Faulkner, William. FLYING THE MAIL
Faulkner, William. FLYING THE MAIL Mamet, David. HOFFA. Los Angeles: 20th Century Fox, [1990]. Revised shooting script for the 1992 film with multi-colored rewrite pages present. 118 bradbound pages. Printed wrappers. 4to. With a typed paragraph present on the title page that reads: "This script is not to be copied or circulated. To do so will result in very unpleasant repercussions involving Italians from New Jersey -- D. D." "D.D", ostensibly, is Danny De Vito who directed the movie and co-starred in it with Jack Nicholson, who portrayed the title character, Jimmy Hoffa. Each page of the script has been rubber-stamped in red ink in code numbers, identifying the script as having been assigned to a specific individual so that should the script fall into the wrong hands, the film company will know from whom it originated. The real-life Jimmy Hoffa disappeared and was never found, but author David Mamet speculates what might have happened to the mob-embroiled labor leader in the movie's dramatic last scene. In our view, a particularly scarce Mamet screenplay. Fine.
[along with]
The press box for the movie -- some forty pages of information that includes a description of the film's score, a cast list and snippets of dialogue. Enclosed in a pictorial folder of Nicholson and DeVito. Fine.
Faulkner, William. FLYING THE MAIL Mamet, David. HOFFA. Los Angeles: 20th Century Fox, [1990]. Revised shooting script for the 1992 film with multi-colored rewrite pages present. 118 bradbound pages. Printed wrappers. 4to. With a typed paragraph present on the title page that reads: "This script is not to be copied or circulated. To do so will result in very unpleasant repercussions involving Italians from New Jersey -- D. D." "D.D", ostensibly, is Danny De Vito who directed the movie and co-starred in it with Jack Nicholson, who portrayed the title character, Jimmy Hoffa. Each page of the script has been rubber-stamped in red ink in code numbers, identifying the script as having been assigned to a specific individual so that should the script fall into the wrong hands, the film company will know from whom it originated. The real-life Jimmy Hoffa disappeared and was never found, but author David Mamet speculates what might have happened to the mob-embroiled labor leader in the movie's dramatic last scene. In our view, a particularly scarce Mamet screenplay. Fine.
[along with]
The press box for the movie -- some forty pages of information that includes a description of the film's score, a cast list and snippets of dialogue. Enclosed in a pictorial folder of Nicholson and DeVito. Fine.
Faulkner, William. FLYING THE MAIL Mamet, David. HOFFA. Los Angeles: 20th Century Fox, [1990]. Revised shooting script for the 1992 film with multi-colored rewrite pages present. 118 bradbound pages. Printed wrappers. 4to. With a typed paragraph present on the title page that reads: "This script is not to be copied or circulated. To do so will result in very unpleasant repercussions involving Italians from New Jersey -- D. D." "D.D", ostensibly, is Danny De Vito who directed the movie and co-starred in it with Jack Nicholson, who portrayed the title character, Jimmy Hoffa. Each page of the script has been rubber-stamped in red ink in code numbers, identifying the script as having been assigned to a specific individual so that should the script fall into the wrong hands, the film company will know from whom it originated. The real-life Jimmy Hoffa disappeared and was never found, but author David Mamet speculates what might have happened to the mob-embroiled labor leader in the movie's dramatic last scene. In our view, a particularly scarce Mamet screenplay. Fine.
[along with]
The press box for the movie -- some forty pages of information that includes a description of the film's score, a cast list and snippets of dialogue. Enclosed in a pictorial folder of Nicholson and DeVito. Fine.