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CHARLATAN ON THE ROAD

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Tim Burgess and music supremo Alan McGee tonight set off on a DJing double-act around the UK. McGee has nicknamed the tour the “Diet Coke Tour” as none of them will be drinking. He says on his Myspace page ruefully: “Looks like it will be 21 shows in 23 days. Neither of us could do that these days if we got wrecked, but sober we will walk it!’ Expect something of the flavour of McGee's Death Disco club nights - where anything from Joy Division and The Jam to Sugababes and the Shangri-La's will get spun on the wheels of steel - on the Diet Coke Tour. Here are the club dates in full: Silhouette Nightclub, Hull (October 5) Fandangos, Ellon, Aberdeenshire (6) Stavka, Glasgow (7) Iron Works, Inverness (8) Independent, Sunderland (9) Stone Love @ Digital, Newcastle (12) Tokyo Project, Oldham (13) The Plug, Sheffield (14) Zanibar, Liverpool (15) Telford, tbc (16) Tokyo, Huddersfield (17) Blowpop, Bristol (18) Sugarbeat @ The Elbow Rooms, Leeds (19) 53 Degrees, Preston (20) Transmission @ 333, London (21) Mono Bar, Southampton (22) 23-26, tbc (23-26) Proud Galleries,London (27) Traffo Club, Budapest (28)

Tim Burgess and music supremo Alan McGee tonight set off on a DJing double-act around the UK.

McGee has nicknamed the tour the “Diet Coke Tour” as none of them will be drinking.

He says on his Myspace page ruefully: “Looks like it will be 21 shows in 23 days. Neither of us could do that these days if we got wrecked, but sober we will walk it!’

Expect something of the flavour of McGee’s Death Disco club nights – where anything from Joy Division and The Jam to Sugababes and the Shangri-La’s will get spun on the wheels of steel – on the Diet Coke Tour.

Here are the club dates in full:

Silhouette Nightclub, Hull (October 5)

Fandangos, Ellon, Aberdeenshire (6)

Stavka, Glasgow (7)

Iron Works, Inverness (8)

Independent, Sunderland (9)

Stone Love @ Digital, Newcastle (12)

Tokyo Project, Oldham (13)

The Plug, Sheffield (14)

Zanibar, Liverpool (15)

Telford, tbc (16)

Tokyo, Huddersfield (17)

Blowpop, Bristol (18)

Sugarbeat @ The Elbow Rooms, Leeds (19)

53 Degrees, Preston (20)

Transmission @ 333, London (21)

Mono Bar, Southampton (22)

23-26, tbc (23-26)

Proud Galleries,London (27)

Traffo Club, Budapest (28)

MARTIN SCORSESE DIRECTS THE ROLLING STONES

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Martin Scorsese has announced that he will be filming The Rolliing Stones while they are on the road. The legendary director has been rumoured to be working on a documentary about the Stones for some time. The Rolling Stones are currently on the road in the U.S., touring their latest release A Bigger Bang. Scorsese will film the Stones' upcoming New York City gigs at The Beacon Theatre between October 29 and 31. It is not clear if the documentary will encompass the entire history of The Rolling Stones or just their current tour. Scorsese directed 2005’s acclaimed Bob Dylan documentary 'No Direction Home'. The Rolling Stones have only ever made one career retrospective film, 1989's '25X5'.

Martin Scorsese has announced that he will be filming The Rolliing Stones while they are on the road.

The legendary director has been rumoured to be working on a documentary about the Stones for some time.

The Rolling Stones are currently on the road in the U.S., touring their latest release A Bigger Bang. Scorsese will film the Stones’ upcoming New York City gigs at The Beacon Theatre between October 29 and 31.

It is not clear if the documentary will encompass the entire history of The Rolling Stones or just their current tour.

Scorsese directed 2005’s acclaimed Bob Dylan documentary ‘No Direction Home’.

The Rolling Stones have only ever made one career retrospective film, 1989’s ’25X5′.

RARE RECORD SHOP TO CLOSE

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Reddington’s, a collectors’ record shop, is closing down after 40 years' trading, citing as causes spiraling overheads and the increasing dominance of the internet. Owner Dan Reddington says the choice of records available on sites such as Ebay make running a shop impossible. He told the Birmingham Post, “If you search The Beatles or Elvis you are going to get more than 10,000 [results] and we just cannot compete with that.” The much-loved Birmingham record shop is a collectors’ paradise with a back catalogue of more than 100,000 records. The shop has helped many a local rocker find the vinyl they’ve long been searching for. Local musicians and supporters of the shop just happen to be Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant, Black Sabbath’s Geoff Nicholl’s and E.L.O.’s Bev Bevan. Plant, on hearing of the store’s closure, popped in to pass on his best wishes to owner Dan Reddington - he's been shopping there for rare blues, rockabilly and rock'n'roll records for years. This is the second recent incident involving Plant helping out in his local community, following the story, reported last week on www.uncut.co.uk, that he is to help his neighbour raise cash for an operation. A musical show, an homage based on the Reddington’s shop, will take place at the Alexandra Theatre, Birmingham in November 2007. Bev Bevan has been confirmed to play. Live appearances by other musicians that have shopped there are also likely. Reddington Records are still trading via their website(s). As Dan says, “If you cant beat them, join them.” sales@reddingtonsrarerecords.co.uk

Reddington’s, a collectors’ record shop, is closing down after 40 years’ trading, citing as causes spiraling overheads and the increasing dominance of the internet.

Owner Dan Reddington says the choice of records available on sites such as Ebay make running a shop impossible.

He told the Birmingham Post, “If you search The Beatles or Elvis you are going to get more than 10,000 [results] and we just cannot compete with that.”

The much-loved Birmingham record shop is a collectors’ paradise with a back catalogue of more than 100,000 records. The shop has helped many a local rocker find the vinyl they’ve long been searching for.

Local musicians and supporters of the shop just happen to be Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant, Black Sabbath’s Geoff Nicholl’s and E.L.O.’s Bev Bevan.

Plant, on hearing of the store’s closure, popped in to pass on his best wishes to owner Dan Reddington – he’s been shopping there for rare blues, rockabilly and rock’n’roll records for years.

This is the second recent incident involving Plant helping out in his local community, following the story, reported last week on www.uncut.co.uk, that he is to help his neighbour raise cash for an operation.

A musical show, an homage based on the Reddington’s shop, will take place at the Alexandra Theatre, Birmingham in November 2007.

Bev Bevan has been confirmed to play. Live appearances by other musicians that have shopped there are also likely.

Reddington Records are still trading via their website(s).

