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Classic Monster Collection

A triple bill of iconic horror: Boris Karloff's Frankenstein's monster, Bela Lugosi's Dracula and Lon Chaney Jr's Wolfman. Admittedly creaky, these black-and-white chillers from the '30s and '40s still boast amazing gothic sets, mesmerising atmosphere and some riveting performances. More enchanting than scary, the best of them?James Whale's 1931 Frankenstein?appears here in its uncut form.

A triple bill of iconic horror: Boris Karloff’s Frankenstein’s monster, Bela Lugosi’s Dracula and Lon Chaney Jr’s Wolfman. Admittedly creaky, these black-and-white chillers from the ’30s and ’40s still boast amazing gothic sets, mesmerising atmosphere and some riveting performances. More enchanting than scary, the best of them?James Whale’s 1931 Frankenstein?appears here in its uncut form.

Spartacus: Special Edition

Exhaustive two-disc release of this superlative restored cut of producer/star Kirk Douglas and wunderkind director Stanley Kubrick's epic tale of the legendary slave-turned-rebel-leader. All together now: "I'M SPARTACUS!"

Exhaustive two-disc release of this superlative restored cut of producer/star Kirk Douglas and wunderkind director Stanley Kubrick’s epic tale of the legendary slave-turned-rebel-leader. All together now: “I’M SPARTACUS!”

The Runaway Jury

Possibly the best John Grisham-based flick since The Firm: OK, the rest were lousy, but Gary Fleder rattles this courtroom thriller along with pace and panache, and a stellar cast. Lawyers Dustin Hoffman (anti-guns) and Gene Hackman (pro-his own fat pay cheque) face off as a widow claims damages for her husband's shooting. But jury rigger John Cusack and his moll RachelWeisz are the wild cards. Classy potboiler.

Possibly the best John Grisham-based flick since The Firm: OK, the rest were lousy, but Gary Fleder rattles this courtroom thriller along with pace and panache, and a stellar cast. Lawyers Dustin Hoffman (anti-guns) and Gene Hackman (pro-his own fat pay cheque) face off as a widow claims damages for her husband’s shooting. But jury rigger John Cusack and his moll RachelWeisz are the wild cards. Classy potboiler.

Paycheck

Based on a Philip K Dick short story and directed by John Woo, Paycheck plays like a made-for-TV Minority Report. It boasts a screenplay from, ahem, Dean Georgaris (Tomb Raider 2?nuff said), it stars Ben Affleck and Uma Thurman at their charmless worst, and it's Woo's dullest action-direction in years. No John, slo-mo doesn't make it better!

Based on a Philip K Dick short story and directed by John Woo, Paycheck plays like a made-for-TV Minority Report. It boasts a screenplay from, ahem, Dean Georgaris (Tomb Raider 2?nuff said), it stars Ben Affleck and Uma Thurman at their charmless worst, and it’s Woo’s dullest action-direction in years. No John, slo-mo doesn’t make it better!

