Reviews

Jesus Of Montreal

Written and directed by the perennially underrated French-Canadian Denys Arcand, this engrossing 1989 fable sees Lothaire Bluteau as an actor playing Jesus who's caught up in conflict with the church. His problems begin to echo those of the Biblical Christ. Oscar-nominated, the dry, ironic style gives it a wry resonance more effective than any breast-beating.

Good-Time Charlie

Being John Malkovich team twist the rules of narrative to ingenious comic effect

Laura Cantrell – Not The Tremblin’ Kind

The reissue of Cantrell's 2000 debut is timely following the critical success of last year's When The Roses Bloom Again, and a major US tour with Elvis Costello. John Peel deemed this his "favourite record of the last 10 years and possibly my life", while Costello describes her sound as "if Kitty Wells made Rubber Soul". Nashville-bred, NYC-based Cantrell is steeped in country and bluegrass, but brings a strident grace all her own. Set atop guitars both acoustic and twangy—and soft squeals of steel—her voice is cut-glass pure.

George Usher – Fire Garden

Ny Stalwart Champions Power Pop

That Old Black Magic

Farrell & co are back with a vengeance

Basil Kirchin – Quantum

Long-lost experiment with, yes, our perceptions of sound

Pete Yorn – Day I Forgot

LA scenemaker makes decent foray towards rock stardom

Uncle Tupelo

First three albums from alt.country pioneers remastered with bonus tracks

Lonnie Youngblood Feat.Jimi Hendrix – Two Great Experiences

Very early Hendrix tapes dusted down by his sax mate

Arnie Dreamer

DIRECTED BY Jonathan Mostow STARRING Arnold Schwarzenegger, Nick Stahl, Claire Danes, Kristanna Loken Opened August 1, Cert 12A, 109 mins So far, 2003 has been heaving with lacklustre sci-fi epics. Enter the joker in the mega-budget pack: Terminator 3, the sequel no one wanted to see, starring an ageing icon 10 years past his best and directed by someone nobody's heard of.
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