Motion Pictures Using Period Merchandise
In the late 1980s Lehman's discovered a new market for their products when they were contacted by a property master trying to locate a cast iron stove for the film Back to the Future Part III. Since the 1990 release of that film, Lehman's has provided historic period props for a number of different films and television series:
- "Back to the Future Part III"
- Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles
- The Patriot
- Gangs of New York
- Cold Mountain
- Mystic River
- Open Range
- Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
- War of the Worlds (2005 version)
- "Into the West" (TV miniseries)
- "Seraphim Falls"
- Next
- The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
- The Great Debaters
- "John Adams" (TV miniseries)
- "The Lovely Bones"
- "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides"
Read more about this topic: Lehman's Hardware
Famous quotes containing the words motion, pictures and/or period:
“It may be possible to do without dancing entirely. Instances have been known of young people passing many, many months successively, without being at any ball of any description, and no material injury accrue either to body or mind; Mbut when a beginning is madewhen felicities of rapid motion have once been, though slightly, feltit must be a very heavy set that does not ask for more.”
—Jane Austen (17751817)
“A higher class, in the estimation and love of this city- building, market-going race of mankind, are the poets, who, from the intellectual kingdom, feed the thought and imagination with ideas and pictures which raise men out of the world of corn and money, and console them for the short-comings of the day, and the meanness of labor and traffic.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“When we suffer anguish we return to early childhood because that is the period in which we first learnt to suffer the experience of total loss. It was more than that. It was the period in which we suffered more total losses than in all the rest of our life put together.”
—John Berger (b. 1926)