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TV Roundup

Since 24, the world's somehow overlooked Steven Bochco's ice-breaking 23-part epic series (here on six discs), which traced the ricocheting ramifications of a Hollywood murder trial in obsessive detail, locking us into addictive characters with exquisite week-on-week suspense. Daniel Benzali is the snidey-but-good lawyer, Stanley Tucci the reptilian suspect millionaire. It still ensnares you. Good as it gets.

Since 24, the world’s somehow overlooked Steven Bochco’s ice-breaking 23-part epic series (here on six discs), which traced the ricocheting ramifications of a Hollywood murder trial in obsessive detail, locking us into addictive characters with exquisite week-on-week suspense. Daniel Benzali is the snidey-but-good lawyer, Stanley Tucci the reptilian suspect millionaire. It still ensnares you. Good as it gets.

The Big Bounce

Elmore Leonard's first modern fiction novel was originally filmed in 1969 with Ryan O'Neal in the starring role. It flopped. This remake (directed by Miami Blues' George Armitage) fares no better; it drifts aimlessly, while Owen Wilson's small-time crook, drawn into a relationship with the thrill-seeking girl of a local property developer, never engages your feelings. Morgan Freeman, Charlie Sheen and Vinnie Jones co-star.

Elmore Leonard’s first modern fiction novel was originally filmed in 1969 with Ryan O’Neal in the starring role. It flopped. This remake (directed by Miami Blues’ George Armitage) fares no better; it drifts aimlessly, while Owen Wilson’s small-time crook, drawn into a relationship with the thrill-seeking girl of a local property developer, never engages your feelings. Morgan Freeman, Charlie Sheen and Vinnie Jones co-star.

Jean Renoir Box Set

From the mid-'30s, the film-makers' film-maker at his peak. Le Crime De Monsieur Lange is a hymn to the rebellious working class. La B...

From the mid-’30s, the film-makers’ film-maker at his peak. Le Crime De Monsieur Lange is a hymn to the rebellious working class. La B

Northfork

The epitome of love-it-or-hate-it cinema, Mark and Michael Polish's surreal account of a mid-'50s Montana town about to be submerged by dam waters has absolutely no hook for the viewer other than sheer admiration for the beauty of the landscape, a gutsy disregard for narrative pacing and the detached Lynchian performances. Proudly unique, nonetheless.

The epitome of love-it-or-hate-it cinema, Mark and Michael Polish’s surreal account of a mid-’50s Montana town about to be submerged by dam waters has absolutely no hook for the viewer other than sheer admiration for the beauty of the landscape, a gutsy disregard for narrative pacing and the detached Lynchian performances. Proudly unique, nonetheless.

Les Enfants Terribles

Cocteau's dissection of the decadence of youth may be an acquired taste, but in 1949 it must have been quite a shocker. Callow siblings Nicole St...

Cocteau’s dissection of the decadence of youth may be an acquired taste, but in 1949 it must have been quite a shocker. Callow siblings Nicole St

Django

RELEASED A YEAR after Sergio Leone created the genre with A Fistful Of Dollars (1965), Django, directed by Leone's onetime assistant Sergio Corbucci, was the movie that saw the spaghetti western explode; a fact borne out by the countless unauthorised sequels it spawned across Europe and beyond (as far as Jamaica, where Perry Henzell's 1973 Rude Boy classic The Harder They Come paid heavy homage). Blue-eyed Franco Nero plays the eponymous mystery gunslinger, wandering in from the filthy wilderness, dragging a coffin behind him, toward a Hellish-looking bordertown. There, private war is being fought between leering Mexican bandidos and Klannish, red-hooded gringos?a conflict Django solves, more or less, by butchering everyone. This cynical slaughterhouse replays elements of Leone's movie?notably the drifter hero caught between rival factions, lifted wholesale from Kurosawa's Yojimbo (1961)?but amplifies them to abstraction. Excess is key: the stylisation is berserk-baroque (Django's coffin contains a huge machine gun, which he fires from the hip); the close-ups zoom closer; the dumb slapstick humour touches on pantomime; the perfectly preposterous music comes crashing in to underline every point. Even the dubbing is more breathtakingly bad than ever before. But it was the stupendous ultraviolence that saw Django banned in several countries (and denied a UK certificate until 1993). In one scene, for instance, a preacher has his ear hacked off, then is made to eat it?a moment that makes Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs tribute seem demure. While Leone leaned increasingly toward opera, Corbucci hankered after the pulpiest, most disreputable comic-book imaginable ?and got there.

