up for another comedy film titled Slammer, which was later renamed Who`s That Girl. However, she had to convince both Warner Bros. and the producers of the film that she was ready for the project. Madonna enlisted her friend James Foley to direct the film. Shooting began in New York in October 1986, and continued until March 1987. Production was halted during December due to snowfall in New York. Madonna utilized the time to work on her next tour and the soundtrack of the film. The film was released on August 7, 1987, and was a box office bomb, grossing only $2.5 million in its first week, with its final domestic total being about $7.3 million on a budget between $17 million and $20 million. Critics were highly disappointed with the film, and Foley`s direction. Madonna`s accompanying Who`s That Girl World Tour went on to be a critical and commercial success, grossing a total of US$25 million, and playing in front of audiences totaling 1.5 million people. The soundtrack also enjoyed commercial success, with the title track becoming Madonna`s sixth number one single on the US Billboard Hot 100 record chart. Nikki Finn is a carefree young woman who usually wears a leather jacket and skirt, sports fire-red lips and a platinum bob, and speaks in a high-pitched voice; she`s also resourceful and intelligent. One day her boyfriend Johnny sees two men stealing money out of a trust fund and takes a picture of this theft. He puts the pictures in a safe deposit box and gives Nikki the key for safekeeping. The thieves catch and murder Johnny and frame Nikki by dumping his body into the trunk of her car, and she`s sentenced to seven years in prison. After four years, tax attorney Loudon Trott (Griffin Dunne) is getting married to the daughter of one of the richest men in New York, Simon Worthington. Loudon`s bride Wendy Worthington (Haviland Morris) is a selfish woman who is more consumed in her wedding plans than in her fiancé`s well-being. Loudon, on the other hand, has many duties entrusted to him by his boss--and future father-in-law--Mr. Worthington (John McMartin): First he must pick up a cougar for an exotic-animal activist Montgomery Bell (John Mills), then he must pick up Nikki, and lastly he must make sure she catches the next bus to her hometown, Philadelphia. Meanwhile, Nikki`s determined to catch the actual thieves and expose the truth. After meeting Loudon, Nikki cons him into taking her shopping. After they take a Rolls-Royce into Harlem to buy a gun--and are nearly arrested during a police raid--she tells Loudon her story; believing she`s innocent, he decides to help her. She`s also on the run from a pimp named Raoul (Coati Mundi) and his lackey Benny (Dennis Burkley), the ones who killed Johnny. Only after dangling off a car smashed through the top floor of a parking garage does he tell her the bank and the box number (6111) of her slain boyfriend. Afterward Nikki vanishes with the cougar, whom she names Murray. Loudon visits Mr. Bell to apologize for losing the animal, then finds that Nikki had delivered Murray and was waiting for Loudon at Mr. Bell`s home; he has created a Brazilian rainforest filled with animals on top of his roof. There Nikki and Loudon--who have become close--express love for each other; Murray also finds a mate. Loudon delivers Nikki to the bus station the next morning, but Nikki brokenheartedly realizes that she must go back to Philadelphia, leaving Loudon, who is about to get married. On the bus she opens an envelope in the security box and finds the photographs that prove that Mr. Worthington is an embezzler and he was the mastermind behind the theft. Nikki gate-crashes the wedding, gets Mr. Worthington arrested, and proclaims her love for Loudon. Nikki and Loudon ride off into the sunset on a bus to Philadelphia, with Murray and his partner chasing after them.

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Dimenzije oko 50 x 70 cm. Jednom savijen, male rupe od kačenja. Videti slike. ➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡➡

