COLLECTION NAME:
Movie Posters
mediaCollectionId
ImageWorld~2~2
Movie Posters
Collection
true
Filename:
Our Daily Bread.jpg
filename
Our Daily Bread.jpg
Filename
false
Movie Title:
Our Daily Bread
movie_title
Our Daily Bread
Movie Title
false
Movie Genre:
Drama
movie_genre
Drama
Movie Genre
false
Decade:
Decade 1930
decade
Decade 1930
Decade
false
Year:
1934
year
1934
Year
false
Studio-Distributor:
United Artists
studio_distributor
United Artists
Studio-Distributor
false
IMDb Link:
imdb_link
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0025610
IMDb Link
false
Stars:
Tom Keene, Karen Morley, John Qualen
stars
Tom Keene, Karen Morley, John Qualen
Stars
false
Director:
King Vidor
director
King Vidor
Director
false
Caption:
Our Daily Bread (United Artists, 1934). One Sheet (27 X 41). , King Vidor directs and produces this sequel to his silent classic, The Crowd. Tom Keene and Karen Morley are cast in the roles previously played by James Murray and Eleanor Boardman, as a couple unable to make ends meet in the city, who move to an abandoned farm they have acquired. The two open their property to victims of the Depression, and create a community in which everyone comes together for the common good. Upon release, the film was labeled by many as a communist film, while the communist press considered it to be capitalist propaganda. Prior to restoration, this rare poster had pinholes in the background, a tear in the lower left border, a hole in the yellow background, and a hole in the hands below the title. The borders have been airbrushed, and touchup work has been done to the folds. This is the first time Heritage has offered this beautiful one sheet for a very important film. Fine- on Linen.
_luna_media_iptc_caption
Our Daily Bread (United Artists, 1934). One Sheet (27 X 41). , King Vidor directs and produces this sequel to his silent classic, The Crowd. Tom Keene and Karen Morley are cast in the roles previously played by James Murray and Eleanor Boardman, as a couple unable to make ends meet in the city, who move to an abandoned farm they have acquired. The two open their property to victims of the Depression, and create a community in which everyone comes together for the common good. Upon release, the film was labeled by many as a communist film, while the communist press considered it to be capitalist propaganda. Prior to restoration, this rare poster had pinholes in the background, a tear in the lower left border, a hole in the yellow background, and a hole in the hands below the title. The borders have been airbrushed, and touchup work has been done to the folds. This is the first time Heritage has offered this beautiful one sheet for a very important film. Fine- on Linen.
Caption
true
CharacterSet:
%G
_luna_media_iptc_characterset
%G
CharacterSet
true
ModelVersion:
4
_luna_media_iptc_modelversion
4
ModelVersion
true
DateCreated:
2015-09-16
_luna_media_iptc_datecreated
2015-09-16
DateCreated
true
RecordVersion:
4
_luna_media_iptc_recordversion
4
RecordVersion
true
Keywords:
1930s
_luna_media_iptc_keywords
1930s
Keywords
true
TimeCreated:
13:54:40-05:00
_luna_media_iptc_timecreated
13:54:40-05:00
TimeCreated
true
Byline:
Picasa
_luna_media_iptc_byline
Picasa
Byline
true
ExifResolution:
768 x 1024
Filesize:
329344 Bytes
Thumbnail:
image/jpeg, 9925 Bytes
Filename:
Our Daily Bread.jpg
MIMEtype:
image/jpeg
Imagetimestamp:
2015:09:16 13:54:40
Imagesize:
768 x 1024