Coming Home

The Vietnam war had been over for three years by the time Hal Ashby made Coming Home in 1978. Those who'd survived the combat zones of South-East Asia had returned to find themselves shunned and quarantined, like lepers in their home towns; a living, breathing reminder of a shameful war many back home would rather forget had ever happened. Some of those who came back perhaps wished they'd died out there in the jungles?the paraplegics, the traumatised, forever dreading the nameless, shapeless things that whispered to them in the night. The return of the veterans inspired 'New Hollywood' to explore the home front's reaction to Vietnam, giving rise to a cycle of movies like Taxi Driver (1976), Heroes (1977), Rolling Thunder (1977) and Coming Home. This was Ashby's sixth movie, made on the back of his biopic of protest singer Woody Guthrie, Bound For Glory. Ashby was a freewheeling hippie with a strong anti-establishment streak, and accordingly Coming Home was shot through with a dark cynicism. He cast as his female lead Jane Fonda, a vocal opponent of the war, and peppered the movie's soundtrack with '60s counterculture icons like the Stones, Dylan, Hendrix and Tim Buckley. At one point, Jon Voight says: "I'm not the enemy, the enemy is this war." Ashby's intentions couldn't have been clearer. Fonda's Sally is an army wife, her husband, Bob (Bruce Dern), a Marine captain sent to Vietnam in 1968. In Bob's absence Sally takes a job in the Veterans Hospital in LA, where she meets Luke (Voight), an old high school friend who took a bullet in the back and is now in a wheelchair. Luke's eaten up with rage and bitterness, but Sally's kindness tempers his anger. Sally, meanwhile, the stereotypical homely wife, finds herself questioning her beliefs and falling for Luke. The two embark on an affair. Then Bob comes home. It's almost impossible to find fault with Ashby's film. As a meditation on the effects of war, on the scars it leaves, it's an astonishing work. The leads are uniformly excellent and Voight rails against the establishment with real passion. We need movies like this, now more than ever. Damn shame Ashby's been dead 15 years and there's no one out there willing to take his place.

The Vietnam war had been over for three years by the time Hal Ashby made Coming Home in 1978. Those who’d survived the combat zones of South-East Asia had returned to find themselves shunned and quarantined, like lepers in their home towns; a living, breathing reminder of a shameful war many back home would rather forget had ever happened. Some of those who came back perhaps wished they’d died out there in the jungles?the paraplegics, the traumatised, forever dreading the nameless, shapeless things that whispered to them in the night. The return of the veterans inspired ‘New Hollywood’ to explore the home front’s reaction to Vietnam, giving rise to a cycle of movies like Taxi Driver (1976), Heroes (1977), Rolling Thunder (1977) and Coming Home. This was Ashby’s sixth movie, made on the back of his biopic of protest singer Woody Guthrie, Bound For Glory. Ashby was a freewheeling hippie with a strong anti-establishment streak, and accordingly Coming Home was shot through with a dark cynicism. He cast as his female lead Jane Fonda, a vocal opponent of the war, and peppered the movie’s soundtrack with ’60s counterculture icons like the Stones, Dylan, Hendrix and Tim Buckley. At one point, Jon Voight says: “I’m not the enemy, the enemy is this war.” Ashby’s intentions couldn’t have been clearer.

Fonda’s Sally is an army wife, her husband, Bob (Bruce Dern), a Marine captain sent to Vietnam in 1968. In Bob’s absence Sally takes a job in the Veterans Hospital in LA, where she meets Luke (Voight), an old high school friend who took a bullet in the back and is now in a wheelchair. Luke’s eaten up with rage and bitterness, but Sally’s kindness tempers his anger. Sally, meanwhile, the stereotypical homely wife, finds herself questioning her beliefs and falling for Luke. The two embark on an affair. Then Bob comes home.

It’s almost impossible to find fault with Ashby’s film. As a meditation on the effects of war, on the scars it leaves, it’s an astonishing work. The leads are uniformly excellent and Voight rails against the establishment with real passion. We need movies like this, now more than ever. Damn shame Ashby’s been dead 15 years and there’s no one out there willing to take his place.

American Splendor

Paul Giamatti, a character actor who's embodied a host of losers and creeps, always merited a lead role, and was surely born to play Harvey Pekar, the grumpy but ultimately likeable (not lovable) hospital clerk who finds a means of expression through his comic books/graphic novels. Inspired by friend Robert Crumb (and this is a superior film to the 1994 documentary Crumb), our obsessive-compulsive antihero depicts and ponders the mundane and everyday through his work, and the world and his wife relate. Celebrity, which isn't what it's cracked up to be, ensues. Splicing acted sequences with cartoons and real footage of Pekar and his motley entourage, this unconventional biopic, bristling with indignant intelligence, even tackles Pekar's later illness head on, as his misanthropy (slightly) mellows. Hope Davis is pitch-perfect as Pekar's scatty but forceful wife, and the film brilliantly blends cynical humour with justified pathos. Splendid.

