Sell or Auction Your Men in Black Screen Used 120″ Animatronic Alien for up to Nearly $20,000 or More at Nate D. Sanders Auctions
FREE APPRAISAL. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Men in Black screen used 120″ animatronic alien that is for sale, please email your description and photos to [email protected] of Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com).
Sell Your Men in Black screen used 120″ animatronic alien
Below is a recent realized price for a Men in Black screen used 120″ animatronic alien. We at Nate D. Sanders Auctions can obtain up to these amounts or more for you:
Men in Black Screen Used 120″ Animatronic Alien. Sold for nearly $20,000.
Consign your Men in Black screen used 120″ animatronic alien at Nate D. Sanders Auctions. Send a description and images of your item to us at [email protected].
Here are some recent items that our auction house, Nate D. Sanders (http://www.NateDSanders.com) has sold:
Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith screen-worn black suits and prop weapons from ”Men in Black II”. Extensive lot from the hit UFO franchise includes the iconic black suits worn by Tommy Lee Jones as Agent Kay and by Will Smith as Agent Jay. Pair of suits were tailor-made for the actors by acclaimed costume designer John David Ridge. ”Mr. Tommy Lee Jones” is typed to the labels of his jacket and pants, as is ”Mr. Will Smith” on the labels of his jacket and pants. Both suits include a white cotton dress shirt, custom made by Anto of Beverly Hills. Shirts feature monograms embroidered in blue thread to the labels, ”T.L.J.” and ”W.S.”, respectively. Shirt labels are dated June 2001 in type. Ensembles are complete with unlabeled black neckties and velvet pocket squares. Wardrobe is accompanied by the pieces de resistance, Agent Kay & Jay’s giant alien-blasting weapons. Impressive pieces are made of solid rubber finished in silver paint. Agent Kay’s single-barrel weapon in silver, with green at the top measures a whopping 40” in length. Agent Jay’s tri-barrel weapon measures 31.5”. Will Smith’s jacket and trousers feature small holes for his wire harness to pass through, with labels inscribed ”Harness” in ink, and the letters ”FC” are handwritten to his shirt label. Some scuffing to props and tearing to the back of Jones’ shirt, else lot is near fine overall. With a COA from Prop Store and a copy of costume department’s info sheet. Sold for $25,428.


Iconic Black Suits from ”Men in Black 3” Screen-Worn by Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones
Men in black suits is the concept underlying one of the largest and most successful film franchises in Hollywood history. And here are the iconic black suits, custom-made and screen-worn by Will Smith as ”Agent Jay” and Tommy Lee Jones as ”Agent Kay” in ”Men in Black 3”. Each costume consists of a matching black suit jacket and pants, a white long sleeve button down dress shirt, a black tie, black shoes, and a black leather belt. The jacket and pants are custom-made by John David Ridge and have attached labels with ”Mr. Smith” and ”Mr. Jones” written in ink respectively. Both shirts are made by Anto of Beverly Hills, with Mr. Smith’s reading ”W.S. March 2011” and Mr. Jones’ reading ”T.L.J. Aug 2010”. ”Men in Black 3” was the most successful installment in the Columbia Pictures trilogy, grossing $625 million out of a total $1.65 billion. Mr. Smith’s pants have a 2” tear on the side of the right leg, otherwise near fine condition. With a COA from Screen Used. Sold for $15,625.


Will Smith Screen-Worn Iconic Black Suit From ”Men In Black 3” — With LOA Signed by Will Smith
Will Smith screen-worn suit from ”Men in Black 3”. Titular black suit by John David Ridge features: (1) single-breasted three-button jacket, measuring approximately 22” across, with 27” long arms and 20” across waist. ”Mr. Smith” has been handwritten upon the interior label but has faded significantly; (2) matching 34 x 33 trousers; (3) white dress shirt by tailor Anto Beverly Hills, with ”W.S.” labeled within; (4) black tie without label; (5) black Italian leather belt by Traflagar in size 36/90; (6) shoes by Rockport in size 12; (7) asymmetrical wristwatch by Hamilton; (8) pair of black dress socks by Gold Toe, never opened. Ensemble is near fine. With an LOA signed by Will Smith in black ink on his personal stationery. Sold for $6,544.


