Reviews

The Singing Detective

The memory of Dennis Potter is not well-served by this inferior feature version of the fine '80s BBC TV series that confirmed Potter as one of Britain's most original and daring screenwriting talents. Here, Robert Downey Jr takes the Michael Gambon role of Dan Dark, the chronically ill pulp fiction writer who, delirious in hospital, finds reality merging with the fantasy world of his novels.

The Long Ryders – The Best Of The Long Ryders

Seminal '80s country-punks repackaged

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

Fear And Trembling

Lost In Translation lite

In Godard We Trust

"I'm not sure if it's a comedy or a tragedy," shrugs actor Jean-Claude Brialy in Une Femme Est Une Femme, "but it's a masterpiece." Not wrong there. This hyperactive 1961 ground-breaker, even more than the mesmerising Alphaville, is everything that's wonderful about early Godard. Later, he became obsessed with semiotics, deconstructing to the point where only the fanatical could go with him. But here, in the post-Breathless era, high on success and confidence, he's brushing excess flecks of genius off his coat.

Decasia

Part of the BFI's intriguing "A History Of The Avant-Garde" series, this is 66 minutes of decaying, nitrate-film archive footage, an artful collage in which figures deteriorate as we watch. Obviously, it's heavily symbolic: nuns, children, boxers go about their endeavours unaware (or are they?) of the oblivion that looms. The dissonant score's a drag, but this is nothing if not haunting.
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