As Dan says, “If you cant beat them, join them.”

sales@reddingtonsrarerecords.co.uk

GET READY FOR HOLD STEADY

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The Hold Steady are currently the most hotly tipped band in the U.S, gaining rave reviews in everything from Rolling Stone to Newsweek. The five-piece band comprise: Craig Finn (vocals), Tad Kubler (guitar), Franz Nicolay (keys), Galen Polivka (bass) and Bobby Drake (drums) They make quality rock’n’roll, a bit like Thin Lizzy playing Jonathan Richman songs or AC/DC riffing through Springsteen’s ‘Born To Run’. So you can see why we like them. The Hold Steady finally release their UK debut single, ‘Chips Ahoy!’, which tells the tale of a guy, a girl and a horse in a way only Craig Finn can. "I've got a girl, she don't have to work/ She can tell which horse is gonna finish first/Some nights the painkillers make the pain even worse… She put $900 on the 5th horse in the 6th race/I think its name was Chips Ahoy!/Came in 6 lengths ahead/We spent the whole next week getting high." ‘Chips Ahoy’ is out on very limited 7" vinyl on November 13. The Hold Steady’s album ‘Boys And Girls In America’, produced by John Agnello (Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr), is released by Vagrant in January. http://www.theholdsteady.com/

The Hold Steady are currently the most hotly tipped band in the U.S, gaining rave reviews in everything from Rolling Stone to Newsweek.

The five-piece band comprise: Craig Finn (vocals), Tad Kubler (guitar), Franz Nicolay (keys), Galen Polivka (bass) and Bobby Drake (drums)

They make quality rock’n’roll, a bit like Thin Lizzy playing Jonathan Richman songs or AC/DC riffing through Springsteen’s ‘Born To Run’. So you can see why we like them.

The Hold Steady finally release their UK debut single, ‘Chips Ahoy!’, which tells the tale of a guy, a girl and a horse in a way only Craig Finn can.

“I’ve got a girl, she don’t have to work/ She can tell which horse is gonna finish first/Some nights the painkillers make the pain even worse… She put $900 on the 5th horse in the 6th race/I think its name was Chips Ahoy!/Came in 6 lengths ahead/We spent the whole next week getting high.”

‘Chips Ahoy’ is out on very limited 7″ vinyl on November 13.

The Hold Steady’s album ‘Boys And Girls In America’, produced by John Agnello (Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr), is released by Vagrant in January.

http://www.theholdsteady.com/

Doors reissues available through a door

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The Doors’ 40th anniversary is next month, and Rhino/Elektra Records will be saluting one of the greatest rock bands of all time with ‘Perception’. A lavish 12-disc set, it's appropriately packaged as a door, one that can be opened and closed. The 6-CD/6-DVD box-set presents all of The Doors’ classic studio albums with legendary vocalist Jim Morrison, each supplemented with rare and unreleased audio and video tracks. Surviving band members John Densmore (drums), Robby Krieger (guitar), and Ray Manzarek (keyboards) helped produce the collection alongside The Doors’ long-time engineer Bruce Botnick. 1967’s ‘The Doors’ and ‘Strange Days’, 1968’s ‘Waiting For The Sun’, 1969’s ‘The Soft Parade’,1970’s ‘Morrison Hotel’ and 1971’s L.A. Woman’ all get remastered. Each album is also accompanied by a DVD, including a 5.1 DTS Surround Sound mix of the album, as well as photo galleries and videos. ‘Perception’ will be available from November 28.

The Doors’ 40th anniversary is next month, and Rhino/Elektra Records will be saluting one of the greatest rock bands of all time with ‘Perception’.

A lavish 12-disc set, it’s appropriately packaged as a door, one that can be opened and closed.

The 6-CD/6-DVD box-set presents all of The Doors’ classic studio albums with legendary vocalist Jim Morrison, each supplemented with rare and unreleased audio and video tracks.

Surviving band members John Densmore (drums), Robby Krieger (guitar), and Ray Manzarek (keyboards) helped produce the collection alongside The Doors’ long-time engineer Bruce Botnick.

1967’s ‘The Doors’ and ‘Strange Days’, 1968’s ‘Waiting For The Sun’, 1969’s ‘The Soft Parade’,1970’s ‘Morrison Hotel’ and 1971’s L.A. Woman’ all get remastered.

Each album is also accompanied by a DVD, including a 5.1 DTS Surround Sound mix of the album, as well as photo galleries and videos.

‘Perception’ will be available from November 28.

Pete Doherty finds his poetic identity

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Babyshambles leader and ex-Libertine Pete Doherty has chosen to read English war poet Siegfried Sassoon’s ‘Suicide In The Trenches’ for a programme to mark National Poetry Day tomorrow. This year’s theme is ‘identity’. ‘Poetry: From Pete Doherty to Andrew Motion’ will air on Artsworld, a Sky channel, tomorrow, Friday October 5, in the evening. As well as Doherty and Motion, the programme will also feature stand-up poet Luke Wright and actor Omid Djalli. They were all asked to pick a poem that reflected a part of themselves. Doherty commented on his personal reasons for choosing ‘Suicide In The Trenches: “I chose the poem because my old man was always in the uniform, because he was in the army; he’d come and go wherever - Bosnia, Ireland – all over the place,” he said, comparing live performance to being in the trenches. “Getting onstage, we wanted to be in the front line…” Doherty also recites excerpts of his own work such as ‘La Belle et La Bête’ and ‘Hooray for the 21st Century.’ Often overlooked amid the paparazzi scrum, Doherty’s poetry won him the opportunity to work with The British Council in Russia, aged just 16. He is also a published poet whose work can be found in the underground publications 'Rising Poets' and 'Full Moon Empty Sports Bag'.

Babyshambles leader and ex-Libertine Pete Doherty has chosen to read English war poet Siegfried Sassoon’s ‘Suicide In The Trenches’ for a programme to mark National Poetry Day tomorrow. This year’s theme is ‘identity’.

‘Poetry: From Pete Doherty to Andrew Motion’ will air on Artsworld, a Sky channel, tomorrow, Friday October 5, in the evening.

As well as Doherty and Motion, the programme will also feature stand-up poet Luke Wright and actor Omid Djalli. They were all asked to pick a poem that reflected a part of themselves.

Doherty commented on his personal reasons for choosing ‘Suicide In The Trenches:

“I chose the poem because my old man was always in the uniform, because he was in the army; he’d come and go wherever – Bosnia, Ireland – all over the place,” he said, comparing live performance to being in the trenches. “Getting onstage, we wanted to be in the front line…”

Doherty also recites excerpts of his own work such as ‘La Belle et La Bête’ and ‘Hooray for the 21st Century.’

Often overlooked amid the paparazzi scrum, Doherty’s poetry won him the opportunity to work with The British Council in Russia, aged just 16. He is also a published poet whose work can be found in the underground publications ‘Rising Poets’ and ‘Full Moon Empty Sports Bag’.

WIN AN AUDIENCE WITH AEROSMITH

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Does it get much better than this? We thought not. Plus, this week only we're offering you an Audience With Aerosmith. Well, almost. We want your questions for Steve Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith. With a new LP, the band's 14th album of original material and their first since 2001's Just Push Play, due out next year - it's apparently on a White Stripes tip - there's plenty to talk about with America's answer to the Glimmer Twins, aka the Toxic Twins. But what have you always longed to ask Aerosmith's dynamic duo? Nothing is off limits, so send your rubber-lipped enquiries to allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

Does it get much better than this?

We thought not.

Plus, this week only we’re offering you an Audience With Aerosmith.

Well, almost.

We want your questions for Steve Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith.

