Reviews

The Stepford Wives

Broad comic remake of feminist chiller

Latin Lessons

The young Che Guevara's political awakening on a road trip through South America

Johnny Got His Gun

Left limbless, deaf, dumb and blind by a WWI landmine, US GI Timothy Bottoms is locked away in a hospital. Considered beyond medical help, he drifts in memories and fantasies, until, years later, he finally finds a way to communicate—to little avail. Based on his 1939 novel, this 1971 anti-war parable was the only film directed by blacklisted scriptwriter Dalton Trumbo. At times awkward, it's nonetheless driven by an acute, angry intelligence. Hard to forget.

The Barbarian Invasions

Denys Arcand reunites the Quebecois characters who made '86's The Decline Of The American Empire so witty and engaging, and despite their age, disillusion and failing health, they're as intellectually provocative as before. Yes, it's talky, but as one lies dying, his friends reminisce about days of drugs and libido, and his son finds a backbone. A moving, note-perfect Oscar-winner.

Various Artists – Dread Meets B-Boys Downtown

Don Letts soundtrack to early-'80s NYC

The Spencer Davis Group – Keep On Running

Career anthology that runs out of steam halfway through

Dark Angel

Sixth terrific solo album from hedonistic, nihilistic Seattle survivor

This Month In Soundtracks

In the mid-'80s Alex Cox, having made Repo Man and Sid & Nancy to some acclaim, was deemed a financially viable punk auteur. This changed after Straight To Hell, his surreal anti-comedy-cum-spaghetti-western, which had a peculiar genesis. Cox had booked a bunch of less than abstemious musicians for a Solidarity Tour of Nicaragua.

Richie Havens – Grace Of The Sun

Latest instalment in one man's crusade to keep the spirit of the '60s alive

Brave Captain – All Watched Over By Machines Of Loving Grace

Third album proper from ex-Boo Radley Martin Carr
Advertisement

Editor's Picks

Advertisement