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50 x 35 cm 1 x presavijen Boomerang! is a 1947 American crime film noir based on the true story of a vagrant who was accused of murder by an incompetent police force, only to be found not guilty through the efforts of the prosecutor. It stars Dana Andrews, Lee J. Cobb, Karl Malden, Arthur Kennedy and Jane Wyatt. The film was directed by Elia Kazan, based on a 1945 story (written by Fulton Oursler, credited as `Anthony Abbot`) in Reader`s Digest and was shot largely in Stamford, Connecticut after Kazan was denied permission to film in Bridgeport, Connecticut, where the actual events occurred. This semidocumentary also contains voice-overs by Reed Hadley. The film was entered into the 1947 Cannes Film Festival. Father Lambert (Wyrley Birch), a priest, is shot dead on a Bridgeport, Connecticut street at night. The police, led by Chief Robinson (Lee J. Cobb), fail to immediately find the murderer. It soon becomes a political hot potato, with the police accused of incompetence, and the city`s reform-minded administration comes under attack. Robinson and the prosecutor Henry Harvey (Dana Andrews) come under severe pressure by political leaders to find the killer or bring in outside help. After strenuous efforts yield nothing, a vagrant ex-serviceman, John Waldron (Arthur Kennedy), is apprehended and identified in a lineup. Pushed by politicians, the press, and the public, the police need someone to bring to trial. Waldron is interrogated for two days by police until, deprived of sleep, he confesses. The evidence seems solid, and a gun in his possession is believed to be the gun that was used in the shooting. Harvey, however, is not convinced. He questions Waldron, investigates the evidence and the witnesses. Harvey then risks his reputation and incurs the wrath of the police and the public in proposing that the defendant is innocent, while he and his wife (Jane Wyatt) are also being threatened by a businessman named Harris (Ed Begley). In court, even though he is the prosecutor, Harvey lays out the flaws in the case before the judge, and indicates he intends to dismiss the charges. The judge suspects Harvey`s motives; Harvey`s relationship with Chief Robinson is strained; and a mob unsuccessfully attempts to impose their own justice on Waldron. A sub-plot involving Paul Harris and a property under consideration for sale to the city—at a price Harris desperately needs to keep himself afloat—also has a prominent place in the film. Harris tries to blackmail Harvey by threatening to destroy his wife, a planning committee member, unless he supports the sale and sits idle, allowing Waldron to be convicted. At a preliminary hearing, Harvey once again presents evidence that would lead to Waldron`s exoneration. When a reporter gets wind of the double-dealing and threatens Harris with exposure, Harris commits suicide in the courtroom. The film ends with a narration that the murder was never solved, and the real Henry Harvey was Homer Cummings who rose to the position of U.S. Attorney General.

