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  • Albert Finney movie posters trace one of British cinema's most magnetic and physically commanding careers — a performer who defined the working-class male hero of British New Wave cinema before demonstrating, across five decades of subsequent work, that he was one of the most complete screen actors of his generation.

    Finney's film debut in Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960) — as the factory worker Arthur Seaton, defiant, sensual, and contemptuous of middle-class aspiration — arrived with the force of a genuine cultural statement. The kitchen-sink realism of Tony Richardson and Karel Reisz found in Finney its definitive screen embodiment. Tom Jones (1963), Richardson's Oscar-winning adaptation of Fielding's novel, made Finney an international star, its theatrical materials among the most exuberant and cinematically inventive British one-sheets of the decade.

    Later transformations were equally remarkable: the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot in Murder on the Orient Express (1974, Oscar-nominated), the hard-bitten private eye in Miller's Crossing (1990), the Daddy Warbucks of Annie (1982), the crooked politician of Erin Brockovich (2000, Oscar-nominated), and the veteran gamekeeper of Skyfall (2012). Five Oscar nominations across five decades attest to his remarkable consistency. Original theatrical paper from his 1960s peak is now scarce in fine condition.

    Buy original theatrical prints from across this distinguished British actor's career — from the kitchen-sink realism of his beginnings through the prestige productions of his later decades.

    Browse alongside Oscar-winning film posters and drama film posters. All Film/Art Gallery movie posters and items are authenticated originals.