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Word: epigrammed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...stares out at the tortured futuristic landscape of Judge Dredd with a macho hauteur that seems to say, "Who's tougher than me?" And the answer is, the bosses of the major film studios. Compared with them, Stallone and his fellow summer-movie heroes--those mean-eyed, pumped-up, epigram-expectoratin' cinema studs--are prissy little honor-roll students. The real tough guys are fellows named Semel and Pollock and Roth; their battlefield is the summer calendar; they show their guts by slotting their big pictures to open in just the right week in hopes of killing the competition. This...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: THE QUICK AND THE DREDD | 7/10/1995 | See Source »

Schama is that academic exoticus, a professor without a Ph.D.; he has said, "All I want to do is share the past." Like his earlier masterworks, Landscape and Memory is studded with apt illustrations from art and literature, and its pages crackle with epigram and, at times, a dry Gibbonian wit. The book also has a message of rebuke for those multiculturalists who despise Western civilization as the archenemy of nature and the world's primary despoiler of pristine wilds. "Even the landscapes that we suppose to be most free of our culture," Schama writes, "may turn out, on closer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CALL OF NATURE | 4/24/1995 | See Source »

...husband of a Hollywood star, Jessica Lange. His new work, which opened last week off-Broadway under Shepard's own direction, seems an exercise in nostalgia for his old, avant-garde self. The plot is purposely spare, and the dialogue maddeningly elliptical, rising only to an occasional pretentious epigram: "People drifting apart -- it's worse than death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THEATER: Arid Country | 11/28/1994 | See Source »

...staff member. "Or maybe, to be fair, he never had anyone courageous enough working for him who'd come up to him and say, 'Boss, you can't do that anymore.' " Former Oklahoma Congressman Wes Watkins, who retired four years ago, says a friend once offered him a useful epigram about Washington: "There are some that go to the Capitol and grow, and some that go there and swell." He adds, "Some get power hungry and arrogant, and that leads to corruption." Which kind Rostenkowski will turn out to be is now up to a court to decide...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gloom Under the Dome | 6/13/1994 | See Source »

...reading Begley lies in his beautiful, economical virtuosity: characters are etched in three lines; epigram and description are effortlessly paired, as when he writes, "Death is the greatest of sculptors. His modeling knife had removed all but the most indispensable matter from ((his)) face." But for all of Begley's talent and painstaking technique, the novel never transcends artifice. Craftsmanship remains a wonderful virtue, but it's no substitute for genius...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: What's the Diffidence? | 4/18/1994 | See Source »

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