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48 x 68 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster, AFFICHE de FILM The Day of the Jackal (1971) is a thriller novel by English author Frederick Forsyth about a professional assassin who is contracted by the OAS, a French dissident paramilitary organisation, to kill Charles de Gaulle, the President of France. The novel received admiring reviews and praise when first published in 1971, and it received a 1972 Best Novel Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America. The novel remains popular, and in 2003 it was listed on the BBC`s survey The Big Read. The OAS, as described in the novel, did exist, and the book opens with an accurate depiction of the attempt to assassinate de Gaulle led by Jean-Marie Bastien-Thiry on 22 August 1962. However, the subsequent plot is completely fictional. The book begins in 1962 with the (historical) failed attempt on de Gaulle`s life planned by Col. Jean-Marie Bastien-Thiry in the Paris suburb of Petit-Clamart: Operation Charlotte Corday. Following the arrest of Bastien-Thiry and remaining conspirators, the French security forces wage a short but extremely vicious `underground` war with the terrorists of the OAS, a militant right-wing group who have labelled de Gaulle a traitor to France after his grant of independence to Algeria. The French secret service, particularly its covert operations directorate (the `Action Service`), is remarkably effective in infiltrating the terrorist organisation with their own informants, allowing them to seize and interrogate the terrorists` operations commander, Antoine Argoud. The failure of the Petit-Clamart assassination, and a subsequent unsuccessful attempt at the École Militaire, compounded by Bastien-Thiry`s eventual execution by firing squad, likewise demoralise the antagonists. Argoud`s deputy, Lt-Col Marc Rodin, carefully examines their few remaining options and establishes that the only way to succeed in killing de Gaulle is to hire a professional assassin from outside the organisation, someone completely unknown to both the French authorities and the OAS itself. After inquiries, he contacts an Englishman (whose true name is never disclosed), who meets with Rodin and his two principal deputies in Vienna, and agrees to assassinate de Gaulle, but who demands a total of US$500,000 (approximately $4.2 million today). They also decide to call him a code name, `The Jackal`. The triumvirate of OAS commanders then take up residency on the top floor of a Rome hotel guarded by a group of ex-legionnaires to avoid the risk of being captured and subsequently revealing the assassination plot under interrogation. The remainder of Part One describes the Jackal`s exhaustive preparations for the forthcoming assignment. He first acquires a legitimate British passport under a false name, under which he decides to operate for the majority of his mission. He then steals the passports of two foreign tourists visiting London who superficially resemble him for use as contingency identities. With his primary phony passport, the Jackal travels to Brussels, where he commissions a master gunsmith to build him a special suppressed sniper rifle of extreme slimness with a small supply of mercury-tipped explosive bullets. He also acquires a set of forged French identity papers from a professional forger. The latter makes the mistake of attempting to blackmail him, for which the Jackal kills him and locks his body in a large trunk where he determines it will not be found for a considerable time. After exhaustively researching a series of books and articles by, and about, de Gaulle, the Jackal travels to Paris to reconnoitre the most favourable spot and the best possible day for the assassination. Upon orchestrating a series of armed robberies in France, the OAS is able to deposit the first half of the Jackal`s fee in his bank account in Switzerland. Meanwhile, the French secret service, curious about Rodin and his subordinates being holed up in the hotel, composes and despatches a false letter that lures Viktor Kowalski, one of Rodin`s bodyguards (and a hulking giant) to France, where he is caught and tortured to death. Interpreting his incoherent ramblings, the secret service is able to decipher Rodin`s plot, but knows nothing of the assassin himself bar his codename. When informed of the plan, de Gaulle (who was notoriously careless of his personal security) refuses to cancel any public appearances, modify his normal routines, or even allow any kind of public inquiry into the assassin`s whereabouts to be made: any investigation, he orders, must be done in absolute secrecy. Roger Frey, the French Minister of the Interior, convenes a conference of the heads of the French security forces. Because Rodin and his men are in the hotel under heavy guard, they cannot be caught and interrogated about the assassin. The rest of the meeting is at a loss to suggest how to proceed, until a Commissioner of the Police Judiciaire reasons that their first and most essential step is to establish the Jackal`s true identity, which is a duty for a police detective. When asked to name the best detective in France, he volunteers his own deputy commissioner, Claude Lebel. Granted special emergency powers to conduct his investigation, Lebel does everything possible to uncover the Jackal`s identity. He first calls upon his `old boy network` of foreign intelligence and police contacts to inquire if they have any records of a top-class political assassin. Most of the inquiries are fruitless, but in the United Kingdom, the inquiry is eventually passed on to the Special Branch of Scotland Yard, and another veteran detective, Superintendent Bryn Thomas. A search through Special Branch`s records turns up nothing. However, one of Thomas`s subordinates suggests that if the assassin were an Englishman, but primarily operated abroad, he would most probably come to the attention of the Secret Intelligence Service. Thomas makes an informal inquiry with a friend of his on the SIS`s staff, who mentions hearing a rumour from an officer stationed in the Dominican Republic at the time of President Trujillo`s assassination. The