Paul Giamatti, a character actor who’s embodied a host of losers and creeps, always merited a lead role, and was surely born to play Harvey Pekar, the grumpy but ultimately likeable (not lovable) hospital clerk who finds a means of expression through his comic books/graphic novels. Inspired by friend Robert Crumb (and this is a superior film to the 1994 documentary Crumb), our obsessive-compulsive antihero depicts and ponders the mundane and everyday through his work, and the world and his wife relate. Celebrity, which isn’t what it’s cracked up to be, ensues.

Splicing acted sequences with cartoons and real footage of Pekar and his motley entourage, this unconventional biopic, bristling with indignant intelligence, even tackles Pekar’s later illness head on, as his misanthropy (slightly) mellows. Hope Davis is pitch-perfect as Pekar’s scatty but forceful wife, and the film brilliantly blends cynical humour with justified pathos. Splendid.

Nevada Smith

Henry Hathaway's Nevada Smith takes one of the characters from Harold Robbins' Hollywood potboiler The Carpetbaggers (filmed by Edward Dmytryk two years earlier, with Alan Ladd in the role) and wraps an entire movie round him. Steve McQueen stars as the young Smith, a half-breed cowboy hellbent on tracking down his parents' killers. Beautifully shot by Lucien Ballard, McQueen is as quietly hypnotic as ever.

Henry Hathaway’s Nevada Smith takes one of the characters from Harold Robbins’ Hollywood potboiler The Carpetbaggers (filmed by Edward Dmytryk two years earlier, with Alan Ladd in the role) and wraps an entire movie round him. Steve McQueen stars as the young Smith, a half-breed cowboy hellbent on tracking down his parents’ killers. Beautifully shot by Lucien Ballard, McQueen is as quietly hypnotic as ever.

Roger Dodger

One of the most gratifying indie dark horses of last year, with writer/director Dylan Kidd giving Campbell Scott the role of a lifetime. As ageing Lothario Roger, getting bitter as he realises his sleazy charms are fading, Scott is dynamic, demanding no sympathy as he educates and corrupts his eager-to-learn-the-ropes nephew. Jennifer Beals and Elizabeth Berkley turn their noses up. Honest to a fault.

One of the most gratifying indie dark horses of last year, with writer/director Dylan Kidd giving Campbell Scott the role of a lifetime. As ageing Lothario Roger, getting bitter as he realises his sleazy charms are fading, Scott is dynamic, demanding no sympathy as he educates and corrupts his eager-to-learn-the-ropes nephew. Jennifer Beals and Elizabeth Berkley turn their noses up. Honest to a fault.

The Eagle Has Landed

This 1976 adaptation of Jack Higgins' best-selling WWII novel was a fitting late-'70s swan song for John Sturges. Michael Caine leads a band of principled, Nazi-hating German commandos off to invade Blighty on the sly. Robert Duvall, Donald Sutherland, Jenny Agutter and Donald Pleasance join the action.

This 1976 adaptation of Jack Higgins’ best-selling WWII novel was a fitting late-’70s swan song for John Sturges. Michael Caine leads a band of principled, Nazi-hating German commandos off to invade Blighty on the sly. Robert Duvall, Donald Sutherland, Jenny Agutter and Donald Pleasance join the action.

Hud

Paul Newman, all Texan swagger and mesmerising Marlboro sneers, completely redefines the concept of 'iconic' as the eponymous heavy-drinking, skirt-chasing, joy-riding cattleman and self-declared "cold-blooded bastard" in Martin Ritt's 1962 classic. Able support comes from sultry Patricia Neal, suitably green Brandon DeWilde (Shane) and James Wong Howe's perfect black-and-white cinematography.

