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A pair of newspapers from the 1999 Sean Bean four-part TV movie Extremely Dangerous. The edition of the 'Northern Echo' is a custom made cover dated June 20, 1999 featuring a CG mugshot of Neil Byrne (Sean Bean) along side a headline detailing his escape, wrapped around a copy of The Times Metro. The second paper is a copy of The Guardian with the crossword partially completed and various doodles, and has an comical back story to go with it – between the takes filming the scene with Byrne and Annie (Juliet Aubrey) in the café, Sean Bean would take to doodling on the paper/filling in the crossword, which kept having to be swapped for different takes after Annie writes down the hotel name, to which Bean rebelled and wrote “Stop changing the paper!” in the corner! Both papers are in a used but good condition with an interesting history.
I like Sean's drawings he is a very talented artist. I would LOVE to have him as one of my students !!!!!
The physical description states that he has blue eyes, not green.
Lurtz’s (Lawrence Makoare) broken arrow from the first in Peter Jackson’s epic fantasy trilogy The Lord of the Rings: the Fellowship of the Ring (2001). Lurtz was the first of the Uruk-hai to be bred from the pits beneath Isengard, and is of greater strength and intelligence than the later Uruk-hai. This arrow and others like it can be seen in the penultimate battle sequence towards the end of the film when Lurtz kills Boromir (Sean Bean) with his by shooting him several times with his arrows until Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen) intervenes. The arrow is constructed of wood which have been purposefully pained a much darker brown. The fletching is made of a dark 'fur-like' material which is supposed to be vicious Warg fur, and has been bound to the arrow using faux leather string. The arrow shaft has the appearance of being snapped about three-quarters of the way up. The arrow head is constructed of wood which has been covered in a metal tip which is pointed at the end, making this much rarer than the generic resin-tipped arrows, and the shaft looks to have been sawn off from the rest of the arrow. The larger of the pieces measures 54cm (21.25”) with the smaller being 22cm (8.5”), although both have intentional battle worn distress, they are in excellent condition.