Reviews

Brooks – Red Tape

Dark, ambitious second album from fast-rising Derby producer

David Cross – It’s Not Funny

Hilarious US left-field comedian

The Twilight Singers – She Loves You

Diverse, patchy covers album from Greg Dulli

Burning Sensation

Magnificently barmy indie-opera from NY's squabbling Friedbergers

Joss Stone – Mind, Body And Soul

Sophomore effort from Devon's teenage would-be-soul empress

Father And Son

Russian study of an intense family relationship

Basque Ball

The issue of Basque separatism simmers unresolved in Spain, where Julio Medem's documentary has aroused controversy for its alleged one-sidedness. The director's technique is unsubtle. He's rounded up countless talking heads, sat them in chairs in front of attractive Basque scenery, and got them to talk to camera about the complicated political, historical and social issues involved. The result is somewhat tedious and confusing.

Pépé Le Moko

A landmark in the development of the doomed anti-hero, Julien Duvivier's timeless 1936 proto-noir made an icon of Jean Gabin, playing Pépé, the legendary French gangster exiled to the baroque, shadow-strewn purgatory of the Algerian casbah. Falling for a female tourist, he decides the time's come to break for home, but the cops are waiting. Still surprising, tough and casual, it sashays the line between cynicism and romance like few others.

Billy Childish

Childish may well be a "genius" (just ask Jack White), but this DVD doesn't really do the Bard Of Chatham justice since it contains just two old gigs filmed on video. Admittedly, Thee Milkshakes twang up an impressive storm in 1984, but watching Thee Headcoats rock a crowd of about 10 in 1989 is much less gripping, even with cameos from Holly Golightly's Headcoatees. Shame.
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