Poet Miller avoids limelight
Chuck Miller hides underground — away from the cheerleading nature of academic poetry, away from interviews and equivocal limelight, perhaps away from the cannon of American poetry altogether. If poetic rebels still exist in free-form poetry, Miller is already sneering, leaving a trail of questions in his figurative dust-wake. (Maybe even the finger?)
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Calle Sur: South America meets Midwest
What do you get when two Latin musicians – a Colombian woman and Panamanian man – cross paths in the middle of Iowa?
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Italian reloaded
The Matrix Reloaded (R)
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Topkapi : typical 1960s heist movie
Topkapi is strongly ingrained in the cinematic genre bedrock that has inspired recent remakes such as Ocean’s Eleven. In these 60s heist films, criminals tend to be quirky and highly-specialized character actors brought together by a central mastermind. The crews assembled tend to contain one eccentric technophile, an oversexed femme fatale, a fat man that sweats a lot, a drunk and someone with anger management issues. Crime is a sort of whimsical psychotherapy group running amok.
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