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Writer

Brandon K. Walston

Latest Content

O.J. Simpson's Defense Lawyer Speaks at IOP

Although best known for his central role on the O.J. Simpson defense team, famed attorney Johnnie Cochran barely touched on

Best of the Best

Included in the biographical notes on the writers anthologized in The Best American Short Stories 1997 are brief commentaries concerning

Devil's Advocate

Al Pacino steals the show as the head of a truly diabolical New York law firm that snags Keanu Reeves'

One Night Stand

Wesley Snipes stars as a commercial director who begins to reevaluate his life after a visit with his AIDS-infected best

Diva's Sexy Originality Inspired by R&B Greats

One afternoon last fall, I happened upon Erykah Badu's debut video "On and On." Coming on late in Black Entertainment

Surreal 'Chronicle' Traces Search for Cat, Identity in Japan

A few months ago literary critics were busying themselves trying to invent new synonyms for epic and powerful. These efforts--putting

Devil's Advocate

Al Pacino steals the show as the head of a truly diabolical New York law firm that snags Keanu Reeves'

'One Night Stand' No 'Vegas'

With the Oscar award winning Leaving Las Vegas, director Mike Figgis made a film that was as hopelessly romantic as

Year of the Horse

Jim Jarmusch pays a worthy tribute to Neil Young & Crazy Horse by mounting an engrossing collage of biography, interviews

Devil's Advocate

Al Pacino steals the show as the head of a truly diabolical New York law firm that snags Keanu Reeves'

Pacino Steals the Show in 'Advocate'

At the end of Taylor Hackford's Devil's Advocate, Al Pacino expounds on why he has chosen the field of law

Paying Tribute to the Young and Crazy

"How can you ask a couple of cute questions and think you gonna capture thirty years of pain and family...?"

[living large] ON A BORING BACKGROUND

F or anyone who saw the recent MTV Video Music Awards, the surreal highlight of the evening was not Da

'Locusts' a Confused Film Debut

The Locusts, the debut feature of writer-director John Patrick Kelley, is perhaps the first film ever to use the castration

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