RELEASED A YEAR after Sergio Leone created the genre with A Fistful Of Dollars (1965), Django, directed by Leone’s onetime assistant Sergio Corbucci, was the movie that saw the spaghetti western explode; a fact borne out by the countless unauthorised sequels it spawned across Europe and beyond (as far as Jamaica, where Perry Henzell’s 1973 Rude Boy classic The Harder They Come paid heavy homage). Blue-eyed Franco Nero plays the eponymous mystery gunslinger, wandering in from the filthy wilderness, dragging a coffin behind him, toward a Hellish-looking bordertown. There, private war is being fought between leering Mexican bandidos and Klannish, red-hooded gringos?a conflict Django solves, more or less, by butchering everyone. This cynical slaughterhouse replays elements of Leone’s movie?notably the drifter hero caught between rival factions, lifted wholesale from Kurosawa’s Yojimbo (1961)?but amplifies them to abstraction. Excess is key: the stylisation is berserk-baroque (Django’s coffin contains a huge machine gun, which he fires from the hip); the close-ups zoom closer; the dumb slapstick humour touches on pantomime; the perfectly preposterous music comes crashing in to underline every point. Even the dubbing is more breathtakingly bad than ever before.

But it was the stupendous ultraviolence that saw Django banned in several countries (and denied a UK certificate until 1993). In one scene, for instance, a preacher has his ear hacked off, then is made to eat it?a moment that makes Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs tribute seem demure. While Leone leaned increasingly toward opera, Corbucci hankered after the pulpiest, most disreputable comic-book imaginable ?and got there.

21 Grams

Alejandro Gonz...

Alejandro Gonz

Thrill Kill Cult

Miami has a way of bringing out the worst in people, and the very best in crime writers. Think Carl Hiaasen. Think Elmore Leonard. Most definitely think Charles Willeford, inspiration for this cool, cult thriller from 1990. "Did you see the movie Gandhi?" asks an irritatingly persistent Hare Krishna, just before Freddie Frenger Jr breaks his middle finger and sends him into shock. Junior doesn't know it, but he's just killed a man?and he hasn't even got out of Miami airport yet. Guess he never did catch Gandhi. Like Cutter's Way, Deep Cover or Jim McBride's Breathless, George Armitage's movie somehow flew under the cultural radar. You discover these flicks almost on the off-chance, and then can't believe the rest of the world never wanted to know. What makes Miami Blues special? For a start, heroic homicide detective Hoke Moseley (Fred Ward) wears dentures, which is some mark of distinction in this macho genre. His gnashers are promptly stolen, along with his gun, his badge, and his dignity, by the aforementioned Junior (Alec Baldwin), a just-released sociopath who proposes to the first hooker he meets, striking lucky with Jennifer Jason Leigh's nice but dim Susie. She wants the house with the white picket fence, and the movie doesn't laugh at her for it. Waving Hoke's badge around, Junior patrols the streets, ripping off wrongdoers. Then starts to get into the role. He even collars a couple of Miami's most wanted. Alec Baldwin's live-wire performance is a collector's item. His scenes with Leigh have a screwy mix of sincerity and cynicism which keeps the movie percolating. Understated but genuinely sharp, Miami Blues is one cult you may want to consider joining.

Miami has a way of bringing out the worst in people, and the very best in crime writers. Think Carl Hiaasen. Think Elmore Leonard. Most definitely think Charles Willeford, inspiration for this cool, cult thriller from 1990. “Did you see the movie Gandhi?” asks an irritatingly persistent Hare Krishna, just before Freddie Frenger Jr breaks his middle finger and sends him into shock. Junior doesn’t know it, but he’s just killed a man?and he hasn’t even got out of Miami airport yet. Guess he never did catch Gandhi. Like Cutter’s Way, Deep Cover or Jim McBride’s Breathless, George Armitage’s movie somehow flew under the cultural radar. You discover these flicks almost on the off-chance, and then can’t believe the rest of the world never wanted to know. What makes Miami Blues special? For a start, heroic homicide detective Hoke Moseley (Fred Ward) wears dentures, which is some mark of distinction in this macho genre. His gnashers are promptly stolen, along with his gun, his badge, and his dignity, by the aforementioned Junior (Alec Baldwin), a just-released sociopath who proposes to the first hooker he meets, striking lucky with Jennifer Jason Leigh’s nice but dim Susie. She wants the house with the white picket fence, and the movie doesn’t laugh at her for it. Waving Hoke’s badge around, Junior patrols the streets, ripping off wrongdoers. Then starts to get into the role. He even collars a couple of Miami’s most wanted. Alec Baldwin’s live-wire performance is a collector’s item. His scenes with Leigh have a screwy mix of sincerity and cynicism which keeps the movie percolating. Understated but genuinely sharp, Miami Blues is one cult you may want to consider joining.

