User:Sydney Perkins/Sandbox/National Screen Service
The National Screen Service (NSS) was a company that distributed trailers and paper accessories, such as posters and lobby cards, for the majority of theatrical motion pictures in the United States from the 1940s to the mid-1980s. Originally founded in 1920 to produce and distribute trailers for the major film studios, NSS branched out into the distribution of other accessories while continuing its trailer business, effectively monopolizing the distribution of theatrical advertising materials in the U.S. They also produced and distributed many snipes and policy trailers[1] and designed credits sequences for a number of films, including King Kong Escapes.
Overview
The National Screen Service distributed posters, trailers, pressbooks, stills, lantern slides, admats, and other accessories for the releases of nearly all kaiju and tokusatsu films from the major and mini-major U.S. film studios during the Showa era. While NSS normally printed and distributed paper materials produced by and occasionally in cooperation with the studios, NSS produced the trailers themselves with few exceptions. Their trailers would often use design motifs, taglines and title logos in the studios' advertising materials.
The National Screen Service did not produce and distribute trailers for all major companies; MGM and Warner Bros. produced and distributed trailers for their films until 1957 and 1967, respectively, when each transferred those duties to NSS.[2][3] Columbia began to produce and distribute their own trailers, posters and accessories starting in 1960; in response, NSS began to produce and distribute their own trailers for Columbia films to meet the needs of exhibitors on a "weekly service plan" that stipulated a supply of trailers for Columbia films in order to prevent the need to pay an additional fee for Columbia's own trailers.[4][5]
Following the widespread transition from one-screen theaters to multiplexes in the U.S. during the 1980s, there came to be less space available to advertise individual films. This led to a decline in the use of poster sizes other than the one-sheet, and subsequently the decline in the National Screen Service's business, as film distributors started to use their own in-house facilities for the few accessories needed.[1]
National Screen Service-distributed material can be identified by an "NSS Stock Number" located at the bottom of posters and accessories. This code features the last two digits of the year of a film's release, followed by a stock number assigned to each film, restarting at 1 each year and continuing in ascending order with each project. For example, the NSS Stock Number for Godzilla, King of the Monsters! is 56 / 214, meaning it was the 214th film that the NSS worked on in 1956. In later years, the NSS Stock Numbers appear much less frequently on materials.[6]
Filmography
Title | One sheet | NSS Stock Number | Distributor | Trivia |
---|---|---|---|---|
King Kong (1942 reissue) |
42 / 267 | RKO Pictures | ||
Mighty Joe Young | 49 / 220 | RKO Pictures | ||
King Kong (1952 reissue) |
52 / 206 | RKO Pictures | ||
The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms | 53 / 358 | Warner Bros. | ||
Mighty Joe Young (1953 reissue) |
53 / 362 | RKO Pictures | ||
Godzilla, King of the Monsters! | 56 / 214 | Trans World |
| |
King Kong (1956 reissue) |
56 / 263 | RKO Pictures | ||
Half Human | 57 / 179 | DCA | ||
King Kong (1957 reissue) |
57 / 283 | RKO Pictures | ||
Mighty Joe Young (1957 reissue) |
57 / 355 | RKO Pictures | ||
The Black Scorpion | 57 / 523 | Warner Bros. | ||
Rodan | 57 / 510 | DCA |
| |
The Giant Behemoth | 59 / 52 | Allied Artists | ||
The Mysterians | 59 / 139 | MGM |
| |
Gigantis, the Fire Monster | 59 / 179 | Warner Bros. |
| |
The H-Man | 59 / 109 | Columbia Pictures |
| |
Battle in Outer Space | 60 / 122 | Columbia Pictures |
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The Sword and the Dragon | 60 / 253 | Valiant | ||
Gorgo | 61 / 36 | MGM |
| |
Konga | 61 / 42 | American International Pictures | ||
Mothra | n/a | 62 / 250 | Columbia Pictures |
|
Varan the Unbelievable | 62 / 380 | Crown-International Pictures |
| |
King Kong vs. Godzilla | 63 / 215 | Universal Pictures |
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Gorath | 64 / 209 | Brenco Pictures |
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The Human Vapor | 62 / 400 | Brenco Pictures |
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Godzilla vs The Thing | 64 / 277 | American International Pictures |
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Atragon | 65 / 30 | American International Pictures |
| |
Ghidrah, the Three-Headed Monster | 65 / 289 | Continental Distributing |
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Frankenstein Conquers the World | 66 / 67 | American International Pictures |
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The Human Vapor (1968 reissue) |
68 / 176 | Brenco Pictures |
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King Kong Escapes | 68 / 186 | Universal Pictures |
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Mad Monster Party? | 68 / 42 | Embassy Pictures | ||
Destroy All Monsters | 69 / 217 | American International Pictures |
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Latitude Zero | 70 / 119 | National General Pictures |
| |
Yog, Monster from Space | 71 / 188 | American International Pictures |
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Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster | 72 / 40 | American International Pictures |
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Tidal Wave | 75 / 121 | New World Pictures |
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A*P*E | 76 / 208 | Worldwide Entertainment Corporation |
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King Kong (1976 film) | 76 / 212 | Paramount Pictures |
External links
References
This is a list of references for Sydney Perkins/Sandbox/National Screen Service. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]
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