Reviews

Phil Ochs – Cross My Heart:An Introduction To Phil Ochs

Patchy selection from the man Quentin Tarantino called "a musical journalist, a chronicler of his time"

Cosmic Rough Ride

Unsatisfactory smattering by genius Memphis quartet/trio, the acme of twisted'70s power pop

Current Restored

Clint's back at his directorial best with a lean, mean adaptation of Dennis Lehane's gripping crime novel

The Man Without A Past

Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki's maverick reputation is built on a series of inspired, lugubrious comic gems, but this latest film—about a coma victim who wakes up with no memory of his past life—suggests he's in need of a new direction. The film looks terrific, but the gags are mannered and the story twee. Not so much deadpan as dead dull, it's a film about an amnesiac that's appropriately forgettable.

Warm Water Under A Red Bridge

From Shohei Imamura—one of several 'legendary Japanese masters' none of us have ever heard of—comes a genuinely surreal fable of a man searching for hidden treasure who finds a complex erotic gush-out with a lonely young woman who's turned on by water. It's often beautiful to look at, though the orgasmic writhing sections are unintentionally hilarious.

To Joy

Ingmar Bergman's early films are often passed over. To Joy (1950) has hardly been seen in the UK, but it's highly personal, autobiographical even, totally involving, moving, and its theme of marital disharmony runs through much of his mature work. Marta and Stig meet, marry, he cheats, they reunite. Victor Sjöström and the Beethoven are unforgettable.

Joe Henry – Tiny Voices

Ninth album from much-admired and well-connected former country-rocker

Snaking All Over

Ageless rock'n'roll motherlode reconvenes Stooges, toys with Green Day and hooks up with art-rapper Peaches

Wedded Bliss

Sixth album from Mr and Mrs Sparks of New Mexico

Party Monster – Island

Celebrating the '80s electro-dance era, at least as it was perceived in New York clubs, this mixes period pounders with updated readings from contemporary exponents. Electroclash may not have taken off on cue, but there's a trickle-down situation now. You'll both laugh at and bounce about to Miss Kittin & The Hacker's irreverent "Frank Sinatra", Ladytron's comic "Seventeen" and Felix Da Housecat's "Money, Success, Fame, Glamour".
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