Steve Evans (writer)

Stephen Burgess Evans (born April 1, 1963 in Charlottesville, Virginia) is an award-winning American journalist, author, communications professional and film historian. A Poynter Institute for Media Studies Fellow, Evans has received first place awards for feature writing from the Virginia Press Association and Tennessee Press Association. He has also received numerous awards from the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) for excellence in academic writing and publishing in higher education. His writing and photography have appeared in more than 50 print publications, including The Wall Street Journal, The LA Times, The Richmond Times-Dispatch and The Washington Post, as well as scores of online publications. Evans' film commentary appears on DVDVerdict.com,[1] RottenTomatoes.com,[2] CinemaUprising.blogspot.com,[3] IMDb.com,[4] and has been featured on The Criterion Collection homepage, among many other online sites devoted to film appreciation and cinema history.

He is a graduate of the University of Virginia master's degree program for studies in classical rhetoric and communication theory. During his time at UVA he received the departmental award for outstanding teaching in his work with undergraduates. Evans received a bachelor's degree with honors in journalism and political science from Virginia Commonwealth University.

Since 1990, Evans has published more than 6,500 detailed reviews of motion pictures produced in virtually every country with a film industry. An international readership follows his website celebrating classic, obscure and contemporary cinema, as well as film history. Evans' writing and research on world cinema focus on a richer appreciation of life as viewed through the prism of different cultures that use film as a medium for artistic expression.

Google has indexed every post on his film blog, and Evans' work is widely referenced in other major search engines including Yahoo and Bing.

His new screenplay, "Monet for Nothing," centers on an international art heist by an American expatriate couple on the lam in Paris — running from Interpol, the mafia and a cabal of obnoxious, oddball in-laws.

Awards

References

  1. DVD Verdict
  2. Rotten Tomatoes
  3. Cinema Uprising
  4. IMDb

External links


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