Billion Dollar Brain

Ken Russell's 1967 movie was the last in the original Harry Palmer trilogy, and it's lunatic great. Retired from MI5 and living on cornflakes as a flea-bitten private eye, Michael Caine's downbeat, kitchen-sink Bond has to deliver some eggs, and deal with a militaristic right-wing Texan oil baron who's planning to destroy Soviet Russia with his computer (the titular brain). Caine is quite brilliantly morose.

Ken Russell’s 1967 movie was the last in the original Harry Palmer trilogy, and it’s lunatic great. Retired from MI5 and living on cornflakes as a flea-bitten private eye, Michael Caine’s downbeat, kitchen-sink Bond has to deliver some eggs, and deal with a militaristic right-wing Texan oil baron who’s planning to destroy Soviet Russia with his computer (the titular brain). Caine is quite brilliantly morose.

Wild River

Every film buff knows Elia Kazan's On The Waterfront and East Of Eden, but his two greatest films are terribly overlooked. In the case of America, America (1963), it's probably because he didn't cast a star. In the case of Wild River (1960), it's almost inexplicable. Montgomery Clift is a government official trying to persuade an old woman she must leave her home before it's flooded. Complex, tender, rich and true, this is a masterpiece, lost and found.

Every film buff knows Elia Kazan’s On The Waterfront and East Of Eden, but his two greatest films are terribly overlooked. In the case of America, America (1963), it’s probably because he didn’t cast a star. In the case of Wild River (1960), it’s almost inexplicable. Montgomery Clift is a government official trying to persuade an old woman she must leave her home before it’s flooded. Complex, tender, rich and true, this is a masterpiece, lost and found.

Buffalo Bill And The Indians

Robert Altman's wry comedy tackles the origins of modern showbiz and media manipulation in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show. Paul Newman plays the legendary 'star' as a bundle of neuroses who more than meets his match when the show is joined by Sitting Bull (Frank Kaquitts)?a man of principles, unimpressed by the razzamatazz. An enjoyable indictment of Hollywood.

Robert Altman’s wry comedy tackles the origins of modern showbiz and media manipulation in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show. Paul Newman plays the legendary ‘star’ as a bundle of neuroses who more than meets his match when the show is joined by Sitting Bull (Frank Kaquitts)?a man of principles, unimpressed by the razzamatazz. An enjoyable indictment of Hollywood.

Women In Love

The simmering sexuality. The blood lust. The savaging of bourgeois restraint. The horse flagellation. Ken Russell and DH Lawrence were made for each other. The nude wrestling scene is the one that everyone remembers, but the satire bites best in the form of Hermione, Eleanor Bron's caricature of avant-garde pretence. Made in 1969, this is probably the last time Russell showed restraint before he hurtled into kitsch overkill.

The simmering sexuality. The blood lust. The savaging of bourgeois restraint. The horse flagellation. Ken Russell and DH Lawrence were made for each other. The nude wrestling scene is the one that everyone remembers, but the satire bites best in the form of Hermione, Eleanor Bron’s caricature of avant-garde pretence. Made in 1969, this is probably the last time Russell showed restraint before he hurtled into kitsch overkill.

Les Dames Du Bois De Boulogne

This dark treasure from 1945 was Robert Bresson's second feature. Scripted by Cocteau, it's erotic longing and revenge, as spurned spider woman Maria Casares seeks the downfall of her ex and his lover. In contrast with the grey, static textures of Bresson's celebrated work, there's near-noirish lustre, but the intriguing, deceptive narrative bareness, the sense of forces moving beneath the surface, are his alone.

This dark treasure from 1945 was Robert Bresson’s second feature. Scripted by Cocteau, it’s erotic longing and revenge, as spurned spider woman Maria Casares seeks the downfall of her ex and his lover. In contrast with the grey, static textures of Bresson’s celebrated work, there’s near-noirish lustre, but the intriguing, deceptive narrative bareness, the sense of forces moving beneath the surface, are his alone.

