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Fountain Pens In The Movies


farmersmums

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Since I've been interested in fountain pens I've been keeping an eye out for them in movies. Lately I've noticed a few, and wondered if anyone can identify them, just because I'm curious:

 

1) The first scene in Inglourious Basterds, where Hans Landa and the farmer LaPadite have that incredibly tense conversation over milk (and a pipe). Landa whips out his trusty FP and a bottle of ink to write down the names of the Dreyfus family members...it appears to be a vacuum or button filler of some sort from the way he fills it in one smooth motion. Anyone figured out what that pen is yet? I think this has shown up on FPN before but I can't find it.

 

2) One of the last scenes in The Book of Eli, where Eli is dictating the Bible (from memory!) to the white haired scholar. The latter is shown putting down pages and pages of ink with a gold-nibbed FP but it went by too quickly for me to ID.

 

3) In Shutter Island, Leo DiCaprio appears to be using a Parker Jotter ballpoint to make notes in his notebook. It seems funny now, but the ballpoint would've been pretty cutting edge for that time since the movie was set in the 1950's...correct?

Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every once in a while...
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Towards the end of The Paper Chase (1973), Professor Kingsfield (John Houseman) grades exams with a full-size Big Red Parker Duofold.

 

In an early scene in Stailngrad (1993), Lt. von Witzman (Thomas Kretschmann), on the train to the eastern front, writes a letter to his girl Clara using a fountain pen--probably a Pelikan 100, Soennecken, or similar PF.

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  • 1 year later...

In A dangerous method, by David Cronenberg, dr. Jung (Michael Fassbender), dr. Freud (Viggo Mortensen) and Sabina Spielrein (Keira Knightley) they all use fountain pens. Unfortunately I could't recognize any of them, except for a possible Waterman with silver overlay.

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  • 2 months later...

In A dangerous method, by David Cronenberg, dr. Jung (Michael Fassbender), dr. Freud (Viggo Mortensen) and Sabina Spielrein (Keira Knightley) they all use fountain pens. Unfortunately I could't recognize any of them, except for a possible Waterman with silver overlay.

 

Freud (Viggo Mortensen) uses dip pens. Sabina Spielren (Keira Knightley) uses a silver overlay. Jung (Michael Fassbender) seems to use a black ebonite pen.

 

Neither could I recognize any of those.

 

Great movie, by the way.

 

Cheers,

 

Iosepus

Bruno Taut - Crónicas Estilográficas (https://estilofilos.blogspot.com)

The contents and pictures of this post belong to the author, here identified as Bruno Taut.

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Not a fountain pen, but in The Matrix Reloaded, the character of the Architect (bearded white man in the white suit) gestures with and controls a bank of screens using a Lamy Swift.

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Recently watched Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium. There is a scene in the beginning, were Bellini pulls a pen out of a glass and begins writing. Looks like a fountain pen. Not sure what kind.

“Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter, and those who matter don't mind.”

― Dr. Seuss

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  • 5 months later...

I also saw one in the movie For Lovers Only. Staring Stana Katic and Mark Polish. There are a few scenes were she is using a fountain pen and I can't seem to identify them! Anyone have any idea?

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In the film Chaplin, I'm pretty sure there is a black English Duofold. It is used by Chaplin's biographer when writing his biography.

I'd rather spend my money on pens instead of shoes and handbags.

 

 

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I just saw "Salmon Fishing In The Yemen"

 

"Can I borrow your pen?"

"No, it's my special one. Italic nib"

 

I didn't have time to see the pen.

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Dead presidents, man is in Vietnam writing a letter home to a friend, don't know the pen as all they showed was the nib and feed.

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    • stylographile
      Awesome! I'm in the process of preparing my bag for our pen meet this weekend and I literally have none of the items you mention!! I'll see if I can find one or two!
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      Ah, but how to get it processed - that is the question. I believe that the last machine able to run K-14 (Kodachrome processing) ceased to operate some 15 or so years ago. Perhaps the film will be worth something as a curiosity in my estate sale when I die. 😺
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      Take a lot of photos!   If the film has deteriorated or 'gone off' in any way, you can use that as a 'feature' to take 'arty' pictures - whether of landmarks, or people, or whatever.
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