
Darth Vader's Star Wars lightsabre and Michael Keaton Batman suit go to auction
The Propstore auction will also see a bullwhip, belt and holster from Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade (1989) and a costume worn by Jane Fonda in Barbarella (1968) go on sale between September 4 and September 6.
Darth Vader's lightsabre, which the auctioneer claims is the first of its kind to be offered on sale, is expected to fetch between one million and three million dollars (£746,000–£2,238,000), while Keaton's Batman suit is estimated to reach between 250,000 and 500,000 dollars (£186,000–£373,000).
Ford's Indiana Jones items, which Propstore claims are the first complete set of their kind to be offered at auction, are expected to make between 250,000 and 500,000 dollars (£186,000–£373,000), while Fonda's Barbarella costume is estimated at between 20,000 and 40,000 dollars (£14,000-£29,000).
Brandon Alinger, Propstore chief operating officer, said: 'We've assembled one of the most impressive selections of authentic props and costumes ever brought to market — pieces of genuine cultural history that continue to inspire awe decades after their debut.
'Whether it's the craftsmanship of an original Batsuit, the power of a Star Wars lightsabre, each item tells a story.
'We're proud to offer this exceptional collection and to give collectors and fans a rare opportunity to claim a tangible piece of the films and shows that shaped our imaginations.'
Other items in the sale include Tobey Maguire's Spider-Man costume from the 2002 film of the same name, estimated to make between 100,000 and 200,000 dollars (£76,000-£149,000), and a flamethrower used by Sigourney Weaver as Ellen Ripley in Aliens (1986), which is predicted to sell for between 125,000 and 250,000 dollars (£93,000-£186,000).
An animatronic Billy The Puppet with remote from Saw III is expected to sell for between 30,000 and 60,000 dollars (£22,000-£44,000), while a Captain America shield used by Chris Evans in Avengers: Age Of Ultron (2015) is estimated to fetch between 60,000 and 120,000 dollars (£44,000-£89,000).
Propstore's Entertainment Memorabilia Live Auction will take place in Los Angeles and on the auctioneer's website, showcasing more than 1,000 lots with a joint valuation of 10 million dollars (£7.5 million).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
15 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Will Carrie Bradshaw get her fairytale ending? And Just Like That... hints at her final storyline as 'woke' reboot is cancelled
Following the announcement that season three would be its last, the penultimate episode of And Just Like That... dropped major clues about one character's ending. Sarah Jessica Parker, who stars as Carrie Bradshaw, announced on August 1 that the Sex and the City reboot will abruptly end with season three. The series finale airs on August 14, marking the end of Carrie's journey, which began with Sex and the City in 1998. Episode 11, titled 'Forget About the Boy', hinted that Carrie might not get her happy ever after, following her split from boyfriend Aidan Shaw (John Corbett), and after her fling with neighbor Duncan (Jonathan Cake) ended with him leaving New York. At the start of the episode Carrie meets with her editor, Amanda (Ashlie Atkinson), to speak about her novel, which focuses on a woman in the 1800s. Amanda loves Carrie's novel, but says that the final chapter is missing. Confused, Carrie responds, 'You have the last chapter…That's the last page. After her love dies, she's in the garden alone.' While Carrie is talking about her book's main character, the show seems to be questioning how her own story should end, especially after her greatest love, Big (Chris Noth), died at the beginning of the series. The editor tells Carrie, 'I'm a happy ending gal. What you've written is a romantic tragedy.' Carrie quips that she doesn't understand why a woman alone in a garden is a 'tragedy.' Carrie later chats with friends Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) and Charlotte (Kristin Davis) about the meeting. She tells them: 'I like the ending, I thought it was honest.' However the show does leave viewers with some hope that Carrie might not end up alone, after years of romantic ups and downs. At the end of the episode, Carrie is seen writing an epilogue to her novel. In it, her main character gets a letter from a friend, who invites her to a party celebrating the return of her cousin. Carrie writes that the man is a 'handsome widower.' Confused, Carrie responds, 'You have the last chapter…That's the last page. After her love dies, she's in the garden alone' The editor tells Carrie, 'What you've written is a romantic tragedy.' Carrie quips that she doesn't understand why a woman alone in a garden is a 'tragedy' Carrie's novel ends with her heroine alone, but with the hint of a new romance in her future. The episode also had touches of nostalgia. In one scene Carrie runs into Lisette, the woman subletting her iconic old apartment, and jokes that she's there to get the place back. The joke, however, turns serious when Carrie attends Lisette's pre-Thanksgiving party and appears horrified by the temporary walls Lisette has put up to divide the space. The series finale, airing on HBO Max on August 14, will reveal if Carrie gets a happy ending. The controversial Sex and The