The Girl Can’t Help It

It wasn't until Frank Tashlin's 1956 screwball comedy, starring Jayne Mansfield at her most buxom, that Hollywood finally exploited the nascent rock'n'roll boom. The result is a Technicolor feast of Gene Vincent, Little Richard and Eddie Cochran in their hip-swivelling prime, rivalled only by Julie London's (literally) haunting shiver through "Cry Me A River". Camp, corny, but classic.

It wasn’t until Frank Tashlin’s 1956 screwball comedy, starring Jayne Mansfield at her most buxom, that Hollywood finally exploited the nascent rock’n’roll boom. The result is a Technicolor feast of Gene Vincent, Little Richard and Eddie Cochran in their hip-swivelling prime, rivalled only by Julie London’s (literally) haunting shiver through “Cry Me A River”. Camp, corny, but classic.

Amarcord

The title translates as "I remember" in dialect, but Fellini's visionary 1973 work (an Oscar winner) wasn't the rosy nostalgia about childhood he'd originally planned. His unique, untethered imagination bleeds into every frame of these '30s-set seaside snapshots, with?of course?sex and religion figuring prominently. Warring parents, twisted priests, Fascists, fantasy, farce and melancholy. As they say, very Fellini.

The title translates as “I remember” in dialect, but Fellini’s visionary 1973 work (an Oscar winner) wasn’t the rosy nostalgia about childhood he’d originally planned. His unique, untethered imagination bleeds into every frame of these ’30s-set seaside snapshots, with?of course?sex and religion figuring prominently. Warring parents, twisted priests, Fascists, fantasy, farce and melancholy. As they say, very Fellini.

1984

With grim, grubby retro-future styling, Michael Radford's movie, originally released in the eponymous year, is the best adaptation of George Orwell's feel-bad totalitarian parable. As reluctant rebel Winston Smith, John Hurt is perfect?looks like he's spent his life in misery. The revelation is Richard Burton, weighed down with strange love, melancholy and menace in his final role as O'Brien, the investigator who takes Hurt under his wing to crush him.

With grim, grubby retro-future styling, Michael Radford’s movie, originally released in the eponymous year, is the best adaptation of George Orwell’s feel-bad totalitarian parable. As reluctant rebel Winston Smith, John Hurt is perfect?looks like he’s spent his life in misery. The revelation is Richard Burton, weighed down with strange love, melancholy and menace in his final role as O’Brien, the investigator who takes Hurt under his wing to crush him.

Orphée

Jean Cocteau's 1949 reworking of the myth of Orpheus (Jean Marais) portrays him as a beat poet torn between his art, his wife (Marie D...

Jean Cocteau’s 1949 reworking of the myth of Orpheus (Jean Marais) portrays him as a beat poet torn between his art, his wife (Marie D

Forty Guns

Sam Fuller once claimed that the point of any opening sequence was to give the viewer an erection. Here we have Barbara Stanwyck in black, on a white stallion at the head of her 40 hired men. As lawman Barry Sullivan exclaims succinctly: "Whoa!" Shot in 11 days, in Cinemascope, this is Fuller firing on all cylinders, taking the '50s pulp western and squeezing more juice out of it than any of his contemporaries.

Sam Fuller once claimed that the point of any opening sequence was to give the viewer an erection. Here we have Barbara Stanwyck in black, on a white stallion at the head of her 40 hired men. As lawman Barry Sullivan exclaims succinctly: “Whoa!” Shot in 11 days, in Cinemascope, this is Fuller firing on all cylinders, taking the ’50s pulp western and squeezing more juice out of it than any of his contemporaries.

La Balance

Great, gritty, noir-ish French thriller from '82, a controversial sensation in its homeland. Writer/director Bob Swain (an American who'd lived in Paris for 20 years) casts Richard Berry as the undercover cop who uses informers to bust pimps. He presses prostitute Nathalie Baye to betray the alpha gangster. The climactic action recalls The French Connection.

Great, gritty, noir-ish French thriller from ’82, a controversial sensation in its homeland. Writer/director Bob Swain (an American who’d lived in Paris for 20 years) casts Richard Berry as the undercover cop who uses informers to bust pimps. He presses prostitute Nathalie Baye to betray the alpha gangster. The climactic action recalls The French Connection.

