Reviews

Robert Palmer – Drive

England's blue-eyed soul boy goes back to his roots

Richard Youngs – Airs Of The Ear

Delicate, multi-layered esoterica from UK improv innovator

Mono – One More Step And You Die

Second album from Japanese Mogwai

Meat Loaf – Bat Out Of Hell: 25th Anniversary Edition

Marvin'n'Jim's classic of subtlety and restraint, digitally remastered with extra tracks and a bonus hits DVD

The Prisoners – A Taste Of Pink!

Before the epidemic, primitive '80s garage dementia from UK's suburbs

Aphrohead – Thee Underground Made Me Do It

Round-up of Felix Da Housecat's prodigious '90s electro-disco productions

Trembling Before G_d

Documentary about the lives of gay and lesbian orthodox and Hasidic Jews

Guilty By Suspicion

Veteran producer Irwin Winkler's 1990 directorial debut, recreating the paranoid climate that enveloped early-'50s Hollywood during the anti-communist witch-hunts. Robert De Niro is the fictitious RKO director watching lives, morals and ethics come apart under the strain. A clear-eyed and heartfelt history lesson, with a Martin Scorsese cameo that's a barely disguised portrait of blacklist exile Joseph Losey.

Un Homme Et Une Femme

Claude Lelouch arguably never surpassed this 1966 Oscar-winning romance, which sweetened French new wave experimentation for the global mainstream. For all the heart-tugging lyricism, it's still immensely affecting. Bright Anouk Aimée and brave Jean-Louis Trintignant, both widowed, fall in love as that durable theme tune twinkles away.

The Last House On The Left

Thirty-one years after its initial US release, Wes Craven's debut retains its power to shock, detailing the worst night in the (short) lives of two teenage girls and the bizarre comeuppance of their tormentors. Dated (and overrated) but worth a look.
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