• Add description, images, menus and links to your mega menu

  • A column with no settings can be used as a spacer

  • Link to your collections, sales and even external links

  • Add up to five columns

  • Marlon Brando movie posters gather original theatrical material from one of cinema's most influential performers — from Streetcar Named Desire through The Godfather — representing post-war American acting revolution. Brando's theatrical campaigns span four decades, and original prints from his peak periods are among the most consistently valuable in the collector market.

    A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) and On the Waterfront (1954) represent the early work — promotional imagery that captured the raw physical intensity Brando brought to both roles. The Wild One (1953) produced the leather-jacket iconography that defined a generation. Then the extraordinary later turn: Vito Corleone in The Godfather (1972) — for which he won his second Academy Award after refusing the first — and Colonel Kurtz in Apocalypse Now (1979), the film in which he and Francis Ford Coppola pushed cinema toward its psychological edges. Last Tango in Paris (1972) gave him Bernardo Bertolucci's most challenging canvas, and the French campaign for that film is among the most significant in his collecting arc.

    Available in US one-sheets, French grandes affiches, Italian foglio, British quads, German A1s, Japanese B2s, lobby card sets, and half-sheets. Condition runs Fine to Very Fine. Original paper from his 1950s and 1970s peaks is now scarce and rarely surfaces in fine condition.

    Find original theatrical paper alongside Al Pacino posters, James Dean posters, and The Godfather posters. All Film/Art Gallery movie posters and items are authenticated originals.