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This dialogue of Caravaggio with the modern world was unfortunately cut short by a particularly negative turn in his life’s theme of fights and flights. He collapsed on a beach at Port Ercole, while trying to run after the ship that had left with all of his most recent work. While the 39 year-old’s body remained on that beach, his paintings sailed away: Caravaggio’s work outlived him. For centuries, his art was largely criticized as vulgar and lacking imagination. Only in the 1950s, after an exhibit of his work...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Book Review: Franche Prose | 10/7/2005 | See Source »

...face…,” or “I wanted to kill this obnoxious kid during ‘The Passion of the Christ’ when….” All we’ve been hearing about are our fellow students’ lame beach houses in New Jersey and their “totally inspiring, way artistically enlightening” $10,000 jaunts through Western Europe. Where are the memorable films...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Column: Froehlove | 10/7/2005 | See Source »

...know, “Saving Private Ryan” was a pretty good movie, but it would have really packed an emotional punch if the Normandy beach scenes were backed by whiny, overblown emo-rock about “All the things that you never ever told me/And all the smiles that are ever gonna haunt...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pop Screen: Li'l Kim, My Chemical Romance, Interpol | 10/7/2005 | See Source »

Biographies based on religious scripture, no matter how eloquent, aren’t exactly beach reading, and “David” is no exception. Still, Pinsky adds enough modern-day points of reference to keep the story accessible. When David bargains with Saul about marrying the latter’s daughter, it’s “like something from the ‘Godfather’ movies or ‘The Sopranos.’” When one of David’s opponents finds a spear driven through his stomach, he?...

Author: By Nicholas K. Tabor, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: BookEnds: Pinsky Breathes Life Into Israelite King | 10/6/2005 | See Source »

...clients. "Thousands of people are coming here every week," says Caoimhín Mac Giolla Mhín from the Irish Republican Army prisoners' group, Coiste, as another bus passes along the Catholic Falls Road. "They're not coming here for fishing. Not everybody wants to lie on a beach." Onboard one of Lavelle's buses last week, 40 people listened attentively to the quieter parts of Belfast's history, like the building of the Titanic in a local shipyard. But their necks craned whenever they passed a temple of recent turbulence, like police stations surrounded by high walls...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Turning Tragedy Into a Tourist Industry | 10/4/2005 | See Source »

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