20th Century Fox

Prop Store Entertainment Memorabilia

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Universal Pictures

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Paramount Pictures

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20th Century Fox

Prop Store Entertainment Memorabilia

Walt Disney Productions

Paramount Pictures

Touchstone Pictures

Prop Store Entertainment Memorabilia

If you've ever thought that your mantelpiece or office bookshelf is incomplete without an M41A Pulse Rifle—or perhaps Monty Python's taunting French knight helmet—then you and your massive wallet are in luck.

On Tuesday, September 26, Prop Store Entertainment Memorabilia will host an online auction, and, if I'm any judge of character, there's a good chance a look through the catalog will leave you gasping with delight.

Take the aforementioned M41A from Aliens. The resin, foam, and wood gun is a little scraped and battered, and it won't count down how many shells you've got left—but it may well make you feel like a Colonial Marine. It won't be cheap, though—bidding starts at $13,475 (£10,000).

How about the self-lacing Nikes that Marty McFly wore in Back to the Future Part II? OK, we know Nike recently released a limited run of Air Mags that might cost you $54,000. The starting bid on a pair actually used in the film is but a fraction of that: $16,844, (although they do look a little worse for wear).

There are costumes for whichever famed film likeness you desire. If jumpsuits are your thing, you could choose from Peter Venkman or Pete "Maverick" Mitchell. Or go with a sci-fi theme—Sark, perhaps, or maybe Jayne Cobb, or possibly even Mark Watney? I think I might have broken my friend Lee Hutchinson's brain with that last one.

A notable standout—to me at least—is a model of the Millennium Falcon that never appeared in a Star Wars movie. While there are plenty of items from many of the Star Wars films (some signed by Ralph McQuarrie work looks especially cool), this particular Falcon will be more familiar to hardcore Blade Runner fans: the fastest ship in the known universe also spent some moonlighting as a building in Ridley Scott's noir classic.

Although the auction takes place in London tomorrow at 12pm local time (7am ET), you don't need to find a last-minute flight across the Atlantic: you can bid online. Some of us at Ars would rather you not, however. We've already found all the coins buried between our couch cushions (and, er, children's college funds).

Listing image by 20th Century Fox