Reviews

Carry On Larry

Catch up with the opening series of Seinfeld co-creator's darkly hilarious sitcom

Message In A Battle

Superior sword-slashing spectacular with powerful performances

Pete Bruntnell – Played Out

All-acoustic deconstruction of singer-songwriter's career highlights

Greasy Riders

Tasty offbeat debut from bedroom-dwelling electro-funk fanatics

Great Lake Swimmers

Exquisitely frosted debut from Toronto's Tony Dekker

Thick Pigeon

Undeservedly obscure synth duo reappraised

Bobby Charles – Last Train To Memphis

Louisiana legend hits the comeback trail

Occult Status

BFI re-release of cult classic plays London before rolling across the country

What’s Eating Gilbert Grape

The definitive American indie-lite film from '93, made by a pre-schmaltz Lasse Hallström and starring a young Leonardo DiCaprio, this has an affecting warmth and wit. Like an anti-David Lynch movie, it sells smalltown Americana, via Johnny Depp's harried protagonist, as a confused, idiosyncratic but always humane place. John C Reilly and Crispin Glover provide heavyweight back-up.

Blow-Up

To explode a myth: in 1966 Antonioni's first English film was pitched not on the Italian director's vision or its meditations on the interface between reality and fantasy, but on its 'unflinching' portrayal of Swinging London—ie, much nudity. The original trailer, included here, makes that perfectly clear: it was popular because of breasts, not because it asked what 'meaning' meant. And photographer David Hemmings' romps with models and Vanessa Redgrave remain icons of "yeeeah, baby" wish fulfilment for lensmen everywhere.
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