And Justice For All 1979 Exclusive Page
The film’s tagline, “The law is a minefield,” was an understatement. The climax—Pacino’s explosive “You’re out of order!” monologue—remains one of the most quoted (and memed) breakdowns in film history.
So, if you find a musty magazine from 1979 with Al Pacino’s wild eyes staring out from a courtroom, buy it. Frame it. Because that exclusive isn’t just a piece of journalism. It’s a piece of history—and for the true fan, it’s the only evidence that justice, even cinematic justice, is hard-won. Are you a collector who owns the original 1979 exclusive? Share your photos and stories in the comments below. And for more deep-dives into classic cinema’s lost press, subscribe to our newsletter. and justice for all 1979 exclusive
In the annals of cinema history, 1979 was a landmark year. Apocalypse Now took us into the heart of darkness, Alien introduced us to our worst nightmare in space, and Kramer vs. Kramer captured the zeitgeist of a changing American family. Yet, nestled between these epics was a smaller, angrier, and surprisingly prophetic film that has only grown in stature with time: …And Justice for All . The film’s tagline, “The law is a minefield,”
But getting that speech to the screen was a battle. And the captured every scar. Anatomy of the Exclusive: “The Pacino Rage” The specific exclusive that fans hunt for today originally appeared in a now-defunct major film magazine (sources point to Rolling Stone or New York magazine’s summer “Preview” issue) under the headline: “…And Justice for All”: The Al Pacino Explosion. Frame it