Paul Newman, all Texan swagger and mesmerising Marlboro sneers, completely redefines the concept of ‘iconic’ as the eponymous heavy-drinking, skirt-chasing, joy-riding cattleman and self-declared “cold-blooded bastard” in Martin Ritt’s 1962 classic. Able support comes from sultry Patricia Neal, suitably green Brandon DeWilde (Shane) and James Wong Howe’s perfect black-and-white cinematography.

To Sleep With Anger

A superb lyrical antidote to the countless guns-and-gangs depictions of life in the black communities of LA, Charles Burnett directs Danny Glover as Harry Mention, a man who stirs up past tensions when he comes to visit old family friends. With an excellent blues, gospel and jazz soundtrack to boot.

A superb lyrical antidote to the countless guns-and-gangs depictions of life in the black communities of LA, Charles Burnett directs Danny Glover as Harry Mention, a man who stirs up past tensions when he comes to visit old family friends. With an excellent blues, gospel and jazz soundtrack to boot.

Taps

Harold Becker's tale of US Military School cadets squaring up against greedy property developers stars Timothy Hutton and a youthful Sean Penn and Tom Cruise. It's a faintly ludicrous story that works thanks to Becker's understated direction and three strong leading performances, made all the more interesting when you consider that a post-breakthrough Penn and Cruise would have been cast the other way round. Here, Cruise is the hothead and Penn the conscience-stricken man of reason.

Harold Becker’s tale of US Military School cadets squaring up against greedy property developers stars Timothy Hutton and a youthful Sean Penn and Tom Cruise. It’s a faintly ludicrous story that works thanks to Becker’s understated direction and three strong leading performances, made all the more interesting when you consider that a post-breakthrough Penn and Cruise would have been cast the other way round. Here, Cruise is the hothead and Penn the conscience-stricken man of reason.

Tommy: The Collector’s Edition

Ken Russell's 1975 adaptation of The Who's rock opera cast Roger Daltrey as the deaf, dumb and blind boy who finds enlightenment, but downplayed the mysticism in favour of addled Freudian guff. It's a real mish-mash, with some truly embarrassing moments (Paul Nicholas, for one), but is redeemed by the performances of Ann-Margret and Oliver Reed, interesting cameos from Elton John and Tina Turner, and a stylish sense of design.

Ken Russell’s 1975 adaptation of The Who’s rock opera cast Roger Daltrey as the deaf, dumb and blind boy who finds enlightenment, but downplayed the mysticism in favour of addled Freudian guff. It’s a real mish-mash, with some truly embarrassing moments (Paul Nicholas, for one), but is redeemed by the performances of Ann-Margret and Oliver Reed, interesting cameos from Elton John and Tina Turner, and a stylish sense of design.

Year Of The Dragon

Considering the testosterone on display both in front of and behind the camera (Mickey Rourke stars, Michael Cimino directs, screenplay by Oliver Stone), this 1985 cop thriller, with Rourke's decorated Viet Vet turned NYPD cop taking on the Triads in Chinatown, is nowhere near as deranged as you'd hope. The two set pieces?a gun battle in a Chinese restaurant and the final shoot-out?barely compensate for a disappointingly muted feel.

Considering the testosterone on display both in front of and behind the camera (Mickey Rourke stars, Michael Cimino directs, screenplay by Oliver Stone), this 1985 cop thriller, with Rourke’s decorated Viet Vet turned NYPD cop taking on the Triads in Chinatown, is nowhere near as deranged as you’d hope. The two set pieces?a gun battle in a Chinese restaurant and the final shoot-out?barely compensate for a disappointingly muted feel.

Halls Of Montezuma

Tense and grim war manoeuvres from director Lewis Milestone. Richard Widmark brings hints of mania to his portrayal of a Marine lieutenant leading his troops into enemy territory, scouring a battered Pacific island for prisoners who can reveal the whereabouts of a Japanese rocket base. Plagued by migraines, Widmark is a tough guy, but constantly in touch with fear he tries to mask from his men, among them the more fully neurotic Jack Palance.

