Yvette Mimieux in trouble

MBDTIMA EC008

Original post here. Original text:

arcaneimages:

Yvette Mimieux. The Time Machine. Unused promotional image 

Stab!

tumblr_n7vxyuUx1b1rmgef8o1_1280

Original post here. Image contains a caption with the text “Midnight Horror, avec Valeria d’Obici, Leonardo Treviglio. Mise en scène John Old, Jr. Interdit aux moins de 15 ans.” Original text “Promotional still for Morirai a mezzanotte (Italy, 1987).”

Scary nurse of the morning

tumblr_n78qjt2Gol1riqrywo1_1280

Original post here. Sourced via drawn-out-masturbation. Original text:

pinuparena:

By ScarletGothica

The bondage of Libido

tumblr_n7vxvxwyQj1rmgef8o1_1280

Original post here. Image contains the text “Libido, con Dominique Boschero, Mara Maryl, John Charlie Johns, Alan Collins. Regia de Julian Berry Storff. Una produzione NUCLEOfilm, Roma. Realizzata da Ernesto Gastaldi e Vittorio Salerno.” Original text “Promotional poster for Libido (Italy, 1965).”

Swamp monster

tumblr_n6xdvmMrJS1sgi20zo1_1280

Original post here. Artwork is by Bruce Timm. Sourced on tumblr to jerseydevil13-13 via pencilofdoom.

Strange hitchhiking technique

tumblr_n7vxu2CpDL1rmgef8o1_1280

Original post here. Original text “Japanese-language promotional poster for Autostop…rosso sangue (Italy, 1977).”

We Have Always Lived in the Castle

tumblr_n7hqunGjhX1r7dgeuo1_500

Original post here. Image is the cover of an edition of Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived in the Castle (introduction by Jonahtan Lethem). Sourced to arcaneimages. Original text “A work by one of the masters…”

Base instincts

tumblr_n7vxqqRKaz1rmgef8o1_1280

Original post here. Original text “Promotional poster for Bassi instinti (Italy, 1991).”

Lady Satan leads off another Sacrilege Sunday

tumblr_n7vmteaRKq1rmgef8o1_1280

Original post here. Original text “Satan by Readman.”

The Girl who Loved Death

tumblr_n5jmgruV2f1sd6bg0o1_1280

Original post here. Not to let my editorial voice intrude here too much, but I have read the Paul Fairman story this particular cover is illustrating, and having done so I found it disappointing in comparison with the one that began writing itself in my head. C’est le pulp.. Sourced to americanartarchives.com via twofistedpulp. Original text:

michaelallanleonard:

Walter Popp, 1952