James Bowman

Resident Scholar

Mr. Bowman is well known for his writing on honor, including his book, Honor: A History and “Whatever Happened to Honor,” originally delivered as one of the prestigious Bradley Lectures at the American Enterprise Institute in 2002, and republished (under the title “The Lost Sense of Honor”) in The Public Interest.

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James Bowman is a Resident Scholar at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.

Mr. Bowman is well known for his writing on honor, including his book, Honor: A History and “Whatever Happened to Honor,” originally delivered as one of the prestigious Bradley Lectures at the American Enterprise Institute in 2002, and republished (under the title “The Lost Sense of Honor”) in The Public Interest.

Among the other publications to which he has contributed are Harper’sThe Public InterestThe Washington PostThe Wall Street JournalThe Daily and Sunday Telegraph of London, The Weekly Standard and National Review.

He has worked as a freelance journalist, serving as American editor of the Times Literary Supplement of London from 1991 to 2002, as movie critic of The American Spectator since 1990 and as media critic of The New Criterion since 1993. He has also been a weekly movie reviewer for The New York Sun since the newspaper’s re-foundation in 2002.

Mr. Bowman received B.A. degrees from Lebanon Valley College in Pennsylvania and the University of Cambridge in England, where he also did graduate study and received an M.A. in 1979.

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Hollow Reed

James Bowman

For just a moment, about half way through, Hollow Reed by Angela Pope looks as if it is going to…

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Irma Vep

James Bowman

At its best, Olivier Assayas’s film, Irma Vep (an anagram of Vampire) is rather difficult for an American audience, unfamiliar…

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Jurassic Park (The Lost World)

James Bowman

The Lost World: Jurassic Park by Steven Spielberg is virtually indistinguishable from the original of four years ago—and indeed from…

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Speed 2 — Cruise Control

James Bowman

Speed 2: Cruise Control by Jan De Bont is even more mindless than the first Speed and is perhaps postmodern…

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Temptress Moon (Feng yue)

James Bowman

It’s nice to know, as I’m sure I’ve said before, that somewhere in the world life on celluloid is still…

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Till There Was You

James Bowman

Till There Was You, by Scott Winant, is a leaden and slow-moving romantic comedy that tries very hard to be…

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Trial and Error

James Bowman

Trial and Error by Jonathan Lynn, to a screenplay by Sara Bernstein and Gregory Bernstein, based on the former’s short…

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Van, The

James Bowman

It is unfortunate for Stephen Frears’s The Van, based on the novel by Roddy Doyle, that it is coming out…

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Addicted to Love

James Bowman

Addicted to Love, written by Robert Gordon and directed by Griffin Dunne has its moments of humor but it never…

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Austin Powers, International Man of Mystery

James Bowman

Austin Powers, International Man of Mystery, directed by Jay Roach from a screenplay by Mike Myers, stars Myers as one…

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Brassed Off

James Bowman

Where Twin Town is determinedly cutting edge, Brassed Off by Mark Herman is quaintly old-fashioned. It is so both in…

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Breakdown

James Bowman

Breakdown by Jonathan Mostow is a superior sort of thriller that is a step in the right direction after recent…

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