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Writer

Lynn Y. Lee

Latest Content

Color My World Nostalgic With 'Pleasantville'

Pleasantville charms; on the visual level, it dazzles. Half comedy, half fable, it flips the premise of The Truman Show

Debunking the Myth

S o: you got Quadded. And, by the usual guess, you ought to be gnashing your teeth, muttering imprecations against

The Wings of the Dove

In a canny and generally successful appeal to the youth market, this film streamlines Henry James's notoriously dense novel, bringing

Brevitas

In a canny and largely successful appeal to the youth market, this film streamlines Henry James's notoriously dense novel and

The Wings of the Dove

Streamlining Henry James's notoriously dense novel, this film brings its melodramatic and erotic undertones to the forefront. A well-bred but

Seven Years in Tibet

A gorgeous, half-successful epic gives much-needed public visibility to the tragic modern history of Tibet, but opts for glossy formulaic

Gattaca

First-time director Andrew Niccol brings considerable visual style and an intriguing premise to this story of a Brave New Worldish

In and Out

This tale of a small-town high school teacher (Kevin Kline) whose life turns upside down when he's declared gay by

Daring 'Wings' Stays Aloft

"It's not the easiest book to translate into film," says director Iain Softley of Henry James's The Wings of the

Gattaca

First-time director Andrew Niccol brings considerable visual style and an intriguing premise to this story of a Brave New Worldish

Seven Years in Tibet

A gorgeous, half-successful epic gives much-needed public visibility to the tragic modern history of Tibet, but opts for glossy formulaic

In & Out

This tale of a small-town high school teacher (Kevin Kline) whose life is turned upside down when he's declared gay

Gattaca

First-time director Andrew Niccol, who also wrote the script, brings considerable visual style and an intriguing, only-too-timely premise to this

Seven Years in Tibet

A semi-successful epic that's gorgeous to look at and gives some much-needed high-profile visibility to the tragic modern history of

Eerie 'Titus' Ushers in Halloween at Adams

If ever there were a black sheep in the Shakespeare cannon, Titus Andronicus would be the prime contender. One of

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