One From The Art

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Simon & Garfunkel THE M.E.N. ARENA, MANCHESTER Wednesday July 14, 2004 FOR THOSE WHO believe in eternal magic, it's something of a dodgy start. Framed under a single spotlight for "Old Friends/Bookends", Paul'n' Art appear a little nervous. The harmonies sound twitchy, out of focus. Back-up band in tow, "A Hazy Shade Of Winter" doesn't augur well either, its brittle catchiness smothered by a heavy-handed guitar riff. "I Am A Rock" fares better, but then they dovetail perfectly into a glistening "America". And they're away. And how. The Beatles, Dylan and early Beach Boys aside, it's hard to imagine a songbook more indelibly stamped on the collective subconscious than this. Simon's 1965-70 output remains exquisitely timeless. Unlike their aforementioned peers, though, the planet's greatest duo are fully intact, if a little time-ruffled. Now both 62, twiggy Art's features have grown sharper, his hair still akin to candyfloss laying ambush to an egg. Portly Paul looks like a gnomic Lloyd Grossman and recedes from all sides. It's a wonder they're here at all, given their squabbling history. It's one of the greatest losses to pop that Simon & Garfunkel have been unable to fully heal the rift that wrenched them apart during 1970's commercial career-peak, Bridge Over Troubled Water. At times, they've come close. Following 1981's Central Park gig and European tour, they began recording Think Too Much in '83, only to split again midway through (the songs were salvaged for Simon's own Hearts And Bones). Last year's surprise performance at the Grammys, however?picking up a lifetime achievement award?seems to have re-stoked the fire. It's still, you feel, a delicate entente. What's striking tonight is the almost total lack of eye contact. Art appears the more conciliatory, initiating one priceless exchange after explaining how they first met in a school production of Alice In Wonderland. "This is now the 50th anniversary of this friendship I really hold close." When the applause settles, Paul tells how they started recording two years later: "So this is the 48th anniversary of arguing... Anyway, we don't argue any more. We're exhausted." Whatever the motivation, it's irrelevant once they're flowing freely. There's barely time to ponder the amount of levels that 1968's "America" now exists on? Simon's wistful, hitchhike-and-Greyhound search for the lost innocence of his homeland?before "At The Zoo" kicks in, morphing into the irresistible "Baby Driver". Then it's the sweetly plucked reverie of "Kathy's Song", memories of passing the hat in the '60s folk clubs of Blighty, and bringing the house down with: "I gaze beyond the rain-drenched streets/To England, where my heart lies". Suddenly it all makes sense. Why forgo the past when it tastes as tender as this? After a quick blast of 1957's sub-Everlys debut single "Hey Schoolgirl", the real thing appear. Don'n'Phil, the original brothers at war and S&G role models (spiritual guides from the baby-faced blink of early incarnation Tom & Jerry to the preppy subway-cherubs of '60s New York), are up there, impeccably rolling out "Wake Up Little Susie", "All I Have To Do is Dream" and "Let It Be Me" with the soothe and slide of honey. When the headliners join them for "Bye Bye Love", it's impossible not to be awed. Resuming with "Scarborough Fair/Canticle". and "Homeward Bound", they stay in celestial orbit. "The Sound Of Silence" gives way to the quiet explosion of "Mrs Robinson". There's a bruise of regret over "Slip Slidin' Away", which Simon introduces by way of, "This wasn't recorded by Simon & Garfunkel, but it should have been." With Art's luminous voice adding a feathery dimension here, it now seems a blinding oversight. For all the '60s-in-amber nostalgia, though?and yes, it's the grey crowd in tonight?there's a resonance to these songs that lends a gentle poignancy both personal (the autumnal decay of "Leaves That Are Green") and political ("An American Tune", with its visions of the Statue of Liberty "sailing away to sea" in "the age's most uncertain hours"). But it's the hits everyone's here for, and when the hushed piano ushers in "Bridge Over Troubled Water" ?delivered spectacularly by Garfunkel?you're reminded of its uniqueness: a monster jukebox ballad that remains oblivious to time and space, and never fails to move. After its sweeping crescendo, the encore?"Cecilia", "The Boxer", "The 59th Bridge Street Song" included?seems almost anti-climactic. They might be doing this for themselves, as opposed to each other, but no one can sabotage heavenly chemistry. Unforgettable.

