The turntable (which is actually configured in that photo as a changer)is a BIC.
I am not absolutely sure which one -- looks like either a 940 or 960. The arm looks like a 940 [EDIT: make that 920, see below!] (note shape of the pivot and the Philips-style sliding weight to set the tracking force) but the base looks to be woodgrained, which was not found on the 940 AFAIK (EDIT: yeah, at least early 940s could be had with woodgrained bases!) That said, the bases were probably interchangeable, and the props departments seemed to like to fiddle with things like that in movies.
EDIT: Actually it was the 920 that used the sliding weight on the arm to set VTF! The 920 was very much 'entry level', with a 10 inch platter, though!
Still, it looks like some BIC model to me! It's
not a Philips (e.g., a GA-212 or 312) -- that little clampy thing on the left rear side is a dead giveaway that it was capable of
stacking. Philips had a stacking changer in those days (GA-406, see the Gordon Miller Music page scan I posted above) but it looked very different.
Gonna have to get back to you about the receiver.
It looks pretty generic. My reflex reaction is maybe a Nikko, but I will have to look more carefully.