rumour states that a hired assassin stopped Trujillo`s car with a rifle shot, allowing a gang of partisans to finish him off. Additionally, Thomas also learns that the assassin was an Englishman, whom he is able to identify as Charles Calthrop. To his surprise, Thomas is summoned in person by the Prime Minister (unnamed, but most probably intended to represent Harold Macmillan), who informs him that word of his inquiries has reached higher circles in the British government. Despite the enmity felt by much of the government against France in general and de Gaulle in particular, the Prime Minister informs Thomas that de Gaulle is his friend, and that the assassin must be identified and stopped, with a limitless amount of resources, manpower or expenses at Thomas` disposal. Thomas is handed a commission much similar to Lebel`s, with temporary powers allowing him to override almost any other authority in the land. Checking out the name of Charles Calthrop, Thomas finds a match to a man living in London, said to be on holiday. While Thomas confirms that this Calthrop was in the Dominican Republic at the time of Trujillo`s death, he does not feel it is enough to inform Lebel, until one of his junior detectives realises that the first three letters of his Christian name and surname form the French word for Jackal, Chacal. Unknown to any member of the council in France, there is an OAS mole among them: the mistress of an arrogant Air Force colonel attached to de Gaulle`s staff. Through pillow talk, the colonel unwittingly feeds the Jackal a constant stream of information as to Lebel`s progress. The Jackal enters France through Italy, driving a rented Alfa Romeo sports car with his weapon welded to the chassis. Although he receives word from the OAS agent that the French are on the lookout for him, he determines he will succeed anyway. In London, the Special Branch raids Calthrop`s flat, finding his passport, and deduce that he must be travelling on a false one. When they work out the name of the Jackal`s primary false identity, Lebel and the police come close to apprehending the Jackal in the south of France, but thanks again to his OAS contact, the Jackal leaves his hotel prematurely and evades them by only an hour. With the police on the lookout for him, the Jackal takes refuge in the château of a woman whom he had encountered and seduced at the hotel: when she goes through his things and finds the rifle, he kills her and flees. The murder is not reported until much later that evening, allowing the Jackal to assume one of his two emergency identities and board the train for Paris. Lebel becomes suspicious of what the rest of the council label the Jackal`s apparent `good luck`, and has the telephones of all the members tapped, which leads him to discover the OAS agent. The Air Force colonel withdraws from the meeting in disgrace and subsequently tenders his resignation. When Thomas checks out and identifies reports of stolen or missing passports in London in the preceding months, he closes in on the Jackal`s remaining false identities. On the evening of 22 August 1963, Lebel deduces that the Jackal has decided to target de Gaulle on 25 August, the day commemorating the liberation of Paris during World War II. It is, he realises, the one day of the year when de Gaulle can definitely be counted on to be in Paris and to appear in public. Believing the inquiry to be over, the Minister orchestrates a massive, citywide manhunt for the Jackal now that he can be reported as a killer, dismissing Lebel with hearty congratulations – but the Jackal eludes them yet again: slipping into a gay bar while in disguise, he gets himself picked up by a local man and taken to his flat, where he kills him and hides out. On the 24th, the Minister summons Lebel yet again and tells him that the Jackal still cannot be found. Lebel listens to the details of the President`s schedule and security arrangements, but can suggest nothing more helpful than that everyone `should keep their eyes open.` On the 25th itself, the Jackal, masquerading as a one-legged French war veteran, passes through the security checkpoints carrying his custom rifle concealed in the sections of a crutch. He makes his way to an apartment building overlooking the Place du 18 Juin 1940 (in front of the soon-to-be-demolished façade of the Gare Montparnasse), where de Gaulle is presenting medals to a small group of Resistance veterans. As the ceremony begins, Lebel is walking around the street, questioning and re-questioning every police checkpoint. When he hears from one CRS guard about a one-legged veteran with a crutch, he realises what the Jackal`s plan is, and rushes into the apartment building, calling for the patrol to follow him. Having sneaked into a suitable apartment to shoot from, the Jackal prepares his weapon and takes aim at de Gaulle`s head, but his first shot misses by a fraction of an inch when de Gaulle unexpectedly leans forward to kiss the cheeks of the veteran he is honouring. Outside the apartment, Lebel and the CRS officer arrive on the top floor in time to hear the sound of the first, silenced shot. The CRS man shoots off the lock of the door and bursts in as the Jackal is reloading: the Jackal turns and fires, killing him instantly with a shot to the chest. The Jackal scrambles to load his third and last bullet while the unarmed Lebel snatches up the dead policeman`s submachine-gun: Lebel is faster and shoots the Jackal with half a magazine-load of 9mm bullets, instantly killing him. In London, the Special Branch are cleaning up Calthrop`s apartment when the real Charles Calthrop storms in and demands to know what they are doing. Once it is established that Calthrop truly has been on holiday in Scotland and has no connection whatsoever with the hitman, the British are left to wonder `if the Jackal wasn`t Calthrop, then who the hell was he?` The Jackal is buried in an unmarked grave in a Paris cemetery, officially recorded as `an unknown foreign tourist, killed in a car accident.` Aside from the priest, the only person attending the burial is Police Inspector Claude Lebel, who then leaves the cemetery to return home to his family.

