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That take-charge attitude was modern but not feminist. Garbo didn't represent a different sex from men. She was a different species, an emissary from a higher world of thought and feeling. In her one indisputably great film, Camille, she bestows love on the youthful Armand (Robert Taylor) as a gift from the gods; and, with her anguished, rapturous death, she leaves it with him. Her performance raises melodrama to a feature-length epiphany. No actress today could play a courtesan's self-sacrifice at such a high and perfect pitch. None would dare...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: The Divine Woman | 9/11/2005 | See Source »

...artistic and psychological shocks continued when Mills brought me out to the set in Portland, Ore., where he was re-creating my upbringing (or my fictional version of it), using people who were much better looking than I remembered. Lou Taylor Pucci, who plays Justin (the character I had modeled on myself), is shorter and darker-haired than I am, but his aura and manner were so weirdly familiar that I shivered when I shook his hand. I shivered again when Pucci winked at me and popped his right thumb into his mouth, performing the act without...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: My Childhood, the Movie | 9/11/2005 | See Source »

...There ain't nothin' to it but to do it." Armed with this bromide, an easy wit and $100,000, Robert Townsend made a movie. Suddenly the actor (A Soldier's Story) was his own producer, director and coauthor. The film might be his own life too. Bobby Taylor (Townsend) works days at a hot-dog stand while enduring auditions with casting directors who want every black actor to be Eddie Murphy or Super Dude or "just a little more . . . black?" He secures the title role in a blaxploitation epic called Jivetime Jimmy's Revenge, only to chuck...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Art, War, Death and Sex | 9/8/2005 | See Source »

...Remember American men's tennis? When Andy Roddick lost to unseeded Luxembourgian Gilles Muller in the first round of this year's U.S. Open, critics decried the lack of hometown talent. Was a fading Andre Agassi, 35, all the U.S. had? Did the country really have to count on Taylor Dent? But Blake's stunning run to the U.S. Open quarterfinals has fulfilled an American dream: Blake vs. Agassi, center court on Wednesday night, the most anticipated American vs. American match since 2001, when Pete Sampras beat Agassi in an Open quarterfinal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: U.S. Open Showdown: Agassi v. Blake | 9/6/2005 | See Source »

...with paper hearts bearing the names of military men and women. D.J. Santiago Jr., 8, wrote his father's name on one and Douglas Santiago Sr., a Navy corpsman recently returned from Iraq, helped him stick it on the wall. "I am tired of being the silent majority," Tina Taylor Santiago, D.J.'s mother said. "So many of us support what our troops are doing and no one says anything...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Protest—and Common Ground—in Crawford | 8/29/2005 | See Source »

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