With a new LP, the band’s 14th album of original material and their first since 2001’s Just Push Play, due out next year – it’s apparently on a White Stripes tip – there’s plenty to talk about with America’s answer to the Glimmer Twins, aka the Toxic Twins.

But what have you always longed to ask Aerosmith’s dynamic duo? Nothing is off limits, so send your rubber-lipped enquiries to allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

MUSE AND THOM YORKE WIN DOUBLE

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Muse and Thom Yorke were double award winners last night at the BT Digital Music Awards 2006 held at the Camden Roundhouse. Muse beat Kasabian, Editors and Hard-Fi in a tough category for Best Rock Artist. They also won Best Unofficial Music Site for the fansite www.muselive.com Thom Yorke won the Best Artist Campaign and the Best Use of Mobile, for the campaign surrounding the release of his solo album ‘The Eraser’. Other winners of the night included Lily Allen (Best Pop Artist), Lorraine (Best Electronic Artist), and Peter Gabriel, picking up the Pioneer Award – in recognition of his contribution to the world of digital music. Meanwhile, www.uncut.co.uk's sister site, nme.com, won Best Music Magazine. A full list of awards winners can be found at www.dma06.com The event was filmed for Channel 4, broadcasting on October 21

Muse and Thom Yorke were double award winners last night at the BT Digital Music Awards 2006 held at the Camden Roundhouse.

Muse beat Kasabian, Editors and Hard-Fi in a tough category for Best Rock Artist. They also won Best Unofficial Music Site for the fansite www.muselive.com

Thom Yorke won the Best Artist Campaign and the Best Use of Mobile, for the campaign surrounding the release of his solo album ‘The Eraser’.

Other winners of the night included Lily Allen (Best Pop Artist), Lorraine (Best Electronic Artist), and Peter Gabriel, picking up the Pioneer Award – in recognition of his contribution to the world of digital music.

Meanwhile, www.uncut.co.uk’s sister site, nme.com, won Best Music Magazine.

A full list of awards winners can be found at www.dma06.com

The event was filmed for Channel 4, broadcasting on October 21

OASIS NAME TITLE OF NEW TRACK

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Liam Gallagher has exclusively revealed that he’s written a song called “Guess I’m Out of Time”, presumably for Oasis. He told James Brown for Uncut, “The way I see it, what’s the fucking point of having all this time off if you’ve got the tunes? I’ve got loads of tunes.” The Gallagher brothers talk us through their new greatest hits collection ‘Stop The Clocks’ in the latest issue of Uncut, out today. Noel also tells Uncut how self-doubt nearly made him quit the band at the height of their fame – following their historic 1996 Knebworth shows. “It’s like, what do you do when you’ve done everything?” said Gallagher Sr. “You kind of sink into boredom. I don’t know. Kind of directionless.” ‘Stop The Clocks” is released on November 20.

Liam Gallagher has exclusively revealed that he’s written a song called “Guess I’m Out of Time”, presumably for Oasis. He told James Brown for Uncut, “The way I see it, what’s the fucking point of having all this time off if you’ve got the tunes? I’ve got loads of tunes.”

The Gallagher brothers talk us through their new greatest hits collection ‘Stop The Clocks’ in the latest issue of Uncut, out today.

Noel also tells Uncut how self-doubt nearly made him quit the band at the height of their fame – following their historic 1996 Knebworth shows. “It’s like, what do you do when you’ve done everything?” said Gallagher Sr. “You kind of sink into boredom. I don’t know. Kind of directionless.”

‘Stop The Clocks” is released on November 20.

OASIS ON-LINE VOTE SPECIAL!

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After much speculation about what would be included, Oasis are releasing a definitive hits collection, ‘Stop The Clocks’, on November 20. Unlike a lot of hits collections, Oasis have hand-picked what they consider to be their finest rock'n'roll moments, and they talk about their choices and the stories behind them in the November issue of Uncut, out now. We’d like to know what your favourite Oasis track is from their 10-year career. The full ‘Stop The Clocks’ tracklisting is: Rock'n'Roll Star Some Might Say Talk Tonight Lyla The Importance of Being Idle Wonderwall Slide Away Cigarettes & Alcohol The Masterplan Live Forever Acquiesce Supersonic Half The World Away Go Let It Out Songbird Morning Glory Champagne Supernova Don't Look Back In Anger To cast your vote, enter the title here Many thanks!

After much speculation about what would be included, Oasis are releasing a definitive hits collection, ‘Stop The Clocks’, on November 20.

Unlike a lot of hits collections, Oasis have hand-picked what they consider to be their finest rock’n’roll moments, and they talk about their choices and the stories behind them in the November issue of Uncut, out now.

We’d like to know what your favourite Oasis track is from their 10-year career.

The full ‘Stop The Clocks’ tracklisting is:

Rock’n’Roll Star

Some Might Say

Talk Tonight

Lyla

The Importance of Being Idle

Wonderwall

Slide Away

Cigarettes & Alcohol

The Masterplan

Live Forever

Acquiesce

Supersonic

Half The World Away

Go Let It Out

Songbird

Morning Glory

Champagne Supernova

Don’t Look Back In Anger

To cast your vote, enter the title here

Many thanks!

NEW U2 COLLECTION IMMINENT

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The compilation album will contain two new songs produced by Johnny Cash collaborator Rick Rubin. One of these will be the band’s recent collaboration with Green Day, ’The Saints Are Coming’. As previously reported, the song is a cover of a track by Scottish punk band The Skids, and will be released as a digital download on October 30. The proceeds of this will benefit Hurricane Katrina charity Music Rising. The collection will feature 16 "of the band’s best-known songs", according to http://www.u2.com. The band previously released ’The Best of 1980-1990’ in 1998 and ’The Best of 1990-2000’ in 2002. The tracklisting of the new ‘Best Of’ is yet to be confirmed, though the band have encouraged fans to "start predicting now".

The compilation album will contain two new songs produced by Johnny Cash collaborator Rick Rubin.

One of these will be the band’s recent collaboration with Green Day, ’The Saints Are Coming’.

As previously reported, the song is a cover of a track by Scottish punk band The Skids, and will be released as a digital download on October 30. The proceeds of this will benefit Hurricane Katrina charity Music Rising.

The collection will feature 16 “of the band’s best-known songs”, according to http://www.u2.com.

The band previously released ’The Best of 1980-1990’ in 1998 and ’The Best of 1990-2000’ in 2002.

The tracklisting of the new ‘Best Of’ is yet to be confirmed, though the band have encouraged fans to “start predicting now”.

CAT POWER GOES LIVE

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Cat Power has announced a one-off gig in London next month. The gig precedes a hotly anticipated tour, dates of which have not yet been announced. She will be backed by the Memphis Rhythm Band at the gig at the Camden Roundhouse on November 1. The Memphis Rhythm Band, led by Chan Marshall, is an all-star troupe. Including Al Green's guitarist and songwriting partner Mabon "Teenie" Hodges, as well as Booker T and the MG's drummer Steve Potts and other top Memphis musicians on keyboards, horns and strings, they are one of the best backing bands in the business. Cat Power’s third single, the jaunty "Could We", is out on October 30 and is taken from the universally acclaimed album ‘The Greatest’. The B-side of the single features a stunning rendition of the Everly Brothers' classic ‘All I Have To Do Is Dream’. http://www.matadorrecords.com/cat_power/ http://www.catpowerthegreatest.com/

Cat Power has announced a one-off gig in London next month. The gig precedes a hotly anticipated tour, dates of which have not yet been announced.

