Masterpiece

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Nothing was revealed
A new book about Bob Dylan's masterpiece, "Blood on the Tracks," fusses over the details while missing the story.
"12 Monkeys"
Combining time-travel thriller and experimental film, Terry Gilliam's 1995 oddball classic steals a tale of doomed love and cruel fate from Hitchcock -- then pays back the debt.
Air Jordans
What changed leisure footwear forever and created the wonderful, hideous behemoth of contemporary consumer culture? It's gotta be da shoes.
The James Bond title sequences
Maurice Binder's gorgeous, abstract, erotic openings to the classic 007 films captured the '60s pop revolution in its purest form.
"You Really Got Me"
Desperate for a hit in 1964, an obscure band named the Kinks slashed up a cheap guitar amp with a razor blade. The rest was history.
Jacques Cousteau's "The Silent World"
In this artistic and technological breakthrough -- today almost impossible to find -- the sinewy French explorer took us all into unknown depths.
"Songs for Swingin' Lovers"
Beyond the magnificent late-night gloom (and the bombast of "My Way") you'll find Frank Sinatra's finger-poppin' classic, a joyous exploration of rhythmic invention.
"Joy of Cooking"
Irma Rombauer might have been a terrible cook, but her elegant instruction manual belongs in every kitchen.
"More Songs About Buildings and Food"
It's 1978, and a band of Manhattan art-school geeks called Talking Heads teams with Brian Eno to produce the funkiest nervous-breakdown record ever made.
Pac-Man
With its canary-yellow Everyblob hero, its masterfully simple design and its abstract realm where even death was a cheerful event, Pac-Man brought video gaming out of the bars and into the malls.
Kieslowski's "Three Colors"
Just when it seemed that European cinema had become fossilized, the great Polish director created the slickest -- and loveliest -- concept album in art-film history.
"Fight the Power"
Public Enemy's explosive 1989 hit single brought hip-hop to the mainstream -- and brought revolutionary anger back to pop.
"Star Wars"
Who cares about "Attack of the Clones"? After reinventing popcorn cinema with his giddy space western, George Lucas can do whatever he wants.
"Dark Shadows"
Years before Buffy, Angel and Anne Rice, this ultra-cheapo Gothic soap opera entranced a generation with soulful vampires, werewolves and lost love.
Manet's "Olympia"
With a single shocking canvas depicting a prostitute in repose, Édouard Manet ushered in the brave nude world of modern art.
"Will the Circle Be Unbroken"
Thirty years before "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" the scruffy hippies of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band persuaded skeptical country legends to join them in the studio -- and created bluegrass' greatest moment.
The Holiday Inn sign
Exploding with color, optimism and razzle-dazzle, the now-extinct Holiday Inn "Great Sign" was a true design landmark of the American century.
Brady's portrait of Grant
On a June afternoon in 1864, Mathew Brady invented candid portrait photography -- and changed our vision of American masculinity.
"Smells Like Teen Spirit"
Was Nirvana's angry, culture-shifting 1991 anthem really a revolution? Maybe not. But it changed my life.
"The Outer Limits"
"We control the vertical. We control the horizontal." The creepiest series in TV history combined existential inquiry with a memorable monster menagerie.
Barry Bonds' 2001 season
Many baseball fans will never adore the San Francisco Giants' moody superstar. But en route to perhaps the greatest individual season in the sport's history, Bonds emerged as the wounded hero of a wounded nation.
Philip Roth: The Zuckerman books
Over 21 years, eight novels and 2,200 pages, the titan of American writing has published the most ambitious literary series of our time.
"Jesus Christ Superstar"
Andrew Lloyd Webber's much-mocked rock opera is actually a classic work of '70s spiritual exploration -- and besides, Our Lord is hot.
"Sign O' the Times"
Part '80s musical retrospective, part angry social document and all booty-thumping housequake, Prince's 1987 classic stands as pop's last great double album.
Masterpiece: "2001: A Space Odyssey"
With music and mind-blowing visuals, Stanley Kubrick created a wildly popular avant-garde film that asked all of the biggest questions -- without venturing any easy answers.
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