Reviews

Liquid Assets

Second album since the 2000 reunion, and first on Mike Scott's own label

Wire – Send

First new album in 12 years from post-punk legends

Tricks Of The Trad

Glorious fifth album proper from ever-shifting Bostonians reaches down through the years

The Osmonds – Osmond-Mania!

Twenty-eight-track compilation of Utah saints' greatest hits, with sleevenotes by Alan Osmond

Various Artists – Waves II

Filtered French house par excellence

Dark Water

Classic ghost story from Ring writer and director

Fulltime Killer

Stylish slice of sub-John Woo heroic bloodshed

The Swordsman

Ling (Samuel Hui) and his tomboy sister are charged with keeping a sacred scroll from the clutches of their self-serving Sifu and the scarier-than-they-sound Royal Eunuchs. With multiple directors and more characters than it can handle, the cracks show, but the swordplay and comedic touch proved popular enough to spawn two sequels.

The Funeral The Addiction

Abel Ferrara made these almost simultaneously in '95, and they're especially intense even for him. The more successfully operatic first (Chris Walken, Chris Penn, Vincent Gallo) follows a family of '30s gangsters on a revenge mission; the second's a gory monochrome vampire flick starring Lili Taylor (and Walken again). Nietzschean, neurotic.

See No Evil, Hear No Evil

Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder sleepwalk their way through Arthur Hiller's one-joke 1989 comedy as the accidental owners of a missing microchip who are pursued by an assortment of shady villains. Pryor's blind and Wilder's deaf, but Hiller's pedestrian direction settles for routine caper thriller moves rather than fully exploring the comic potential of this offbeat premise.
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