eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 7r520 LOST PLANET Spanish/U.S. 1sh '53 Judd Holdren, sci-fi serial, cool art, The Invisible Enemy! Date Sold 3/26/2013Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Folded One-Sheet Movie Poster (SpanUS 1sh; printed in Spanish in the U.S. for Spanish speaking audiences; measures 27" x 41" [69 x 104 cm]) (Learn More) The Lost Planet, Conqueror of Space, the 1953 Spencer Gordon Bennett science fiction (sci-fi) action adventure serial ("A Columbia Super-Serial"; "Assignment - space!"; "One man's battle against out-of-this-world crime!"; "Super-Sensational Preview of Tomorrow's Space Thrills!"; "Soaring into new Sensations!"; "New space sensations!"; "Secrets of Space revealed!"; "A sensational preview of tomorrow's wonder world!"; "Learn The Secrets Of: Astra Radio! The Cosmojet! The Hypnotic Ray! Flying Saucers! The Mind Monitor! The Stellar-Scope! The Fluoro-Ray! The Prysmic Catapult! The Invisibility Cell! The Cosmic Cannon! The Sonic Vibrator!"; "Never before such science-fiction thrills!"; "Cosmic serial thrills in an out-of-this-world adventure!"; "Space and thrills - both unlimited"; "Thrill follows thrill!"; about a mad scientist named Dr. Grood who finds a previously unknown planet called Ergro, and the people from that planet provide him with a series of amazing inventions, including hypnotic mind control device, called "The Hypnotic Ray" and a device that turns people invisible, called "The Invisibility Cell", that SHOULD allow him to take over the entire Earth, but he is stymied in his goal by the heroic Rex Barrow, played by Judd Holdren, who stops him both on Earth and on the planet Ergro!) starring Judd Holdren ("as Fighting Rex Barrow"), Vivian Mason, Ted Thorpe, Forrest Taylor, Michael Fox, Gene Roth, and Karl 'Killer' Davis NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography. Artist: Glenn Cravath Important Added Info: Note that this one-sheet 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 on posters from the 1930s and 1940s there would be an added "Toda en Espanol!", meaning "Entirely in Spanish!", printed within the image). Sometimes posters from the 1960s or later will have the word "SPANISH" printed in the bottom border (or sometimes stamped on the back of the poster). Condition: good to very good. Learn More about condition grades
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