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48 x 68 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster, AFFICHE de FILM

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48 x 68 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster, AFFICHE de FILM McVicar is a British drama film released in 1980 by The Who Films, Ltd., starring Roger Daltrey of the Who in the title role of John McVicar. John McVicar was a 1960s armed robber turned writer whom Scotland Yard publicly announced to be Public Enemy Number One and `wanted dead or alive`. The film was directed by Tom Clegg, and was based on the non-fiction book McVicar by Himself, which John McVicar wrote to describe several months of his experiences in prison. Bill Curbishley and Roy Baird acted as producers, and the film received a nomination in 1981 for Best Picture at MystFest, the International Mystery Film Festival of Cattolica. The film is set in two halves, the first in Durham prison and the second half while McVicar is on the run in London. The first half of the film focuses on relations between the prison officers and inmates and also McVicar`s plotting and eventual prison escape. Roger Daltrey, lead singer of the British rock group the Who, and 1960s pop star and actor Adam Faith play the two lead roles of John McVicar and Walter Probyn respectively. The supporting cast includes Billy Murray, Brian Hall, Steven Berkoff, Georgina Hale, and Cheryl Campbell as Sheila McVicar. The latter half of the film is set in London after McVicar has escaped from Durham. Here he re-establishes relationships with his wife and young son and he eventually decides to try to escape from his life of crime by trying to fund a new life in Canada. Eventually, however, McVicar is forced to fund his family`s relocation plan by returning to crime. Soon the Metropolitan Police are hard on his heels and he is eventually recaptured when one of his colleagues in the crime world informs the police officer in charge of McVicar`s recapture of his whereabouts. McVicar is returned to prison and his sentence is increased, but during this time he studies for a BSc in sociology and he is eventually released. Roger Daltrey as John McVicar Adam Faith as Walter Probyn Cheryl Campbell as Sheila McVicar Billy Murray as Joey David Georgina Hale as Kate Steven Berkoff as Ronnie Harrison Brian Hall as Terry Stokes Peter Jonfield as Bobby Harris Matthew Scurfield as Streaky Jeffries Leonard Gregory as Jimmy Collins Joe Turner as Panda Jeremy Blake as Ronnie Johnson Anthony Trent as Tate Terence Stuart as Sid Harry Fielder as Harry `Aitch` Ian Hendry as Hitchens Malcolm Tierney as Frank Robert Walker Jr. as Codriver James Marcus as Sewell Tony Haygarth as Rabies Anthony May as Billy Charles Cork as Martin Paul Kernber Stanley Lloyd as Magistrate Ronald Herdman as Nobby Tony Rohr as Bootsie Michael Feast as Cody Richard Simpson as Douglas Malcolm Terris as Principal Officer The film`s soundtrack, a Roger Daltrey solo album, was released as McVicar and featured contributions by the other three extant members of The Who, Pete Townshend, John Entwistle and Kenney Jones, along with other musicians. The music was conducted by Jeff Wayne. The songs are: `Bitter and Twisted`, written by Steve Swindells `Just a Dream Away`, written by Russ Ballard `White City Lights`, written by Billy Nicholls and Jon Lind `Free Me`, written by Russ Ballard `My Time Is Gonna Come`, written by Russ Ballard `Waiting for a Friend`, written by Billy Nicholls `Without Your Love`, written by Billy Nicholls `McVicar`, written by Billy Nicholls

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48 x 68 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster Gospodari pakla je britanski horor film iz 1987. godine. Snimljeno je još devet nastavaka. Frenk Koton nabavlja misterioznu, zagonetnu kutiju u Maroku. Legenda kaže da kutija nudi vrhunsku telesnu ekstazu. Frenk je otvara i biva rastrgnut kukama i lancima. Posle izvesnog vremena, Frenkov brat Leri i njegova žena DŽulija, bivša Frenkova ljubavnica, useljavaju se u Frenkovu staru kuću. Zastrašujuća verzija Frenka u obliku živog mrtvaca, pojavljuje se i primorava DŽuliju da zavodi i ubija muškarce da bi se on hranio njihovom krvlju i povratio svoje telo. Lerijeva ćerka Kristi otkriva čudovišnog Frenka na tavanu kuće i uspeva da pobegne sa kutijom. Kristi otvara kutiju i time priziva demone koji se zovu `Cenobiti`. Iz očaja, ona sklapa dogovor sa Cenobitima da oni ponovo zatvore odbeglog Frenka u zamenu za njen život. U međuvremenu, Frenk i DŽulija zajedno ubijaju Lerija. Kada se Kristi vrati kući, ona otkriva da je Frenk odrao kožu sa Lerijevog leša i iskoristio je da se preruši u njenog oca. Frenk pokušava da ubije Kristi, ali greškom ubija DŽuliju. Pre nego što Frenk može da ubije Kristi, pojavljuju se Cenobiti koji ga ponovo rastrgnu. Kristi zatvara kutiju i time proteruje Cenobite. Kasnije, Kristi se rešava zagonetne kutije. Na kraju, kutija završava ponovo kod prodavca koji ju je prvobitno prodao Frenku. Ešli Lourens Kristi Koton Kler Higins DŽulija Koton Šon Čapman Frenk Koton Endru Robinson Leri Koton Dag Bredli Pinhed Nikolas Vins Čaterer Senobit

