Sealed and at a competitive price so I have no pictures of the interior content. See description below. Will ship in original mailer.
It is issue #14 approx. 9 1/4" x 11 3/4" x 12". Weighs over a pound.
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From the Internet:
Fall has officially arrived with its golden-hued leaves and actors and auteurs turning in some of their best work with the season’s cinematic releases. Case in point: Queue Issue 14 cover star Julianne Moore’s performance in Todd Haynes’s riveting feature May December, which makes its much-anticipated North American debut at the opening night of the 61st New York Film Festival. Entirely transformed as the sanctimonious (and seemingly ordinary) suburban matriarch Gracie Atherton-Woo, Moore lends her signature style to capture the character’s polite if prickish manners and her arms-length regard for Elizabeth Berry (a never-better Natalie Portman), an actor who comes to study Gracie in order to play her in a film. Though Gracie would rather everyone forget, she’s indeed filmworthy, having scandalized all of Savannah, Georgia when she declared her love for a 13-year-old, served prison time, and later started a family with that same boy, her now-husband Joe, played by an impressive Charles Melton.
The film marks Moore’s fifth collaboration with Haynes since the pair first began working together on their 1995 film Safe. “Working with Todd is always just miraculous and wonderful. The fact that my creative life has collided with his at all has been a miracle,” says Oscar winner Moore. Exploring truth, memory, and morality, May December is just as unforgettable as the actor’s haunting performance at the center. “Julianne loves to enter into these places of inscrutability in her depictions of women — and in stories in general,” remarks Haynes. “She does not want to put the viewer at ease.”
Additionally, in honor of L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.+ History Month, our 14th print issue features a special celebration of queer creatives and performers, highlighting the power of their presence onscreen. From animated adventure Nimona, an adaptation of the beloved graphic novel from the mind of ND Stevenson, to the heartwarming relationships at the center of Heartstopper, queer films and series are redefining representation. Thanks to a new class of emerging talent like Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget’s Bella Ramsey and ONE PIECE’s Morgan Davies, along with venerated visionaries like acclaimed director George C. Wolfe, who’s set to debut his latest film Rustin, starring Colman Domingo as the gay civil rights icon Bayard Rustin (more from Queue on Domingo’s career-defining turn coming soon), these stars, directors, and writers continue to make groundbreaking contributions to cinema and television and push the boundaries of what’s possible.