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A.M. Fox - Cinema Advertising Slide

Advertising slides like this one would have screened in the cinema near the end of intermission- just as patrons were taking their seats for the second half of the movie (when intermissions were phased out they sometimes shown before the film commenced). 

These ads were printed/painted on glass and were loaded into the projector for a few moments before the heat from the lamp cracked the glass. Some of these slides were detailed and used prints, photographs and visual humour. Others, like this one from A.M Fox, were basic. Given how briefly each slide was shown to the audience, oftentimes simple was best!

No information can be found online about this business- but based off the design of the slide it would have been made from the 1940s-early 1960s. New Zealanders bought 40 million cinema tickets a year by the late 1950s so this was a prime time to advertise. 

Murray's Jewellers- Cinema Advertising Slide

Many cinema advertising slides of the 1950s and 1960s showcased the wedding industry and this one focuses on a very important part of the ceremony- the ring! 

Slides like this one were shown during cinema screenings (usually at the end of the intermission) and each slide was shown for a few seconds to stop the projector's heat from cracking the glass!

This slide has the later 'widescreen' format which suggest that it was made after the 1950s. As 'picture palaces' became multiplexes and intermissions were phased out, cinema advertising was placed at the beginning of the screening. This replaced the singing of 'God Save The Queen' and the newsreels which were both discontinued in the early 1970s. 

When digital media became popular the static slide was itself replaced by the advertising 'film short' we see at the cinema today.

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