![]() Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street Johnny Depp $29.99 Your friends will think you're really sharp when you flash this movie prop replica of the singing barber's straight razor from Tim Burton's musical adaptation of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. The realistic reproduction is intricately detailed and arrives in full colored box, ready for more musical mayhem in your hands. It is 6.25" when closed with a mirror polish stainless steel razor sharp blade with a thickness of 3.5mm followed by the full aluminum handle. It's a gift to die for! ![]() Sweeney Todd Demon Barber Cut Throat Knife Shaving Razor Sharp $9.99 Up for sale is a brand new replica of the Sweeny Todd Demon Barbers Razor as seen from Tim Burton and Johnny Depps 2007 masterpiece. Sweeny Todd made his first appearance in the 1846 serial The String of Pearls. In this first telling of the story Todd was a barber who killed his victims by pulling a lever in his barber chair, causing the victim to fall through a revolving door and break their necks. Todd would then go down and finish off the victims with his cut throat razor. Todd had an agreement with Mrs. Lovett, who took the bodies and baked them into her meat pies. This cut throat razor is constructed with 440 stainless steel and is razor sharp. The handle is detailed with an engraved pattern. The razor is measured at 10.5 overall long, and the blade is measured at 4.75. ![]() Demon Barber Straight Razor of Sweeney Todd Movie Replica $25.99 The blade is beautiful! Such detail to the design. Nice weight to it. A cool addition to any Sweeney Todd fan! ![]() Sweeney Todd - The Demon Barber of Fleet Street - The Musical Book $14.75 Mr. Sondheim fearlessly explores psychic caverns where civilized people are not dying to go ... A naked Sweeney Todd stands revealed as a musical of naked rage, chewing up everyone in its path as it spits out blood and tears. Frank Rich, The New York Times A work of such scope and such daring that it dwarfs every other Broadway musical that even attempts to invite comparison. Rex Reed, New York Daily News |
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