Scarce model from the 1979 film ”Alien” of the famed ”Space Jockey” character aboard the ”Derelict Spaceship”, designed and hand-painted by H.R. Giger. One of the most recognizable scenes in sci-fi cinema, the haunting Space Jockey aka The Pilot, found dead aboard the alien spaceship, was conceived and designed by famed Swiss surrealist painter, sculptor and visual effects artist H.R. Giger, whose work on ”Alien” won an Academy Award in 1980.
The enormous Space Jockey and cavernous spaceship are quintessential Giger, renowned for human-machine melded beings called biomechanoids; the walls of the spaceship appear to be either vertebrae from a once living creature, or cogs in a vast industrial machine system, or perhaps both. Space Jockey is fused into his command station and wears either a mask, or has a elephantine trunk extending from his face. In the ”Alien” set — which was built based on this model — Space Jockey sits 26 feet tall, dwarfing the characters of Kane, Dallas and Lambert who find him dead, his rib cage blasted open, serving as foreshadowing to what awaits the crew later in the film.
So pivotal was the scene — establishing the world of the Alien creature and serving as ground zero for the film’s mythology — that Ridley Scott insisted upon its construction, despite the enormous cost of building the life-size (or larger than life) set. Space Jockey so enthralled the audience of ”Alien”, that the character would even go on to serve as a critical and central story point in Scott’s ”Promethus”, the ”Alien” origin story released in 2012.
The model is reportedly one of only three or four known to exist and comes from the collection of Peter Beale, former 20th Century Fox executive who was given the model by Giger and whose LOA accompanies the piece. The original mold was intentionally cut into smaller parts to be used by the technicians who constructed the set, so the remaining models are the only extant original sculptures of the scene. This model measures 43” wide x 36” long x 16.25” high, hand painted in tones of grey, brown and black by Giger. Space Jockey is fused into his pilot seat, which swivels around on a circular platform. The swiveling piece can be removed and measures 13.5” long x 10.25” high x 4.5” wide. Entire model weighs over 47 lbs., glued to a painted sheet of plywood. A few chips to the resin, otherwise in near fine condition. One of the finest ”Alien” props ever to be sold at auction. Sold for $31,250.

”RoboCop” OmniCorp Screen-Used Prop Body Parts From the Successful 2014 Remake of The Cult Classic
”RoboCop” screen-used prop body parts from the 2014 remake of the film. Parts are for the EM 208 OmniCorp robot. Includes four separated pieces: (1) EM-208 head, with molded features painted, as well as a high gloss foam coating. Silver and black in color, measures 8” x 8.5” with a 12” depth. (2) EM-208 torso as one full piece. Again with a high gloss coating. Molded features include a spinal column, immobile pistons, as well as other mechanical attachment pieces. Measures 14” x 30” with a 10” depth. Measures 7.8 pounds. (3) Two EM-208 legs, one left and one right leg, each in a high gloss coating. Left leg has two metal cord straps attached to the top for hanging and attachment purposes. Foot measures 6” x 13” together with the leg, 41” in height. Each leg weighs 8.4 pounds. Entire set weighs approximately 25 pounds. Minor wear, else near fine. With a COA from MGM. Sold for $25,000.

Prop pengiun from ”Batman Returns”. Rubber penguin with resin rocket strapped to its back is one of the penguin army called upon by Danny DeVito’s villain, The Penguin. Black latex-coated penguin is painted with white and silver to the bindings. Rocket is painted red and white. Shaped wire has also been added. Measures 10” across x 19” high x 15” deep. Weighs 3 pounds, 14 ounces. Some cracking to paint, else near fine. Provenance from Warner Brothers and from Profiles in History Hollywood Auction 56, day 2, lot 956. Sold for $4,375.
FREE APPRAISAL. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Men in Black screen used 120″ animatronic alien that is for sale, please email your description and photos to [email protected] of Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com).
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