Reviews

Suzhou River

Lou Ye's beguiling movie tells the hazy, cut-up tale of a motorcycle courier once hired to follow a woman he then fell for, who subsequently threw herself into the river but seems to have been reborn as a nightclub performer dressed as a mermaid. With its drifting, subjective camera capturing jump-cut collages of street life in the neon-splashed city, it's a fascinatingly intimate portrait of the Shanghai river front, wrapped around a mystery.

Intolerable Cruelty

Since the career peaks of Fargo and The Big Lebowski, the Coen brothers' previously astonishing career momentum has noticeably faltered. O Brother, Where Art Thou? had some good things going for it, but is probably best remembered for its soundtrack.

Lynyrd Skynyrd – Lyve: The Vicious Cycle Tour

Filmed last year in Nashville, this finds Skynyrd—now under the leadership of JohnnyVan Zant—still plying their raucous brand of southern blues-rock, wheeling out the hits (notably "Sweet Home Alabama", "Travelin' Man" and "Free Bird") to an enthusiastic crowd. This is noticeably well-filmed with superior sound quality.

Go Wild In The Country

The best of Oldham's early work, revisited Nashville-style

The Vines – Winning Days

Second album from Aussie brats

Holy Sons – I Want To Live A Peaceful Life

Brazenly morbid deathbed blues

Morning Glory

Post-rock supergroup of sorts create delicate avant-pop masterpiece

Keeper Of The Flame

Bumper '70s reissues from country's First Lady, 10 bonus tracks in tow

Fantastic Voyage

The rapturous romantics' classic third album makes waves again

Starsky & Hutch

Return of the '70s TV supercops
Advertisement

Editor's Picks

Advertisement