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Allen Barra

Allen Barra is a sports journalist who writes regularly for The Wall Street Journal. He formerly served as an editor for American Heritage, where he wrote about 20th century sports and popular culture. His 2009 book, Yogi Berra: Eternal Yankee, was followed by Rickwood Field: A Century in America's Oldest Ballpark in 2010.

Articles by this Author

Geoffrey C. Ward's New History of World War II
Gene Wilder discusses his new World War I adventure
Why 1848?, February/March 2007 | Vol. 58, No. 1
Kurt Andersen gives a neglected year its due
Robert Altman
Just as the year changed the nation, so its World Series changed American sports.
In 1964, the most popular movie star in America had a license to kill from the British government.
The creator of the immensely popular new Western discusses what makes it truly new.
Grim Reapings, June/July 2006 | Vol. 57, No. 3
The classic that seeped into "Deadwood"—and many other Westerns.
What does the only Western on television today have in common with the most popular TV Western ever?
Act One, February/March 2006 | Vol. 57, No. 1
All the President’s Movies
A spectacular and painstaking PBS series brings the war to the screen
10 films that helped shape a generation
Football Coach, October 2005 | Vol. 56, No. 5
Dashiell Hammett
The Hidden Brando
Slavery Televised
Screenings, June/July 2004 | Vol. 55, No. 3
And starring Pancho Villa as himself
Screenings, April/May 2004 | Vol. 55, No. 2
My Darling Clementine
The 50 Biggest Changes in the Last 50 Years
Gods and Generals
Frontiersman, October 2003 | Vol. 54, No. 5
Screening, June/July 2003 | Vol. 54, No. 3
The San Patricios
Film Director, September 2001 | Vol. 52, No. 6
Show Business, June 2001 | Vol. 52, No. 4
A critic looks at 10 movies that show how Americans work together.
Gangster, May/June 1999 | Vol. 50, No. 3
From law officer to murderer to Hollywood consultant: the strange career of a man who became myth

"WEB ONLY STORIES" BY THIS CONTRIBUTOR

If horror films have lost their sting in recent years, it’s in large part because the easy availability of photographic equipment has put genuine horror so much in front of us that fiction seems tame by comparison. The films we saw on television of actual terrified fleeing peasants will linger in…
“Jesse James was a lad who killed many a man.” So went the opening line of the popular song, author unknown, that did much to spread the legend of Jesse Woodson James after his death on April 3, 1882—125 years ago today. Jesse and his brother Frank were already legends in their own time, but the…
Michael Wallis’s new book, Billy the Kid: The Endless Ride (W. W. Norton, 328 pages, $25.95), is the closest anyone has come to a definitive biography of the most mythical figure of the American frontier. On July 14, 1881, Billy the Kid was shot and killed by Pat Garrett in Fort Sumner, New Mexico…
  Kal Penn, Irfan Khan, Sahiri Nair, and Tabu as the Ganguli family in The Namesake  Jhumpa Lahiri’s fiction has touched a nerve with readers on at least two continents. Most American fiction dealing with the immigrant experience has been written by the children of Jewish, Irish, or Italian parents…
James M. McPherson James M. McPherson, the George Henry Davis ’86 Professor of History Emeritus at Princeton University, is perhaps America’s foremost living Civil War scholar. Among his books are his one-volume history of the war, Battle Cry of Freedom, Lincoln and The Second American Revolution,…
Every now and then, and maybe even once a year if you’re lucky, you get a film that is so new—or at least that uses old themes and materials in so new a way—that it stays in your head for days. David Fincher’s Zodiac, about the frenzy that surrounded the Zodiac killer in the late 1960s and the…
Ryan Phillippe as a young FBI agent and Chris Cooper as the spy Robert Hanssen in Breach. The second generation of America’s post–World War II intelligence experts—the ones who inherited the mantle from the WASPs depicted in Robert De Niro’s The Good Shepherd(which opened in December)—were mostly…
Matt Damon and Robert De Niro, who also directed, in The Good Shepherd. (Universal Pictures) When it works, and it works for much of its two hours and 40 minutes, Robert De Niro’s The Good Shepherd feels like a film version of a John le Carré novel directed by Francis Ford Coppola. It’s about the…
Ken Watanabe, at right, plays General Kuribayashi in Letters From Iwo Jima. There is no film director of our time whom the majority of critics want to more passionately line up behind than Clint Eastwood. Future generations of film students may puzzle over why they’re supposed to venerate such…
Sharon Stone and William H. Macy, husband and wife in Bobby. It’s hard to imagine a stranger convergence of influences than have come together in Emilio Estevez’s Bobby. Who would have thought that so many actors (all of whom, apparently, worked in this film for less than their usual fees) were…