She will be backed by the Memphis Rhythm Band at the gig at the Camden Roundhouse on November 1.

The Memphis Rhythm Band, led by Chan Marshall, is an all-star troupe.

Including Al Green’s guitarist and songwriting partner Mabon “Teenie” Hodges, as well as Booker T and the MG’s drummer Steve Potts and other top Memphis musicians on keyboards, horns and strings, they are one of the best backing bands in the business.

Cat Power’s third single, the jaunty “Could We”, is out on October 30 and is taken from the universally acclaimed album ‘The Greatest’.

The B-side of the single features a stunning rendition of the Everly Brothers’ classic ‘All I Have To Do Is Dream’.

http://www.matadorrecords.com/cat_power/

http://www.catpowerthegreatest.com/

MCCARTNEY GETS BACK THE BEATLES SONGS

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Paul McCartney will be adding even more dosh to his personal fortune in 10 years’ time. He has just found out that the copyright to The Beatles’ back catalogue will finally return to him within the next decade, without any high profile legal wrangling as expected. SonyATV, the publishing company that owns the rights – the major shareholder being Michael Jackson – obviously didn’t realise the publishing rights had a time limit. Speaking to the Daily Express, McCartney said, “In about 10 years a lot of the back catalogue returns to me, just legally. Some of the important rights are about to return which I didn't realise". This news is ironic as rock’n’roll lore says that Michael Jackson only originally bought The Beatles’ back catalogue after advice given to him by McCartney himself, to invest his growing fortune by acquiring publishing rights. As McCartney puts it, "You know what doesn't feel very good is going on tour and paying to sing all my songs. Every time I sing 'Hey Jude' I've got to pay someone."

Paul McCartney will be adding even more dosh to his personal fortune in 10 years’ time. He has just found out that the copyright to The Beatles’ back catalogue will finally return to him within the next decade, without any high profile legal wrangling as expected.

SonyATV, the publishing company that owns the rights – the major shareholder being Michael Jackson – obviously didn’t realise the publishing rights had a time limit.

Speaking to the Daily Express, McCartney said, “In about 10 years a lot of the back catalogue returns to me, just legally. Some of the important rights are about to return which I didn’t realise”.

This news is ironic as rock’n’roll lore says that Michael Jackson only originally bought The Beatles’ back catalogue after advice given to him by McCartney himself, to invest his growing fortune by acquiring publishing rights.

As McCartney puts it, “You know what doesn’t feel very good is going on tour and paying to sing all my songs. Every time I sing ‘Hey Jude’ I’ve got to pay someone.”

BIG STAR ON THE BIG SCREEN

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A Big Star biopic is being developed more than 30 years after the original band disintegrated. Alex Chilton’s power-pop gods have been influential on a whole host of brilliant bands including Primal Scream, The Replacements, R.E.M and Teenage Fanclub. The film is being adapted from Uncut contributor Rob Jovanovic’s definitive book about the band, Big Star – The Story of Rock’s Forgotten Band, published last year by Fourth Estate. Based on new interviews with the band, family, friends and major players at Ardent Studios in Memphis, Jovanovic’s book covers the Big Star story from their childhoods to their reunion and 2005 comeback album, In Space. The film is being developed by Melissa Wagman at Clearvision Production. Filming is expected to begin in 2007.

A Big Star biopic is being developed more than 30 years after the original band disintegrated.

Alex Chilton’s power-pop gods have been influential on a whole host of brilliant bands including Primal Scream, The Replacements, R.E.M and Teenage Fanclub.

The film is being adapted from Uncut contributor Rob Jovanovic’s definitive book about the band, Big Star – The Story of Rock’s Forgotten Band, published last year by Fourth Estate.

Based on new interviews with the band, family, friends and major players at Ardent Studios in Memphis, Jovanovic’s book covers the Big Star story from their childhoods to their reunion and 2005 comeback album, In Space.

The film is being developed by Melissa Wagman at Clearvision Production.

Filming is expected to begin in 2007.

LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE

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You’ve met folks like the Hoovers before in the movies. A collection of dyed-in-the-wool misfits, their antecedents include the Griswolds, stars of the National Lampoon’s … Vacation series, Wes Anderson’s Tenenbaums and many others in between. In truth, the dysfunctional family comedy feels a little exhausted these days, as anyone who’s had the misfortune to see Robin Williams’ latest outing, the dire R.V, will know all too well. But what makes this one fly is its warmth. Little Miss Sunshine is a first class love-letter to a family of losers. Let’s start with lecherous, potty-mouthed Grandpa (Alan Arkin), recently shown the door from his retirement home thanks to an abiding love of heroin. There’s Richard (Greg Kinnear), the nominal head of the family, who’s an appallingly unsuccessful motivational speaker. Wife Sheryl (Toni Collette) struggles against the odds to hold her brood together, and the strain is beginning to show. Stroppy teenager Dwayne (Paul Dano) has taken a vow of silence and spends all day reading Nietzsche. Gay uncle Frank (Steve Carell), a Proust scholar no less, has just been released from hospital after a suicide attempt. So far, so fucked-up. And then there’s Olive (Abigail Breslin), a chubby, bespectacled seven year-old with sweet, innocent dreams of one day becoming a beauty queen. Meanwhile, the rest of the Hoovers bicker, bite and squabble among themselves – except Dwayne, who simply leaves notes for his family bearing such heart-warming sentiments as: “I hate everyone” and, when uncle Frank arrives in the house, one which reads: “Welcome to Hell”. There really doesn’t seem much to like about them – until, by some miraculous turn of events, Olive is chosen to take part in the Little Miss Sunshine kids’ beauty pageant in California and the Hoovers find at last something to unite them in a common cause. They head off in a battered VW camper van from Albuquerque to Redondo Beach, determined that at least one of their clan will achieve something they can all share joy in. The journey – three days cross-country – is rich with comic incident as well as one fatality that feels like an explicit homage to National Lampoon’s Vacation. It’s during this crucial section of the film that first-time screenwriter Michael Arndt gently teases the humanity out of the Hoovers and the film opens up to become more than a quirky, by-numbers family comedy. Arndt, along with former music promo directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, steer the Hoovers into a place where, gradually, little moments of love and affection seep through the bitterness. You’re reminded of the way America’s First Family of freaks – the Simpsons – are held together by familial bonds, that their differences from “normal” folk are what make them special and that, ultimately, is what they’re proudest of. This gets brought into shocking relief by the jaw-dropping third act. As the Hoovers crash into the Little Miss Sunshine pageant, as welcome as a skunk in an elevator, the film becoming a scabrous satire on American concepts of success, perfection and happiness. There’s something grotesque about the American beauty pageant tradition – the pushiness of the parents, the disturbing way the competing children are dressed to look like women in their swimsuits and full make-up – which Arndt clearly relishes demolishing in a way that’s simultaneously uncomfortable to watch and deeply funny. As all these perfect children and their perfect parents rush around getting ready for the contest to begin, dumpy little Olive (a guileless performance from Breslin) experiences a moment of clarity in which she realises she can never be as beautiful as them. Yet that makes her all the more determined to see through to the end the – for want of a better word – extraordinary dance routine Grandpa taught her. At which point, it’s safe to say, The Daily Mail and other self-appointed guardians of our nation’s morals will be spitting blood. It’s become de rigeur for this kind of ensemble movie to attract marquee name casts (think of the incredible talents who appeared in similarly themed movies like The Royal Tenenbaums, Igby Goes Down and The Squid & The Whale), and Dayton and Faris are equally blessed here. You expect pros like Kinnear, Colette and Arkin to deliver, but the key player here is Steve Carell – star of the American version of The Office, whose movie CV to date is headed up by Anchorman and The 40 Year-Old Virgin. You sense, in his quiet and unshowy way, Carell is genuinely exploring Frank’s alienation; his performance crucially suggesting a great comic actor in the making, rather than a comic simply trying his hand at acting for a lark. MICHAEL BONNER