City reboot will end after three seasons, following years of fan backlash. The show - which saw Parker, Nixon and Davis reprise their SATC roles as Carrie, Miranda and Charlotte - will wrap up with a two part finale, showrunner Michael Patrick King confirmed. Sex and The City enthusiasts had long expressed their disappointment in the HBO Max spin-off series, slamming it as ' woke ', 'awful' and 'cringeworthy'. Fans had bashed the show and its writers, with some even alleging And Just Like That... had 'ruined' the once-beloved characters from the original Sex and the City and critics calling it 'the worst show on television'. AJLT saw Miranda cheat on husband Steve with non-binary comic Che Diaz, Carrie bizarrely claim 'love of her life' Mr Big was a 'mistake' and agreeing to take a five year break from her on-again romance with Aidan. The show's viewership had tumbled in its ongoing third season. King said in a statement: 'And just like that… the ongoing storytelling of the Sex and the City universe is coming to an end. 'While I was writing the last episode of And Just Like That… season 3, it became clear to me that this might be a wonderful place to stop. Along with Sarah Jessica Parker, Casey Bloys and Sarah Aubrey, we decided to end the popular series this year with a two-part finale and extended the original series order from 10 episodes to 12. 'SJP and I held off announcing the news until now because we didn't want the word final to overshadow the fun of watching the season. 'It's with great gratitude we thank all the viewers who have let these characters into their homes and their hearts over these many years.' Samantha Jones actress Kim Cattrall notably did not return for the series full-time after a decade of bad blood with her castmates. It introduced a host of new side characters including Lisa Todd Wexley (Nicole Ari Parker), Seema Patel (Sarita Choudhury) and Dr Nya Wallace (Karen Pittman). The series kicked off in explosive style with Big (Chris Noth) dying of a heart attack in the first episode. Noth was later edited out of the series after being accused of sexual abuse by four women - he denied all the allegations and has never been charged with any crime. Miranda began cheating on Steve (David Eigenberg) - who was her true love over six seasons and two films - with Che (Sara Ramirez) before starting to exclusively date women, despite her character confirming in SATC she was 'definitely not gay.' Last year Ramirez was dropped from And Just Like That because their character Che Diaz was a 'waste of airtime,' according to insiders, who shut down the actor's claim that being pro-Palestine cost them the role. Ramirez a non-binary actor who uses they/them pronouns, implied they will not return for the third season of the Sex and the City spin-off in a series of posts. They heavily suggested their time on the show was over as they claimed 'casting directors and agents are making black lists of actors and workers who post anything in support of Palestinians and Gaza to ensure they will not work again.' But a source close to the show ridiculed the suggestion, claiming Ramirez's head had been 'on the chopping block since last season' because their character 'held no value anymore' and was 'annoying.' Cattrall had previously refused to ever reprise her fan-favorite role as the man-hungry publicist - having last played the character in much derided 2010 film, Sex and the City 2. It was claimed Cattrall had previously 'torpedoed' plans for a third Sex and the City film - but she later denied this. Cattrall shocked fans when it emerged she had filmed a secret cameo for the show's second season, which she did without interacting with any cast member. She had previously hit out at Parker and said 'we're not friends' after her former co-star posted an Instagram condolence message following the death of Cattrall's brother. The original Sex and the City ran for six seasons, airing on HBO from 1998 until 2004. The story continued with two feature films: Sex and the City (2008) and Sex and the City 2 (2010). And Just Like That... premiered its first season in 2021. The third season will feature 12 episodes, with the finale airing on August 14. And Just Like That... airs Thursdays at 9 p.m. ET on HBO Max.


Daily Mail
15 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Kanye West's wife Bianca Censori covers up for stepmom duty as she takes rapper's kids out in LA
Kanye West 's wife Bianca Censori embraced her stepmom duties as she stepped out in Los Angeles with three of the rapper's four children with ex Kim Kardashian. On Tuesday, the model, 30, was spotted loading into a Cadillac Escalade with Kanye and Kim's daughter Chicago, seven, and their sons Saint, nine, and Psalm, six. Censori — known for her X-rated fashion — was uncharacteristically covered up in a demure all-black outfit as she and Chicago walked side by side to the awaiting car. The Yeezy architect kept her famous curves hidden beneath a long-sleeve top, capri pants, Mary Jane heels and an obvious brunette wig. Chicago coordinated with her stepmom by wearing a black bubble skirt and black T-shirt for their afternoon outing in LA. Meanwhile, Saint and Psalm led the way along with two women who were either friends of the family or the children's nannies. Missing from the action was Kim and Kanye's eldest daughter North West, 12.


