Reviews

TV Roundup

You can't move these days for quality American TV dramas—Six Feet Under, The Badge, Boomtown, 24, the increasingly amazing Alias—so it says a lot for the enduring genius of David Chase's Mob epic that it remains the most compelling of the current generation of TV imports. Series Four was as frightening and funny as anything that preceded it, and was especially notable for its treatment of the darkening relationship between James Gandolfini and Edie Falco. The episode where Tony snuffs Ralphy is unbelievable.

Soylent Green

Pre-Star Wars, '70s Hollywood loved its post-apocalyptic sci-fi dystopias—think The Omega Man, Rollerball and Logan's Run. With a brilliant cast—Charlton Heston, Edward G Robinson in his final role—and a superbly ghoulish twist, few come bleaker or better than this.

Julie Delpy

Hollywood's favourite French actress takes unconvincing stab at musical stardom

Various Artists – Stop Me If You Think You’ve Heard

Rough Trade bands celebrate the label's 25th birthday by covering songs from the catalogue

Yello – The Eye

Initially dazzling, largely frustrating 11th from moustachioed Swiss electro duo

The Duke Spirit – Roll, Spirit, Roll

White city blues on the rocks

Large Number – Spray On Sound

Engagingly oddball debut from erstwhile member of Add N To (X)

Nirvana

Mining the same classical chamberpop as contemporaries Procul Harum, Alex Spyropoulos' and Patrick Campbell-Lyons' charges cut... Simon Simopath Rating Star in 1967, a science-fiction pantomime a-flutter with silken strings and baroque delicacy. Part Greek myth, part L Ron Hubbard. Even better was follow-up All Of Us, though—with the exception of "Rainbow Chaser"—it failed to ignite a public weaned on less fragile acid fare.

Nói Albinói

Contrived whimsy from first-time Danish director

X-Men 2 Special Edition

Full of incident and introducing a slate of new characters, including Alan Cummings' edge-of-camp Nightcrawler, this workmanlike sequel plays less thrillingly second time round on a small screen. In addition to the expected commentaries, the second disc has more info about the film's making, the comic's history and what Ian McKellen had for tea on Day 28 of shooting than even a diehard fan could possibly want.
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