You’ve met folks like the Hoovers before in the movies. A collection of dyed-in-the-wool misfits, their antecedents include the Griswolds, stars of the National Lampoon’s … Vacation series, Wes Anderson’s Tenenbaums and many others in between. In truth, the dysfunctional family comedy feels a little exhausted these days, as anyone who’s had the misfortune to see Robin Williams’ latest outing, the dire R.V, will know all too well. But what makes this one fly is its warmth. Little Miss Sunshine is a first class love-letter to a family of losers.

Let’s start with lecherous, potty-mouthed Grandpa (Alan Arkin), recently shown the door from his retirement home thanks to an abiding love of heroin. There’s Richard (Greg Kinnear), the nominal head of the family, who’s an appallingly unsuccessful motivational speaker. Wife Sheryl (Toni Collette) struggles against the odds to hold her brood together, and the strain is beginning to show. Stroppy teenager Dwayne (Paul Dano) has taken a vow of silence and spends all day reading Nietzsche. Gay uncle Frank (Steve Carell), a Proust scholar no less, has just been released from hospital after a suicide attempt. So far, so fucked-up. And then there’s Olive (Abigail Breslin), a chubby, bespectacled seven year-old with sweet, innocent dreams of one day becoming a beauty queen. Meanwhile, the rest of the Hoovers bicker, bite and squabble among themselves – except Dwayne, who simply leaves notes for his family bearing such heart-warming sentiments as: “I hate everyone” and, when uncle Frank arrives in the house, one which reads: “Welcome to Hell”.

There really doesn’t seem much to like about them – until, by some miraculous turn of events, Olive is chosen to take part in the Little Miss Sunshine kids’ beauty pageant in California and the Hoovers find at last something to unite them in a common cause. They head off in a battered VW camper van from Albuquerque to Redondo Beach, determined that at least one of their clan will achieve something they can all share joy in.

The journey – three days cross-country – is rich with comic incident as well as one fatality that feels like an explicit homage to National Lampoon’s Vacation. It’s during this crucial section of the film that first-time screenwriter Michael Arndt gently teases the humanity out of the Hoovers and the film opens up to become more than a quirky, by-numbers family comedy. Arndt, along with former music promo directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, steer the Hoovers into a place where, gradually, little moments of love and affection seep through the bitterness. You’re reminded of the way America’s First Family of freaks – the Simpsons – are held together by familial bonds, that their differences from “normal” folk are what make them special and that, ultimately, is what they’re proudest of.

This gets brought into shocking relief by the jaw-dropping third act. As the Hoovers crash into the Little Miss Sunshine pageant, as welcome as a skunk in an elevator, the film becoming a scabrous satire on American concepts of success, perfection and happiness. There’s something grotesque about the American beauty pageant tradition – the pushiness of the parents, the disturbing way the competing children are dressed to look like women in their swimsuits and full make-up – which Arndt clearly relishes demolishing in a way that’s simultaneously uncomfortable to watch and deeply funny. As all these perfect children and their perfect parents rush around getting ready for the contest to begin, dumpy little Olive (a guileless performance from Breslin) experiences a moment of clarity in which she realises she can never be as beautiful as them. Yet that makes her all the more determined to see through to the end the – for want of a better word – extraordinary dance routine Grandpa taught her. At which point, it’s safe to say, The Daily Mail and other self-appointed guardians of our nation’s morals will be spitting blood.

It’s become de rigeur for this kind of ensemble movie to attract marquee name casts (think of the incredible talents who appeared in similarly themed movies like The Royal Tenenbaums, Igby Goes Down and The Squid & The Whale), and Dayton and Faris are equally blessed here. You expect pros like Kinnear, Colette and Arkin to deliver, but the key player here is Steve Carell – star of the American version of The Office, whose movie CV to date is headed up by Anchorman and The 40 Year-Old Virgin. You sense, in his quiet and unshowy way, Carell is genuinely exploring Frank’s alienation; his performance crucially suggesting a great comic actor in the making, rather than a comic simply trying his hand at acting for a lark.