Simon & Garfunkel

THE M.E.N. ARENA, MANCHESTER

Wednesday July 14, 2004

FOR THOSE WHO believe in eternal magic, it’s something of a dodgy start. Framed under a single spotlight for “Old Friends/Bookends”, Paul’n’ Art appear a little nervous. The harmonies sound twitchy, out of focus. Back-up band in tow, “A Hazy Shade Of Winter” doesn’t augur well either, its brittle catchiness smothered by a heavy-handed guitar riff. “I Am A Rock” fares better, but then they dovetail perfectly into a glistening “America”. And they’re away. And how.

The Beatles, Dylan and early Beach Boys aside, it’s hard to imagine a songbook more indelibly stamped on the collective subconscious than this. Simon’s 1965-70 output remains exquisitely timeless. Unlike their aforementioned peers, though, the planet’s greatest duo are fully intact, if a little time-ruffled. Now both 62, twiggy Art’s features have grown sharper, his hair still akin to candyfloss laying ambush to an egg. Portly Paul looks like a gnomic Lloyd Grossman and recedes from all sides. It’s a wonder they’re here at all, given their squabbling history. It’s one of the greatest losses to pop that Simon & Garfunkel have been unable to fully heal the rift that wrenched them apart during 1970’s commercial career-peak, Bridge Over Troubled Water. At times, they’ve come close. Following 1981’s Central Park gig and European tour, they began recording Think Too Much in ’83, only to split again midway through (the songs were salvaged for Simon’s own Hearts And Bones). Last year’s surprise performance at the Grammys, however?picking up a lifetime achievement award?seems to have re-stoked the fire. It’s still, you feel, a delicate entente. What’s striking tonight is the almost total lack of eye contact. Art appears the more conciliatory, initiating one priceless exchange after explaining how they first met in a school production of Alice In Wonderland. “This is now the 50th anniversary of this friendship I really hold close.” When the applause settles, Paul tells how they started recording two years later: “So this is the 48th anniversary of arguing… Anyway, we don’t argue any more. We’re exhausted.”

Whatever the motivation, it’s irrelevant once they’re flowing freely. There’s barely time to ponder the amount of levels that 1968’s “America” now exists on? Simon’s wistful, hitchhike-and-Greyhound search for the lost innocence of his homeland?before “At The Zoo” kicks in, morphing into the irresistible “Baby Driver”. Then it’s the sweetly plucked reverie of “Kathy’s Song”, memories of passing the hat in the ’60s folk clubs of Blighty, and bringing the house down with: “I gaze beyond the rain-drenched streets/To England, where my heart lies”. Suddenly it all makes sense. Why forgo the past when it tastes as tender as this?

After a quick blast of 1957’s sub-Everlys debut single “Hey Schoolgirl”, the real thing appear. Don’n’Phil, the original brothers at war and S&G role models (spiritual guides from the baby-faced blink of early incarnation Tom & Jerry to the preppy subway-cherubs of ’60s New York), are up there, impeccably rolling out “Wake Up Little Susie”, “All I Have To Do is Dream” and “Let It Be Me” with the soothe and slide of honey. When the headliners join them for “Bye Bye Love”, it’s impossible not to be awed.

Resuming with “Scarborough Fair/Canticle”. and “Homeward Bound”, they stay in celestial orbit. “The Sound Of Silence” gives way to the quiet explosion of “Mrs Robinson”. There’s a bruise of regret over “Slip Slidin’ Away”, which Simon introduces by way of, “This wasn’t recorded by Simon & Garfunkel, but it should have been.” With Art’s luminous voice adding a feathery dimension here, it now seems a blinding oversight.

For all the ’60s-in-amber nostalgia, though?and yes, it’s the grey crowd in tonight?there’s a resonance to these songs that lends a gentle poignancy both personal (the autumnal decay of “Leaves That Are Green”) and political (“An American Tune”, with its visions of the Statue of Liberty “sailing away to sea” in “the age’s most uncertain hours”). But it’s the hits everyone’s here for, and when the hushed piano ushers in “Bridge Over Troubled Water” ?delivered spectacularly by Garfunkel?you’re reminded of its uniqueness: a monster jukebox ballad that remains oblivious to time and space, and never fails to move. After its sweeping crescendo, the encore?”Cecilia”, “The Boxer”, “The 59th Bridge Street Song” included?seems almost anti-climactic. They might be doing this for themselves, as opposed to each other, but no one can sabotage heavenly chemistry. Unforgettable.