Art and culture

‘Star Wars,’ ‘Chinatown’ and More

The movie business grew up in the pages of Variety.

There is no more comprehensive chronicle of film history than Variety – hands down, no contest, case closed. This gallery backs up that bold statement by offering an array of amazing movie and movie-related advertisements drawn from Variety’s 120 years of covering entertainment and Hollywood.

Truly, the pages presented here only scratch the surface of the jewels and historical artifacts in our voluminous archives. This is definitely not an exhaustively researched selection. These are but some of the fantastic finds that we came across while working this year on the 120th anniversary issue, published Dec. 10 in print and online.

Some of these ads are for long-forgotten obscure titles, some are for classics like “King Kong,” “Casablanca,” “Sunset Boulevard,” “Dr. Strangelove,” “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” “The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie,” “Chinatown,” “Star Wars,” “Platoon,” “Silence of the Lambs,” “Rushmore,” “The Matrix” and “The Talented Mr. Ripley.” Some are for movies produced far outside of the U.S.; as you’ll see, even the Soviet Union touted its Sovexport Film operation in Variety in the 1960s and ‘70s. Some of the pages presented here simply capture a moment in time.

We hope cineastes enjoy this trip through the past century of film as seen through the pages of New York-based Variety, which began publication in December 1905, and Los Angeles-based Daily Variety, which had a proud 80-year run as Hollywood’s hometown paper, published Monday-Friday from 1933 to 2013.

And remember, when you need to know what the O.G. “Star Wars” grossed in its opening weekend in markets like St. Louis, Detroit and “Cincy” – now you know where to find a handy chart.

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