MICHAEL BONNER

WORLD TRADE CENTER

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Although the World Trade Center bombings have been scrutinised in unsparing and forensic media detail, Hollywood has been conspicuously slow off the mark to get involved. Five years on from 9/11 itself, Oliver Stone's drama - drawn from the real life testimonies of two New York Port Authority cops extracted from the rubble of Ground Zero - is only the second film, after United 93 earlier this year, to directly address the 21st century's inaugural act of man-made terror. Hollywood studios are often slow and cautious when responding to hot button events like 9/11. For sure, there are already a handful of films that have been informed, to varying degrees, by the attack on the Twin Towers - Fahrenheit 9/11, 25th Hour, War Of The Worlds, even Munich. Yet the fear of alienating great swathes of audience demographics and incurring political censure for tackling this explicitly sensitive issue sends studios scurrying back to their comfort zone of rom-coms, costume dramas and comic book adaptations. Matters presumably are further complicated by daily news broadcasts detailing the latest dispatches from President Bush's vituperative and ill-conceived response to the tragedy - the rollercoaster-to-Armageddon commonly referred to as the War on Terror. Which perhaps explains how United 93 came to be: although bankrolled by Universal, the director, Paul Greengrass, is Irish and the project was developed by Working Title - the English production company best known for Four Weddings And A Funeral. What makes World Trade Center so interesting as the first, full-blooded American take on 9/11 is that Oliver Stone isn't the obvious candidate to helm a film like this. Although Stone has a lengthy history of on-screen political engagement - Salvador, the Vietnam trilogy, JFK, Nixon, his Castro and Arafat documentaries - his film-making style is traditionally too bombastic to handle a subject that's still so raw and painful for many Americans. But Stone has made what might be, if the critical reception to World Trade Center in America can be believed, the most successful film of his career. Ironic, perhaps, as it appears to share little in common with any other movie on his CV. There's no trademark Stone masonry, no great sound and fury (unless you count the breath-taking sequence around the 40 minute mark where the Towers come down), none of the dizzying, sensory overload you expect from the man who made Natural Born Killers. Stone opts for a straightforward approach to this story, which has led some to churlishly suggest World Trade Center is little better than a made-for-TV movie. Arguably, this demonstrates a fundamental lack of understanding of Stone - a great liberal humanist - and is also extraordinarily ungenerous to a movie that's both commemorative and elegiac in its handling of an event which led to the deaths of 2,749 people, approximately 400 of whom were from the emergency services, there simply to do their job and save lives. Cage is perfect here. He does a great Jimmy Stewart: his John McLoughlin is an Everyman, just doing what he's got to do, whatever it takes, no heroics, no showboating. Stone - like Greengrass - elects to focus solely on the specific events as they unfold. He doesn't acknowledge the wider context of what drove a group of religious fundamentalists to hijack four aeroplanes with the intention of flying them into high-profile targets on American soil. At its heart, World Trade Center is solely about two men struggling to survive in extraordinary, hellish circumstances. And, to Stone's infinite credit, it never descends into schmaltz. The first third of the movie finds McLoughlin and Jimeno gearing up for a day's work - it's rather prosaic, matter-of-fact, following a similar trajectory to Greengrass' film which showed the doomed crew and passengers of United 93 as they went through the equally mundane routines of their own lives prior to embarkation. Once the Towers come down, Stone explores the effects of the disaster on their families. His shrewd casting of Gyllenhaal and Bello means we never once get hysteria, no wailing and gnashing of teeth, just a genuine, impactful sense of the uncertainty, the dreadful not-knowing, as they wait for news. The most contentious character in all this is David Karnes (Michael J Shannon). A former Marine whose response to the catastrophe is to dust off his uniform and go to the site where, with an almost pathological single-mindedness, he yomps across the blasted, nightmare landscape on a one-man mission to find survivors. His two-dimensional, gung-ho fervour is decidedly out-of-synch with the rest of the movie's more rounded characters, and you could argue he's emblematic of the director's most sledge-hammer tendencies. But he reflects a part of the American mindset, and his decision to re-enlist at the end of the film (in a postscript, we learn he's served in the Philippines and Iraq) is based on a very real, clear-cut notion of patriotism. World Trade Center is part of America's healing process after 9/11. And at the risk of sounding trite, it's also part of Stone's own personal healing after the astonishing critical demolition of his last film, Alexander. Here, he's made a humbling and moving movie about enduring against the odds. And for a director who's frequently been misunderstood and misrepresented, this is a particular triumph he should savour. MICHAEL BONNER

Although the World Trade Center bombings have been scrutinised in unsparing and forensic media detail, Hollywood has been conspicuously slow off the mark to get involved. Five years on from 9/11 itself, Oliver Stone’s drama – drawn from the real life testimonies of two New York Port Authority cops extracted from the rubble of Ground Zero – is only the second film, after United 93 earlier this year, to directly address the 21st century’s inaugural act of man-made terror. Hollywood studios are often slow and cautious when responding to hot button events like 9/11. For sure, there are already a handful of films that have been informed, to varying degrees, by the attack on the Twin Towers – Fahrenheit 9/11, 25th Hour, War Of The Worlds, even Munich. Yet the fear of alienating great swathes of audience demographics and incurring political censure for tackling this explicitly sensitive issue sends studios scurrying back to their comfort zone of rom-coms, costume dramas and comic book adaptations. Matters presumably are further complicated by daily news broadcasts detailing the latest dispatches from President Bush’s vituperative and ill-conceived response to the tragedy – the rollercoaster-to-Armageddon commonly referred to as the War on Terror.

Which perhaps explains how United 93 came to be: although bankrolled by Universal, the director, Paul Greengrass, is Irish and the project was developed by Working Title – the English production company best known for Four Weddings And A Funeral. What makes World Trade Center so interesting as the first, full-blooded American take on 9/11 is that Oliver Stone isn’t the obvious candidate to helm a film like this. Although Stone has a lengthy history of on-screen political engagement – Salvador, the Vietnam trilogy, JFK, Nixon, his Castro and Arafat documentaries – his film-making style is traditionally too bombastic to handle a subject that’s still so raw and painful for many Americans. But Stone has made what might be, if the critical reception to World Trade Center in America can be believed, the most successful film of his career. Ironic, perhaps, as it appears to share little in common with any other movie on his CV. There’s no trademark Stone masonry, no great sound and fury (unless you count the breath-taking sequence around the 40 minute mark where the Towers come down), none of the dizzying, sensory overload you expect from the man who made Natural Born Killers. Stone opts for a straightforward approach to this story, which has led some to churlishly suggest World Trade Center is little better than a made-for-TV movie. Arguably, this demonstrates a fundamental lack of understanding of Stone – a great liberal humanist – and is also extraordinarily ungenerous to a movie that’s both commemorative and elegiac in its handling of an event which led to the deaths of 2,749 people, approximately 400 of whom were from the emergency services, there simply to do their job and save lives. Cage is perfect here. He does a great Jimmy Stewart: his John McLoughlin is an Everyman, just doing what he’s got to do, whatever it takes, no heroics, no showboating.

Stone – like Greengrass – elects to focus solely on the specific events as they unfold. He doesn’t acknowledge the wider context of what drove a group of religious fundamentalists to hijack four aeroplanes with the intention of flying them into high-profile targets on American soil. At its heart, World Trade Center is solely about two men struggling to survive in extraordinary, hellish circumstances. And, to Stone’s infinite credit, it never descends into schmaltz. The first third of the movie finds McLoughlin and Jimeno gearing up for a day’s work – it’s rather prosaic, matter-of-fact, following a similar trajectory to Greengrass’ film which showed the doomed crew and passengers of United 93 as they went through the equally mundane routines of their own lives prior to embarkation. Once the Towers come down, Stone explores the effects of the disaster on their families. His shrewd casting of Gyllenhaal and Bello means we never once get hysteria, no wailing and gnashing of teeth, just a genuine, impactful sense of the uncertainty, the dreadful not-knowing, as they wait for news.

The most contentious character in all this is David Karnes (Michael J Shannon). A former Marine whose response to the catastrophe is to dust off his uniform and go to the site where, with an almost pathological single-mindedness, he yomps across the blasted, nightmare landscape on a one-man mission to find survivors. His two-dimensional, gung-ho fervour is decidedly out-of-synch with the rest of the movie’s more rounded characters, and you could argue he’s emblematic of the director’s most sledge-hammer tendencies. But he reflects a part of the American mindset, and his decision to re-enlist at the end of the film (in a postscript, we learn he’s served in the Philippines and Iraq) is based on a very real, clear-cut notion of patriotism.

World Trade Center is part of America’s healing process after 9/11. And at the risk of sounding trite, it’s also part of Stone’s own personal healing after the astonishing critical demolition of his last film, Alexander. Here, he’s made a humbling and moving movie about enduring against the odds. And for a director who’s frequently been misunderstood and misrepresented, this is a particular triumph he should savour.