The Guardian
17 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Amaarae: Black Star review – glamour, glitz and lust from a pop star who should be a supernova
Fountain Baby, the second album by Amaarae, was a revelation – a sensual, funny, frank and musically dense record released in 2023 that established the 31-year-old Ghanaian American pop musician as a cultural force to match contemporaries such as Rosalía and Charli xcx. Although the songs are hedonistic – largely oscillating between wry flexes of wealth and lyrics about trifling with, and being trifled by, women in her orbit – she is also a realist: actions have consequences in Amaarae's world, such as on Reckless & Sweet, as she wonders whether her lovers desire her or merely her money. Despite the ingenuity and complexity of her music, Amaarae has struggled to break into the mainstream, in the UK at least. A recent Glastonbury set felt sparsely attended and, aside from 2020's Sad Girlz Luv Money, one of the most enduring viral hits to emerge from TikTok into the real world, few of her singles have had crossover moments. Hopefully that will change with Black Star, her sleek and hugely enjoyable third album. It requires a slight resetting of expectations. After the plainly radical Fountain Baby, perhaps Amaarae would become downright experimental, but Black Star makes it clear that she just wants to have fun. This is her take on a club record, weaving elements of house, trance and EDM into Afrobeats rhythms and spiky rap cadences. It's more straightforward than its predecessor, but that doesn't diminish its pleasure, derived in large part from Amaarae's relentless pursuit of just that: these songs exalt drinking, drug‑taking, rowdy sex and fine dressing in such a clarified, unapologetic way that they would elicit blushes even from the Weeknd, pop's reigning king of smut. You can imagine Amaarae's bass-heavy but elegant music soundtracking a dark, exclusive superclub, a fitting mode for a musician who prioritises opulence and indulgence in her music. Starkilla, a collaboration with the London rapper Bree Runway, is a villainous-sounding house track the hook of which is simply 'ketamine, coke and molly' over and over again; the slick crush-object song B2B combines pulsating electro with the euphoric chug of South African amapiano. There is a remarkable amount of other dance styles explored here: high-speed dembow and baile funk animate Girlie-Pop!; there are elements of Detroit techno and gqom, another South African style, on SMO; and the opener, Stuck Up, features raucous club rap. Even if it's a more traditional record overall, her globalist attitude makes for sparky, cosmopolitan music. The focus of Amaarae's lyrics hasn't changed significantly, although Black Star is a softer and more lovestruck album than its predecessor. On Kiss Me Thru the Phone Pt 2, a PinkPantheress-featuring sequel to the Soulja Boy original, Amaarae and PinkPantheress sing sweetly about 'yearning for you to the bone', their twinned helium voices sounding surprisingly great together. Fineshyt, the best song here, is a gentle trance track that captures the innate sense of melancholy in the much-maligned genre, Amaarae singing about wanting to try a real relationship with her object of affection. These songs provide a welcome counterpoint to the abrasive posturing of earlier ones, which have Amaarae and guests – including Naomi Campbell – mugging and boasting to admittedly great effect. Campbell's appearance is eyebrow-raising: 'They call me a bitch, a villain, controversial diva – no, I am the black star,' she intones, which will probably inflame the many people still up in arms over Campbell's misdeeds, ranging from assault convictions to the alleged mismanagement of a charity (which she denies). But it's fitting for an album that is deliriously in love with wealth, celebrity and all the power it affords. There is a difference between Amaarae and all the other stars fixated on such topics: for her, glamour is a side quest and love is the motive. Shopping at Saks and being passed another blunt might be nice, Amaarae seems to say, but the real high comes from finding someone to share it with. Wild Pink and Fenne Lily: Disintegrate – Edit Wild Pink's John Ross is one of the best lyricists in indie music. The deluxe reissue of his fantastic Dulling the Horns promises plenty of great reinterpretations of his bizarro images, including this soft take on Disintegrate by the English folk singer Fenne Lily.