Reviews

13 Going On 30

Alias actress in coy but charming comedy

Angel On The Right

Engaging tale of corruption from Tajikistan

Twilight Samurai

Veteran Japanese director Yoji Yamada's 77th film recasts the Samurai epic with a fin-de-siècle cynicism reminiscent of the revisionist westerns of the '60s and '70s. In the dying days of 19th-century Japan's Edo period, a reluctant Samurai (Hiroyuki Sanada) fulfils his duties while dreaming of settling down. A beautiful, moving deconstruction of national folk myths.

The Ten Commandments: Special Edition

It's very long and extremely po-faced, and most of the performances are pretty wooden, Yul Brynner's imperious pharaoh aside. Even so, Cecil B DeMille's 1956 account of the life of Moses (Charlton Heston) still has some impressive sequences-notably the Exodus from Egypt, with 60,000 extras—and remains the definitive Biblical epic.

Carly Simon

Melodiously laid-back adult pop

Blondie – Singles Box Set

Pop art taken to logical extreme

Slapp Happy – Henry Cow

Reissue of unlikely 1974 alliance between would-be art-pop stars and Marxist Canterbury art-rockers

The Residents

Originally recorded in 1971, The Residents' debut The Warner Bros Album was rejected and has remained unreleased until now. Its first outing is as a remix LP, and it's fabulous. Prime early-era Residents, it's an idiosyncratic assault on contemporary music (The Beatles, Dylan) and society using chaotic avant jazz/rock/classical weaponry. To hear this already deconstructed music fed through the mincer of contemporary electronica only makes it even more confusing, disorienting, beguiling and downright delightful.

Rachel Goswell – Waves Are Universal

Debut solo album from Mojave 3 and ex-Slowdive singer/guitarist

The Black Keys – Rubber Factory

Fiery follow-up to 2003's acclaimed Thickfreakness
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