MICHAEL BONNER

THE BLACK DAHLIA

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Los Angeles, 1947. Assigned to solve the murder of "the Black Dahlia", an aspiring Hollywood starlet, two cops, Leland "Lee" Blanchard (Aaron Eckhart) and "Bucky" Bleichert (Josh Hartnett) find themselves succumbing to various erotic obsessions - with the dead girl, wealthy heiress Madeleine Linscott (Hilary Swank) and Lee's girlfriend, former call-girl Kay Lake (Scarlett Johansson). The second of James Ellroy's LA Quartet novels to be adapted for the screen, almost a decade after Curtis Hanson's triumph with LA Confidential, The Black Dahlia boasts a similar visual Žlan - a meticulous evocation of its period, all sharp suits and sleek sedans and bad-girl pouts. Yet it's a very different film than its predecessor. Ellroy's source novel is based on a true story: the brutal murder, in 1947, of movie starlet Betty Short, which became one of the most notorious unsolved murders in Hollywood history. Ellroy's own mother was strangled in 1958, and the author has explicitly drawn connections between the tragic, violent deaths of these two women. De Palma, a surgeon's son, with a taste for the lurid and a mile-wide streak of cruelty in him that rivals his hero Hitchcock, clearly riffs on this shocking, sensationalist material. The film revels in Ellroy's evocation of a corrupt, seedy and venal post-war LA, where everyone's on the make, constantly hustling, whatever the cost. The opening sequence finds soldiers beating up civilians, cops piling in to take a pop at both sides, blows seemingly exchanged for the sheer, hell of it. This is a lawless town, devoid of any moral centre. Hanson's film benefited from the onscreen pairing of Russell Crowe and Guy Pearce, whose brute intensity and physical presence Aaron Eckhart and Josh Hartnett initially appear to struggle in vain to equal. Eckhart acquits himself well enough, but as his obsession with the murdered girl sends him into paranoia and madness, he retreats from the narrative - which focuses instead on the romantic relationships between Hartnett and co-stars Scarlett Johansson and Hilary Swank. On face value, their performances seem stilted, but you sense that De Palma is playing subtly, artfully, with the hyper-stylised melodramas of film noir standards like Mildred Pierce or Kiss Me Deadly. Arguably, the performances aren't necessarily the chief draw here. In a recent onstage interview at the Edinburgh Film Festival, De Palma admitted that his primary interests these days, as a director, are visual: the onscreen exploration of certain images and sequences, the resolution of various spatial challenges. The influence of Hitchcock has left him with an unrivalled compositional sense, one that's apparent in this film's major set-pieces - notably, a crane shot that manages to encompass, in a single take, both a messy shootout in a tenement, and the simultaneous discovery, a block away, of the murdered Black Dahlia; and a breathless race up a staircase (and subsequent fatal plummet to earth) which the director invests with all the flashy virtuosity of Vertigo. De Palma's homage to noir classics occasionally seems intrusive: Bucky's first meeting with the Linscott family, for example, sees the film shift abruptly, and inexplicably, into the first-person - a nod (for those in the know) to Robert Montgomery's 1947 Chandler adaptation The Lady In The Lake. There's a distinct sense of exaggeration and artifice here - scenes lit as if back-projected, props (newspapers, in particular) ever-so-slightly too large. Not for nothing did legendary critic Pauline Kael once describe De Palma as having "the wickedest baroque style in American cinema". Strict realism, here, isn't the point. As befits a mystery set in the space between the dream factory of Hollywood and the sordid reality of LA, this is a movie - and we're never for a moment allowed to forget it. JOANNA DOUGLAS

Los Angeles, 1947. Assigned to solve the murder of “the Black Dahlia”, an aspiring Hollywood starlet, two cops, Leland “Lee” Blanchard (Aaron Eckhart) and “Bucky” Bleichert (Josh Hartnett) find themselves succumbing to various erotic obsessions – with the dead girl, wealthy heiress Madeleine Linscott (Hilary Swank) and Lee’s girlfriend, former call-girl Kay Lake (Scarlett Johansson). The second of James Ellroy’s LA Quartet novels to be adapted for the screen, almost a decade after Curtis Hanson’s triumph with LA Confidential, The Black Dahlia boasts a similar visual Žlan – a meticulous evocation of its period, all sharp suits and sleek sedans and bad-girl pouts. Yet it’s a very different film than its predecessor.

Ellroy’s source novel is based on a true story: the brutal murder, in 1947, of movie starlet Betty Short, which became one of the most notorious unsolved murders in Hollywood history. Ellroy’s own mother was strangled in 1958, and the author has explicitly drawn connections between the tragic, violent deaths of these two women. De Palma, a surgeon’s son, with a taste for the lurid and a mile-wide streak of cruelty in him that rivals his hero Hitchcock, clearly riffs on this shocking, sensationalist material.

The film revels in Ellroy’s evocation of a corrupt, seedy and venal post-war LA, where everyone’s on the make, constantly hustling, whatever the cost. The opening sequence finds soldiers beating up civilians, cops piling in to take a pop at both sides, blows seemingly exchanged for the sheer, hell of it. This is a lawless town, devoid of any moral centre.

Hanson’s film benefited from the onscreen pairing of Russell Crowe and Guy Pearce, whose brute intensity and physical presence Aaron Eckhart and Josh Hartnett initially appear to struggle in vain to equal. Eckhart acquits himself well enough, but as his obsession with the murdered girl sends him into paranoia and madness, he retreats from the narrative – which focuses instead on the romantic relationships between Hartnett and co-stars Scarlett Johansson and Hilary Swank. On face value, their performances seem stilted, but you sense that De Palma is playing subtly, artfully, with the hyper-stylised melodramas of film noir standards like Mildred Pierce or Kiss Me Deadly.

Arguably, the performances aren’t necessarily the chief draw here. In a recent onstage interview at the Edinburgh Film Festival, De Palma admitted that his primary interests these days, as a director, are visual: the onscreen exploration of certain images and sequences, the resolution of various spatial challenges. The influence of Hitchcock has left him with an unrivalled compositional sense, one that’s apparent in this film’s major set-pieces – notably, a crane shot that manages to encompass, in a single take, both a messy shootout in a tenement, and the simultaneous discovery, a block away, of the murdered Black Dahlia; and a breathless race up a staircase (and subsequent fatal plummet to earth) which the director invests with all the flashy virtuosity of Vertigo. De Palma’s homage to noir classics occasionally seems intrusive: Bucky’s first meeting with the Linscott family, for example, sees the film shift abruptly, and inexplicably, into the first-person – a nod (for those in the know) to Robert Montgomery’s 1947 Chandler adaptation The Lady In The Lake.

There’s a distinct sense of exaggeration and artifice here – scenes lit as if back-projected, props (newspapers, in particular) ever-so-slightly too large. Not for nothing did legendary critic Pauline Kael once describe De Palma as having “the wickedest baroque style in American cinema”. Strict realism, here, isn’t the point. As befits a mystery set in the space between the dream factory of Hollywood and the sordid reality of LA, this is a movie – and we’re never for a moment allowed to forget it.

