National Screen Service
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The National Screen Service, or NSS for short, was a company which controlled the distribution of theatrical advertising materials in the United States from approximately 1940 to 1990.
NSS was formed in 1920 to produce and distribute movie trailers on behalf of movie studios. As time went on, NSS gradually took over production and distribution of other forms of movie advertising, until in the 1940's, it signed exclusive contracts with all the major movie studios to produce and distribute posters and other paper advertising materials.
During the 1980's, as the design of movie theaters changed from small, individual screens to large multiplexes, the amount of advertising space available for a given movie dropped; as a result, the wide variety of movie poster sizes extant until that time was consolidated down to just the "one-sheet" size. As this greatly reduced the need for a separate organization to control poster distribution, movie studios took back those responsibilities, and NSS shrank.
NSS was eventually bought out by Technicolor, Inc. in September 2000.
[edit] NSS Numbers
As part of its efforts, NSS created and issued "NSS Numbers",allowing NSS to more easily track its inventory of movie advertising material. NSS numbers consisted of from two to four components: a two-digit number representing the date, possibly a slash, then a one-to-four digit number designating which movie in a year it was, and possibly ended by an "R" to represent a rerelease of a movie. One good example is Star Wars; its original release number is "77/21".
Movie posters typically had the number in two places: stamped on the back by NSS, and printed in the lower-right corner. Continuing with the Star Wars example, 77/21 is the blur in the very lower-right corner of the Wiki image.
With the demise of National Screen Service in late 2000, movies no longer receive NSS numbers.