Reviews

Josh Rouse – The Smooth Sounds Of Josh Rouse

It's New Year's Eve 2003, and Josh Rouse is wowing a hometown Nashville crowd with an Isley-tastic version of "Under Cold Blue Stars" that virtually melts into Stevie Wonder's "My Cherie Amour". An excellent concert DVD in its own right, this gets five stars for the added Many Moods Of... documentary in which we see the BBC's Janice Long being visibly moved to tears. Watch and weep with her.

Omara Portuondo – Flor De Amor

The divine diva of Cuban song offers up a mambo-flavoured masterpiece

Feist – Let It Die

Canadian singer-songwriter's enchanting long-player

Down And Dirty

Guitar-laden second album from New York punk-rocker turned alt.troubadour

The Charlatans (US) – San Francisco 1969

Reissue of trailblazing Haight-Ashbury band's official but very belated debut

Marvin Gaye

Party-friendly assembly of Marvin's funkiest sides, and a repackaged edition of definitive four-disc box

Since Otar Left

Heartfelt story of human resilience from Georgia

The Wild Geese

This 1978 throwback to the all-star men-on-a-mission genre of the late '60s delivers a cracking carbine-load of ripe boys' own adventure, mainly thanks to the quartet of scenery-munching hambones (Richard Burton, Roger Moore, Richard Harris, Hardy Krüger) cast as the eponymous squad of cigar-chomping Africa-bound mercenaries.

Gettysburg – Gods And Generals

Ted Turner's pet Civil War projects, both directed by Ronald F Maxwell. 1993's Gettysburg tells the tale of the bloodiest battle ever fought on American soil while its prequel, 2003's Gods And Generals, recounts three earlier battles (Manassas, Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville) through the eyes of Joshua Chamberlain (Jeff Daniels), Stonewall Jackson (Stephen Lang) and Robert E Lee (Robert Duvall). Solid, stirring stuff, if you can sit through the three hours-plus running times of both these films.

Year Of The Dragon

Considering the testosterone on display both in front of and behind the camera (Mickey Rourke stars, Michael Cimino directs, screenplay by Oliver Stone), this 1985 cop thriller, with Rourke's decorated Viet Vet turned NYPD cop taking on the Triads in Chinatown, is nowhere near as deranged as you'd hope. The two set pieces—a gun battle in a Chinese restaurant and the final shoot-out—barely compensate for a disappointingly muted feel.
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