Reviews

Limescale

Debut by improvisational guitar god Derek Bailey's new five-piece band

Various Artists – Digital Disco 2

Machine dance from (mostly) European eggheads

Various Artists – Sex:Too Fast To Live, Too Young To Die

The seedbed of punk

The Troggs – From Nowhere

Expanded '66 debut by Andover's finest

Waiting For Happiness

Playing patience under African skies

Once Upon A Time In The Midlands

With untenable Leone motifs and broad comedy caricatures, this final part of Shane Meadows' "Midlands Trilogy" (after Twenty-Four Seven and A Room For Romeo Brass) is a disappointment. Robert Carlyle is solid as the Glaswegian rogue determined to win back ex-partner Shirley Henderson. Yet, despite a re-shot 'dramatic' ending, it feels slight.

Igby Goes Down

Burr Steers' debut as writer-director is perhaps a little too self-consciously off-kilter, but the film's humour is satisfyingly sour and the performances of a large ensemble cast are impeccable. Pitched somewhere between the macabre and the merely eccentric, Igby stars a convincingly debauched Kieran Culkin as the film's eponymous rebellious teen.

The Desperate Hours

William Wyler's 1955 suspense classic, later remade by Michael Cimino, finds Humphrey Bogart frowning and sweating as only he can (in a role first played on stage by Paul Newman). Three on-the-run cons hold a family hostage in their home, but after plenty of mind games, the suburbanites outfox them. Humph had done it better in Key Largo, but it still crackles gamely.

This Month In Americana

Slow-burning second album from Toby Burke's equine three-piece

The Belle By The Horn

Hitman who provided lavish productions for Frankie and Tatu oversees cult Scots' fifth album proper
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