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E.T EXTRA TERRESTRIAL OLD SCHOOL MOVIE METAL TIN GLOSSY 8x11 & 3/4 POSTER 1982
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This is a must-have for any fan of the iconic 1982 film, E.T. the Extra Terrestrial. This metal tin glossy poster measures 8x11 & 3/4 and features the beloved extraterrestrial character. Perfect for any movie memorabilia collection, this reproduction piece was manufactured in the United States. Add this unique item to your collection today. BRAND NEW! E.T EXTRA TERRESTRIAL OLD SCHOOL ART MOVIE THICK METAL STEEL TIN POSTER. (1982) SIZE: 8x11 & 3/4 INCHES. *Shipped with USPS Priority Mail.Condition is Brand New! SHIPS FREE! AND VERY FAST! (1-3 DAYS) WITH TRACKING NUMBER. SUPERIOR DETAIL AND QUALITY METAL STEEL POSTER! *THIS THICK METAL STEEL TIN POSTER IS FADE RESISTANT UP TO 100 YEARS! *One-of-a-kind metal poster with exquisite design. Sturdy,and durable enough to withstand a lifetime of intense staring! *But staring is only half the fun! This Thick Metal Steel Tin Poster brings your movie moment's to life with vivid color and details to the max! *Crazy durable! *Vivid colors! *Tactile texture *Extremely detailed! *Collectors delight! *Thick & steel *Quality checked! *Gift ready! *Safe for your walls! *Matte Glossy Finish *Frame: No Frame *3D printed on metal in a unique way! *Stays the same size with or without a frame *Comes in its own original plastic protection cover. *GET YOURS TODAY! YOU WON'T BE DISAPPOINTED. *THIS DAY IN HISTORY: JUNE 11 (1982) E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial released Then 34-year-old director Steven Spielberg reportedly drew on his own experiences as an unusually imaginative, often-lonely child of divorce for his science-fiction classic E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, which is released on June 11, 1982. *For Spielberg, E.T. marked a return to territory he had first visited with the classic Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), in which Richard Dreyfuss plays a man who comes face to face with a fearsome alien force that eventually proves to be human-friendly. With E.T., Spielberg would create an even more appealing vision of alien life, in the form of a diminutive creature with wrinkled skin and a glowing belly. Spielberg worked closely with the screenwriter, Melissa Mathison (future wife of Harrison Ford, the star of Spielbergs Indiana Jones films) to capture on film the story of the wise, kind and cuddly alien botanist who is stranded on Earth and needs the help of a sensitive little boy, Elliott (Henry Thomas) to get back home. Elliott and his siblings, played by Robert MacNaughton and a seven-year-old Drew Barrymore, hide E.T. (as the alien dubs himself) in a closet to keep him out of sight from prying adults, including their mother, who is distracted by her painful separation from her husband. Before long, a special link develops between E.T. and Elliott, who will eventually risk his own safety to return E.T. to his planet. *From the time that E.T. had its first showing, on closing night at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival, the films buzz was overwhelmingly positive. Richard Corliss raved in TIME magazine: [E.T.] is a perfectly poised mixture of sweet comedy and ten-speed melodrama, of death and resurrection, of a friendship so pure and powerful it seems like an idealized love. TIME also included the fictional alien in its list of candidates for Man of the Yearthe first film character to receive that honor. Nominated in nine categories at the 1983 Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, the film won four Oscars, for Best Sound Effects Editing, Best Visual Effects, Best Original Score and Best Sound. *E.T. had stupendous success at the box office, eventually raking in some $435 million (it was re-released in 1985 and a special 20th-anniversary edition was issued in 2002).