How 1960s Film Pirates Sold Movies Before the FBI Came Knocking [View all]
When a movie breaks back then [in the 1960s], they put it in like a hundred theaters, Wise explained. And, of course, thats film. Thats 100 films. After two or three weeks, they only need like 20 and [the movie studios] pay tax on every print thats in the room... so they have to junk 80 printsthey have to throw them away. So you can kind of guess the story there, when I find out theyre throwing these things away....
Wise said that when he found out they were just tossing film prints in the trash, he started to offer the low-level employees in the shipping department at the movie studios a few bucks to take them. At first, it was just a single movie from time to time.
Well, that grew, Wise said in an understated way. The guys in the film exchanges in Washington, D.C., his friends, were more than happy to make $25 here or there for something that the studio was just going to throw in the landfill.
Wise sold movies for up to $575, which would be over $4,000 in today's money. But then the FBI found him.
From
http://www.neatorama.com/
More on the story at:
https://paleofuture.gizmodo.com/how-1960s-film-pirates-sold-movies-before-the-fbi-came-1826287332