...couldn't have been 1972, the film was just made and released as "Hapkido" in 1972! "Lady Kung Fu" (as it was re-titled by National General Pictures, a now-defunct division of Columbia Pictures) was English dubbed and released here in the U.S. the following year on September 5, 1973.
Tommy, thanks for the comment and correction! Back then I didn't always make a note of the date of the paper it was clipped from, so obviously I was off a year in my recollections!
When I was younger I clipped out the ads of the movies I wanted to go see and put them in a scrapbook. I also enjoyed hunting through old newspapers I would find here and there, and saving the ads from those as well. Some that I've gleaned from relative's old closets and attics go back to the 50's!
Rather than let them sit there in the old notebook I saved them in, I decided I'd share them with you. Every single entry on this blog page are from actual newspaper clippings that I own and have scanned in, so click on any image to view biggie size.
Although this blog will mostly feature nostalgic vintage newspaper movie ads, I'll also throw in an occasional newspaper article about the movie that I found, as well as ads and items from various TV guides about movies and shows that I liked. And who knows what else? That dog-eared 37-year-old notebook is packed with goodies. Hopefully "Held Over!" will be fun to visit and will reawaken some of your own memories!
Born in the late 50's, a kid in the 60's, a teen in the 70's, I'm "forever-fourteen." Monsters, spooky stuff, sci-fi and Star Trek captured my imagination as a youth and the memories made will never fade. The profile photo symbolizes the efforts of my stepdad to rid me of my "childish" interests, as he called them; at which, not being a man of strong imagination, he failed.
...couldn't have been 1972, the film was just made and released as "Hapkido" in 1972!
ReplyDelete"Lady Kung Fu" (as it was re-titled by National General Pictures, a now-defunct division of Columbia Pictures) was English dubbed and released here in the U.S. the following year on September 5, 1973.
Tommy,
ReplyDeletethanks for the comment and correction! Back then I didn't always make a note of the date of the paper it was clipped from, so obviously I was off a year in my recollections!