Kevin Camp
A spiritual seeker who aims to master as many different subjects as he can.
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- Content
- 12
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- Contributor since
- 4/8/2009
Education/Experience
University of Alabama-Birmingham B.A. in HistoryMotto
To Thine Own Self Be TrueAffiliations
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Displaying Results 1 - 12 (of 12) for All Content
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Film Review: O Lucky Man!A review of the Lindsay Anderson film O Lucky Man!, starring Malcolm McDowell in his second turn as Mick Travis. -
Film Review: ContemptA review of French director Jean-Luc Godard's big budget technicolor film starring heart-throb Brigitte Bardot. -
Movie Review: Heavens Above!A review of a Boulting Brothers satirical comedy, the third in an unofficial trilogy, and second to feature Peter Sellers. The film was one of the last independent, low budget film in which Sellers starred.
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Movie Review: Nashville:A review of the classic Robert Altman film "Nashville" -
A Final Word on Tea PartiesComparing the 2009 tea parties to the tea parties of the colonial days and finding holes in conservative arguments. -
ParasiteThis is a poem about the irony inside a relationship comprised of two selfish people -
The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner: A ReviewTony Richardson's late-era "Kitchen Sink Drama". -
Blow-Up: A ReviewItalian Neo-Realist director Michelangelo Antonioni's first foray into English language cinema, a portrait of Swinging London. It was his only financial success in English.
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Movie Review: SunriseA review of a late silent era classic with an impressive claim to best silent film ever made.
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Old Verses to an Even Older Song: the Budget BattleRepublican arguments to President Obama's budget and legislative agenda have their roots in the arguments and politically sparring that went into the formation of The New Deal.
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I'm All Right Jack: a ReviewThis late 1950's Boulting Brothers wry black comedy gave rise to the career of Peter Sellers and reveals much about our conflicted attitudes towards organized labor.
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Have We Become Numb to Tragedy?A response to recent violent acts involving handguns and killers with no discernible motive and how we deal with them individually and as a society.

