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[Marijuana]. "She Shoulda Said No!" - 1949 Movie Poster.
Amusing vintage movie poster from the 1949 film She Shoulda Said No!, reading: "How bad can a good girl get / She shoulda said No! But she didn't! / Stay up or stay dumb." 28 x 36 inches. Heavy edge wear, one vertical tear at the center of the lower edge, horizontal folding crease. Stored rolled. Overall good.

She Shoulda Said No! is a 1949 exploitation film that follows in the spirit of morality tales such as the 1936 films Reefer Madness and Marihuana. Directed by Sam Newfield (using the pseudonym "Sherman Scott") and starring Lila Leeds, it was originally produced to capitalize on the arrest of Leeds and Robert Mitchum on a charge of marijuana conspiracy. The film was issued under many titles; it struggled to find a distributor until film presenter Kroger Babb picked up the rights, reissuing it as The Story of Lila Leeds and Her Exposé of the Marijuana Racket. Its relative success came only after the promotional posters were redone and a story fabricated that the film was being presented in conjunction with the United States Treasury.

[Marijuana] "She Shoulda Said No!" - 1949 Movie Poster

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[Marijuana]. "She Shoulda Said No!" - 1949 Movie Poster.
Amusing vintage movie poster from the 1949 film She Shoulda Said No!, reading: "How bad can a good girl get / She shoulda said No! But she didn't! / Stay up or stay dumb." 28 x 36 inches. Heavy edge wear, one vertical tear at the center of the lower edge, horizontal folding crease. Stored rolled. Overall good.

She Shoulda Said No! is a 1949 exploitation film that follows in the spirit of morality tales such as the 1936 films Reefer Madness and Marihuana. Directed by Sam Newfield (using the pseudonym "Sherman Scott") and starring Lila Leeds, it was originally produced to capitalize on the arrest of Leeds and Robert Mitchum on a charge of marijuana conspiracy. The film was issued under many titles; it struggled to find a distributor until film presenter Kroger Babb picked up the rights, reissuing it as The Story of Lila Leeds and Her Exposé of the Marijuana Racket. Its relative success came only after the promotional posters were redone and a story fabricated that the film was being presented in conjunction with the United States Treasury.