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48 x 68 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster

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Made in Yugoslavia Sve slikam neposredno pred postavljanje pa stanje bukvalno odgovara fotografijama. . PITAJTE SVE STO VAS ZANIMA PRE KUPOVINE ,HVALA! NAKNADNE REKLAMACIJE NEĆU UVAŽITI! Nakon dogovora uplata je na račun u OTP Banci Šaljem postexpresom nakon uplate NE Šaljem u inostranstvo jedino i osim ako imate nekoga u srbiji da pošaljem na njegovu adresu, nakon uplate na moj račun ili vaše uplate Western unionom na ime i podatke!

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69 x 49 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster GREECE GREEK

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69 x 49 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster „S.P.U.K.” je jugoslovenski i hrvatski film prvi put prikazan 12.decembra 1983. godine. Režirao ga je Milivoj Puhlovski a scenario su napisali Nenad Burcar, Hrvoje Hitrec i Pero Kvesić. Pod šifriranim naslovom filma krije se akcijaška poruka Sreća pojedinca - uspeh kolektiva. u filmu su prikazane dogodovštine mladih koji učestvuju na omladinskoj radnoj akciji. Na omladinskoj radnoj akciji na Savi komandir Vlado želi da njegova brigada bude najbolja. Taj se cilj čini nedostižnim kad se pojavi grafit u kojem anonimni brigadir tvrdi da je nesretan. Komandir počinje lov na pisca grafita, ali njih je sve više i to različitih rukopisa… Damir Šaban Lovro Cintija Asperger Vlasta Danko Ljuština Vlado Radoslav Spicmiler Boro Elizabeta Kukić Koka Branimir Vidić Mrva Predrag Pređo Vušović Redford Vili Matula Ninđa Pjer Zardin Klapton Mario Mirković Mišo Anja Šovagović Despot Bolničarka Nedeljko Ivanišević Bilder Tanja Mazele Žita Borivoj Zimonja Radio voditelj Tomislav Lipljin Liječnik Zvonimir Jurić Kuhar Milan Plećaš Sekretar Otokar Levaj Ličilac Slavica Knežević Seksolog

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69 x 49 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster Izdajnik je jugoslovenski crno-beli igrani film snimljen 1964. godine u režiji Vojislava Rakonjca Kokana, a po scenariju Miće Milića. Radnja je smještena u doba Drugog svjetskog rata i prikazuje kako se ilegalac koga je uhapsio Gestapo slomi pod mučenjem te ne samo izdaje svoje drugove, nego i sudjeluje u njihovom ubijanju. Često se navodi da je Izdajnik najbolji film u filmografiji Rakonjca Kokana. Dušan Đurić Vladeta Lukić Danilo Bata Stojković Olga Vujadinović

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48 x 68 cm 2 x presavijen movie poster, AFFICHE de FILM

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DIMENZIJE 70cm x 50cm Stanje plakata kao na fotografiji.

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DIMENZIJE 70cm x 50cm Stanje plakata kao na fotografiji.

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Stanje plakata kao na fotografiji Dimenzije: 100cm x 70cm

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stanje kao na slici

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Žikina ženidba , filmski plakat . Plakat - 5-

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Vila Orhideja , filmski plakat . Plakat - 5-

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Crni bombarder , filmski plakat . Plakat - 4

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Idemo dalje, filmski plakat . Plakat - 4+ / 5-

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Čudo neviđeno , filmski plakat . Plakat - 4 / 4+

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Zbogom, prijatelju , filmski plakat . Plakat - 4+ / 5-

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Tesna koža, filmski plakat . Plakat - 4 / 4-

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