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Peru leader under investigation for influence peddling
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Canada PM to mourn with grieving town, new details emerge on shooter
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NBA star Chris Paul retires at age 40 after 21 seasons
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USA romp past Dutch in T20 World Cup to keep Super Eight hopes alive
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Ukrainian Heraskevych loses appeal against Olympics disqualification
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England rugby captain Itoje slams Ratcliffe's 'ridiculous' immigration comments
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Italian biathlete Passler cleared to compete at Olympics despite positive test
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Macron slams 'antisemitic hydra' as he honours 2006 Jewish murder victim
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Tuipulotu warns England to beware 'desperate' Scotland in Six Nations
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US consumer inflation eases more than expected to lowest since May
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Germany's Merz urges US to repair ties with Europe
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Russia, Ukraine to hold talks in Geneva on February 17-18
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Cross-country king Klaebo equals Winter Olympics record with eighth gold
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Ukraine's Heraskevych appeals to CAS over Olympic ban as Malinin eyes second gold
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Sophie Adenot, the second French woman to fly to space
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Something to phone home about: E.T. model goes up for auction
The original animatronic model used to bring big-eyed alien E.T. to life in Steven Spielberg's tear-jerker movie is up for auction.
The extra-friendly extra-terrestrial, whose glowing finger and childlike innocence melted hearts in 1982, became a touchstone of cinema history as audiences welled up over the creature's bond with an Earthling -- and his desperate desire to go home again.
Now the model Spielberg's team used to create movie magic can be yours -- if you've got $2-3 million to spare.
With 85 mechanical joints, nearly everything moves, from the eyes, to the neck, and of course that pointy finger that was held aloft as E.T. informed his new friend Elliot that he wanted to "phone home."
A team of puppeteers helped bring the alien to life opposite Elliot (Henry Thomas) and his little sister Gertie (Drew Barrymore), says Martin Nolan, executive director of Julien's Auctions.
Movie makers "had to work day and night to create what you see... because it's not just about creating visuals," he said.
"It also had to be a working creature. I mean, Drew Barrymore who was the little girl -- the sister in the movie -- she actually believed that he was a living species."
If $3 million is a little rich for your blood, but the idea of getting away from it all has appeal, you could always bid on one of the bicycles Elliot and his friends used as they tried to elude the police.
A specially designed BMX bike, which flew across the setting sun in the movie, is expected to fetch up to $50,000.
And if pedaling is not your thing, but zipping through the sky sounds attractive enough, how about a Nimbus 2000 Hero Broom, from "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban"? Yours for around $100,000.
The haul of movie memorabilia -- which also includes lightsabers from the Star Wars franchise, the staff that Charlton Heston used to part the Red Sea in "The Ten Commandments" and Robert De Niro's "Raging Bull" boxing gloves -- goes under the hammer this weekend in Beverly Hills.
O.Salim--SF-PST