'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946)

Limited edition giclee printed on photo rag 308 gsm fine art paper

comedy drama fantasy romance war


'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art
'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946) - film-art

Regular price €171,95 Sale

Please select a size and framing option

Preview Matinee Feature Blockbuster Premiere
Unframed Black White Oak



Notes on sizing

All measurements given are for the printed image only. To calculate the overall dimensions of a framed print please add 200mm to both the horizontal and vertical measurements.

Example: A print image that is specified as being 825mm x 351m will sit inside a frame that has the approximate outside dimensions of 1025mm x 551mm.

'A Matter of Life and Death' (1946)

Limited edition giclee printed on photo rag 308 gsm fine art paper

Director: Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger

Writers : Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger

Stars : David Niven, Kim Hunter, Robert Coote, Kathleen Byron

Returning to England from a bombing run in May 1945, pilot Peter Carter's plane is damaged and his parachute ripped to shreds. He has his crew bail out safely, but figures it is curtains for himself. He gets on the radio, and talks to June, a young American woman working for the U.S. Army Air Forces, and they are quite moved by each other's voices. Then he jumps, preferring this to burning up with his plane. He wakes up in the surf. It was his time to die, but there was a mix-up in heaven. They couldn't find him in all that fog. By the time his "Conductor" catches up with him twenty hours later, Peter and June have met and fallen in love. This changes everything, and since it happened through no fault of his own, Peter figures that heaven owes him a second chance. Heaven agrees to a trial to decide his fate.