Reviews

Mother Night

Based on the Kurt Vonnegut novel and featuring an amazing central performance from Nick Nolte as an American spy living in pre-WWII Berlin, broadcasting military secrets in code under the guise of anti-Semitic, Nazi propaganda. Once the war is over, though, he's arrested for war crimes and put on trial. Will the truth out? A mixture of the disturbing and the bizarre, it's both haunting and thought-provoking. John Goodman co-stars.

Spirits Of Punk

Veteran NYC noiseniks' impressive video portfolio

Judy Collins – Judy Collins 3

Two early'60s staples from original maiden of folk

Earth Opera

Two albums by Boston-based duo who subsequently fell in with the Haight-Ashbury crowd

Reggie Watts – Simplified

Lazy summer grooves signal impressive debut

Wiggy alt.rapper books seat to Mars

Justin Rutledge And The Junction Forty – No Neveralone

Like Damien Jurado or David Ackles, Toronto's Rutledge is a master of gothic understatement. This wintry debut—shrouded in slow-tempo melancholy—is slyly addictive. Against spare backdrops of folk-country guitars, mandolin, piano and the odd banjo, Rutledge sounds weathered beyond his twentysomething years. An array of talent is on hand, not least of which is the reclusive Mary Margaret O'Hara (woefully underused on just one track, "A Letter To Heather"). Otherwise, Rutledge judges the balance perfectly.

Cathy Davey – Something Ilk

Irish-born singer's impressive solo debut

Love Me If You Dare

Charmless Gallic prank-fest falls flat on its ass

Pickup On South Street

Sam Fuller's explosive pulp classic, a red-menace thriller, pitched near hysteria from start to finish. Richard Widmark's lone-wolf pickpocket winds up caught between the Feds and the Reds when he unwittingly lifts stolen microfilm from Jean Peters, a hooker being used as a courier by a Soviet spy ring. Thelma Ritter's loveable stool-pigeon suffers one of the great movie deaths. Definitive Fuller, definitive noir.
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