Reviews

Pleasure

Debut from Norwegian popster with numerous guest appearances, including Justine Frischmann and Cerys Matthews

The Darkness – Permission To Land

Joyous, irony-free celebration of stadium rock from British newcomers

Lawrence Of Suburbia

Excellent compilation prefaces reissue of 10 classic, eccentric albums

Associates – The Radio 1 Sessions Vol 2: 1984-1985

Second chapter doesn't begin to match Alan Rankine-assisted Vol 1

Sex Is Comedy

Indulgent 'erotic' fare from self-obsessed auteur

Cathy Come Home

Nouvelle Vague-inspired camerawork plus a searing central turn from Carol White remain supremely effective in Ken Loach's 1965 teleplay about naïve bride Cathy (White) and her descent into poverty. The tone occasionally veers into public service hysteria, especially after the Capitalist State Apparatus removes Cathy from her tenement, fires her husband and steals her children. A landmark British film nonetheless.

Citizen Kane Special Edition

The medium-defining shibboleth that induces paroxysms of adulation from film critics (but not filmgoers), Citizen Kane has become, in its inviolable immensity, the cinematic equivalent of its own overbearing protagonist, Charles Foster Kane. Yes, the 25-year-old Orson Welles' direction is astounding. Yes, Welles and Herman Mankiewicz's screenplay is a pointed satire of paper baron William Randolph Hearst. Yes, Gregg Toland's deep-focus cinematography is sumptuous. Yes, Bernard Herrmann's score is eerily ominous.

True Confessions

Ulu Grosbard's sombre noir revolves around the infamous Black Dahlia murder that gripped 1940s Los Angeles. With Roberts De Niro and Duvall excellent as brothers caught up in the case—respectively, a repressed but ambitious priest, and a hardbitten homicide cop who suspects his sibling knows more than he should—it aims for a dark, sweeping resonance pitched somewhere between Chinatown and L.A. Confidential.

Glee Is Good

Cardiff indie fusioneers' sixth album has all the usual humour and beauty

Chumbawamba – English Rebel Songs 1381-1984

Confident reworking of historical protest songs by anarcho-punksters
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