Reviews

The Life Of O-Haru

A single indiscretion with a besotted servant (a young Toshirô Mifune) starts an inexorable downward spiral for young noblewoman O-Haru. Disgraced, she and her parents are sent into exile, but it soon becomes clear that a woman with a tarnished reputation has very little chance of making good in 17th-century feudal Japan. With ravishing black-and-white cinematography and an austere formality in the direction, Kenji Mizoguchi's 1952 masterpiece is a beautifully crafted example of a past era in Japanese film-making.

To Sleep With Anger

A superb lyrical antidote to the countless guns-and-gangs depictions of life in the black communities of LA, Charles Burnett directs Danny Glover as Harry Mention, a man who stirs up past tensions when he comes to visit old family friends. With an excellent blues, gospel and jazz soundtrack to boot.

Rory Gallagher – At Rockpalast

Two full German performances from 1976 and 1977, with the master craftsman showing how it's done on acoustic, slide and electric guitars. Caught in his prime, we see him play early favourites—"Pistol Slapper Blues" "Banker's Blues" and "Messin' With The Kid"—alongside later fare usually found on his compilations. And the rock'n'roll jam with a woozy Frankie Miller is deliciously informal.

Deerhoof – Milk Man

Leftfield kindergarten singalongs, amazingly

Ella Guru – The First Album

Sumptuous debut from Liverpool octet

Sufjan Stevens – Michigan

Magnificent evocation of life beyond Detroit Rock City

Various Artists – All Night Long

Hip Bard meets Hard Bop on soundtrack

The Chi-Lites – The Complete Chi-Lites On Brunswick Vols 1 And 2

Definitive comp of Windy City vocal-group soulsters beloved of Tony Soprano

The Ladykillers

The Coens trash an Ealing masterpiece. Thanks, fellas

A Mighty Wind

Affectionate, often very funny Christopher Guest comedy that gently sends up the American folk scene that Dylan fiercely put paid to. It's no Spinal Tap and probably not as hilariously fresh as Best In Show, but Guest and his familiar repertory company—co-writer Eugene Levy, Michael McKean, Harry Shearer, Catherine O'Hara and Parker Posey among them—turn in typically irresistible performances.
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