JOANNA DOUGLAS

Marie Antoinette

A novel spin on the costume genre, Marie Antoinette - Sofia Coppola's follow-up to Lost In Translation - depicts the corridors of power as seen by a spoilt aristocratic ingŽnue: an eighteenth-century Paris (or Versailles) Hilton. Kirsten Dunst plays the sheep-loving monarch, a teenage Austrian princess sent to France to form a marital and political alliance with King Louis XVI. Unfortunately His Majesty (Schwartzman) is a gauche ninny, while life at court is ruled by oppressively stiff rules of etiquette. The young Queen soon finds an escape in wanton expenditure, parties and amateur shepherdessing, blithely unaware that revolution is approaching. Coppola enjoys herself with anachronism, most notably in making the young queen a Californian airhead centuries before her time. The soundtrack is laden with post-punk hits, as if making a connection between 1780s and 1980s excesses - but, while the opening burst of Gang Of Four comes as a bracing shock, later choices (Siouxsie and the Banshees, Bow Wow Wow) are just that bit too obvious for real effect. Gorgeously shot by Lance Acord, the film is much more like a costume drama in the traditional grand fashion than you would expect from a director with Coppola's cutting-edge rep. And, despite an elegant handling of ironies in the first half hour, the film quickly becomes much straighter and staider than it promised. Still, Coppola has a dream cast - apart from a sympathetic, sparkly Dunst, the show is stolen by Asia Argento as the scandalous Countess du Barry and by the magnificently crusty Rip Torn as the old Louis XV. A lavish underachievement, nevertheless Marie Antoinette is a tender and elegant film: wilfully superficial, as befits the portrait of a superficial, doomed culture, but hard not to enjoy. JONATHAN ROMNEY

A novel spin on the costume genre, Marie Antoinette – Sofia Coppola’s follow-up to Lost In Translation – depicts the corridors of power as seen by a spoilt aristocratic ingŽnue: an eighteenth-century Paris (or Versailles) Hilton. Kirsten Dunst plays the sheep-loving monarch, a teenage Austrian princess sent to France to form a marital and political alliance with King Louis XVI. Unfortunately His Majesty (Schwartzman) is a gauche ninny, while life at court is ruled by oppressively stiff rules of etiquette. The young Queen soon finds an escape in wanton expenditure, parties and amateur shepherdessing, blithely unaware that revolution is approaching.

Coppola enjoys herself with anachronism, most notably in making the young queen a Californian airhead centuries before her time. The soundtrack is laden with post-punk hits, as if making a connection between 1780s and 1980s excesses – but, while the opening burst of Gang Of Four comes as a bracing shock, later choices (Siouxsie and the Banshees, Bow Wow Wow) are just that bit too obvious for real effect.

Gorgeously shot by Lance Acord, the film is much more like a costume drama in the traditional grand fashion than you would expect from a director with Coppola’s cutting-edge rep. And, despite an elegant handling of ironies in the first half hour, the film quickly becomes much straighter and staider than it promised. Still, Coppola has a dream cast – apart from a sympathetic, sparkly Dunst, the show is stolen by Asia Argento as the scandalous Countess du Barry and by the magnificently crusty Rip Torn as the old Louis XV. A lavish underachievement, nevertheless Marie Antoinette is a tender and elegant film: wilfully superficial, as befits the portrait of a superficial, doomed culture, but hard not to enjoy.

JONATHAN ROMNEY

Brothers Of The Head

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Fulton and Pepe's last film, the documentary Lost In La Mancha, was a lively record of Terry Gilliam's failed attempt to film Don Quixote, a robust insight into the gaping chasm that occasionally opens up between ambition and reality. For their next trick, Fulton and Pepe have embarked on an altogether more ambitious project. Brothers... is a mock-documentary about the meteoric rise - and inevitable fall - of a rock band fronted by conjoined twins, Tom and Barry Howe. Accordingly, it plays havoc with notions of truth. Constructed from an unfinished Ken Russell film (a fiction Russell himself is on hand to support) and a 1974 documentary which shows how Tom and Barry were coaxed into forming a band, it's a film about filmmaking as much as music. The style flickers between Russell's bombast and shaky, fly-on-the-wall verite, linked by contemporary contributions from the participants. The sense of period - pre-punk - is brilliantly evoked, and the rough energy of the music (by Clive Langer) is spot-on. Tom and Barry are magnificently played by real-life twin brothers Harry and Luke Treadaway, who aren't conjoined but do play their own guitars. This isn't Spinal Tap: there is humour, but the prevailing mood on this darkly bizarre trip is one of disquiet and impending tragedy. ALASTAIR McKAY

Fulton and Pepe’s last film, the documentary Lost In La Mancha, was a lively record of Terry Gilliam’s failed attempt to film Don Quixote, a robust insight into the gaping chasm that occasionally opens up between ambition and reality. For their next trick, Fulton and Pepe have embarked on an altogether more ambitious project.

Brothers… is a mock-documentary about the meteoric rise – and inevitable fall – of a rock band fronted by conjoined twins, Tom and Barry Howe. Accordingly, it plays havoc with notions of truth. Constructed from an unfinished Ken Russell film (a fiction Russell himself is on hand to support) and a 1974 documentary which shows how Tom and Barry were coaxed into forming a band, it’s a film about filmmaking as much as music. The style flickers between Russell’s bombast and shaky, fly-on-the-wall verite, linked by contemporary contributions from the participants. The sense of period – pre-punk – is brilliantly evoked, and the rough energy of the music (by Clive Langer) is spot-on. Tom and Barry are magnificently played by real-life twin brothers Harry and Luke Treadaway, who aren’t conjoined but do play their own guitars. This isn’t Spinal Tap: there is humour, but the prevailing mood on this darkly bizarre trip is one of disquiet and impending tragedy.

ALASTAIR McKAY

KATIE MELUA’S NEW WORLD RECORD

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Katie Melua, Britain’s biggest-selling female singer, yesterday set the Guinness World Record for the deepest underwater concert when she performed at the bottom of a 303ft-deep oil rig. The concert was held at the bottom of a shaft at the Statoil Troll A Platform gas rig, Europe’s largest. They invited Melua to play as part of the gas platform’s 10th anniversary celebrations. In addition to the gas rig staff, the audience included an adjudicator for Guinness World Records to make sure the record criteria was met. She performed her hit singles "Closest Thing To Crazy" and "Nine Million Bicycles" with a full live band. Guinness World Records confirmed that the record has been set. Melua is one of Britain’s most successful exports, having sold more than six million albums worldwide. The concert was filmed for Norwegian television. Melua has a new single, "It’s Only Pain", out later this year. www.katiemelua.com

Katie Melua, Britain’s biggest-selling female singer, yesterday set the Guinness World Record for the deepest underwater concert when she performed at the bottom of a 303ft-deep oil rig.

The concert was held at the bottom of a shaft at the Statoil Troll A Platform gas rig, Europe’s largest. They invited Melua to play as part of the gas platform’s 10th anniversary celebrations.

In addition to the gas rig staff, the audience included an adjudicator for Guinness World Records to make sure the record criteria was met.

She performed her hit singles “Closest Thing To Crazy” and “Nine Million Bicycles” with a full live band. Guinness World Records confirmed that the record has been set.

Melua is one of Britain’s most successful exports, having sold more than six million albums worldwide.

The concert was filmed for Norwegian television.

Melua has a new single, “It’s Only Pain”, out later this year.

www.katiemelua.com