Reviews

Second helping of web-slinging superhero mayhem beats all comers

Wham, Bam, Thank You ‘Nam

When it was released in his native Hong Kong in August 1990, John Woo's brutal Vietnam-era epic Bullet In The Head was a box office disaster. Speaking to Uncut in April 2003, Woo remembered: "When we did the premiere, people just walked out...I felt totally exiled." Coming just over a year after the brutal massacre of students in Tiananmen Square, it's perhaps no surprise that the movie—called Die xue jie tou in Woo's native Cantonese, aka Bloodshed In The Streets—was too complicated, too downbeat, too pessimistic. And it is.

Elephant

Gus Van Sant's Palme d'Or-winning take on the Columbine massacre makes for understandably difficult viewing. Van Sant deliberately shoots the movie flat and spare, looping the story, Rashômon-style, through numerous viewpoints. The Groundhog Day tedium of school life and the blank-eyed stares of the killers are chilling.

Piccadilly

Shot in 1929 by German émigré EA Dupont, this sinuous, shimmering melodrama centres on a London nightclub where the sensuous table-top shimmy of scullery girl Sho-Sho (Anna May Wong) catches her boss' eye. Under his patronage, she's toast of the town, but stirs murderous passions. Flitting between glittering Jazz Age highlife and foul Limehouse backstreets, it exudes an atmosphere of almost illicit potency.

Alex Chilton

Big Star man's missing 70s years

Johnny Thunders & Wayne Kramer – Gangwar!

Dolls man hooks up with MC5 guitarist in predictably volatile combination

Clinic – Winchester Cathedral

Demented third from Grammy-nominated Liverpudlian misfits

The Album Leaf – In A Safe Place

Listless ambi-minstrel recruits post-rock royalty

Angie Stone – Stone Love

Third nu-soul album by sometime writing partner of D'Angelo

Blue States – The Soundings

Blustery rock by former chill-out heroes
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