Tense and grim war manoeuvres from director Lewis Milestone. Richard Widmark brings hints of mania to his portrayal of a Marine lieutenant leading his troops into enemy territory, scouring a battered Pacific island for prisoners who can reveal the whereabouts of a Japanese rocket base. Plagued by migraines, Widmark is a tough guy, but constantly in touch with fear he tries to mask from his men, among them the more fully neurotic Jack Palance.

Unfaithfully Yours

Impeccable 1948 Hollywood swan song from Preston Sturges detailing the destructive effect of marital infidelity on suave millionaire Rex Harrison (brilliantly unhinged). Naturally, there's polished badinage, snappy one-liners and physical comedy aplenty. But it's also curiously dark and modern?see Harrison mutilating his wife with a cut-throat razor, and forcing her to play Russian roulette.

Impeccable 1948 Hollywood swan song from Preston Sturges detailing the destructive effect of marital infidelity on suave millionaire Rex Harrison (brilliantly unhinged). Naturally, there’s polished badinage, snappy one-liners and physical comedy aplenty. But it’s also curiously dark and modern?see Harrison mutilating his wife with a cut-throat razor, and forcing her to play Russian roulette.

Reservoir Dogs: Special Edition

Timely reminder, in the midst of all the Kill Bill hyperbole, of true balls-to-the-wall Tarantino talent?that sickly mint-green warehouse, those black suits, that red blood, the infectious music, the terrifying Hawksian machismo and, mostly, that dialogue: witty and crude, poignant and allusive, naturalistic and downright poetic. Nothing less than genius.

Timely reminder, in the midst of all the Kill Bill hyperbole, of true balls-to-the-wall Tarantino talent?that sickly mint-green warehouse, those black suits, that red blood, the infectious music, the terrifying Hawksian machismo and, mostly, that dialogue: witty and crude, poignant and allusive, naturalistic and downright poetic. Nothing less than genius.

Bullet The Blue Sky

Kevin Costner directs this handsome, old-fashioned western?in which he also stars alongside Robert Duvall?with genuine affection for the great traditions of a once-glorious movie genre, now largely ignored by Hollywood. The film deals with classic western themes?stubborn men in changing times, unable to adapt, unwilling to recognise their days are numbered, the frontier closing around them, the country being 'civilised', the West 'tamed', corrupt and vicious landowners running vast tracts of the land like private republics, fiefdoms policed by corrupt lawmen and hired guns. In Open Range, Costner and Robert Duvall are ageing cowpokes Boss Spearman and Charley Waite, "freegrazers", men who for years have roamed the prairies with their small herds of cattle and ponies, living off the plentiful land. Unfortunately, the land in question is increasingly owned by malignant ranchers like Michael Gambon's ruthless Denton Baxter, a man of demonic temperament much given to violence, intimidation and murder. When Baxter's feral regulators make the grim mistake of shooting up Boss and Charley's camp, in the process killing Charley's dog, Boss and Charley do what they have to do?which in this typical instance means killing everyone who stands against them, whatever the fucking odds. Cue a protracted gunfight that would, I'm sure, bring approving nods from Hill and Peckinpah, past masters at this kind of unilateral bloody mayhem.

Kevin Costner directs this handsome, old-fashioned western?in which he also stars alongside Robert Duvall?with genuine affection for the great traditions of a once-glorious movie genre, now largely ignored by Hollywood. The film deals with classic western themes?stubborn men in changing times, unable to adapt, unwilling to recognise their days are numbered, the frontier closing around them, the country being ‘civilised’, the West ‘tamed’, corrupt and vicious landowners running vast tracts of the land like private republics, fiefdoms policed by corrupt lawmen and hired guns.

In Open Range, Costner and Robert Duvall are ageing cowpokes Boss Spearman and Charley Waite, “freegrazers”, men who for years have roamed the prairies with their small herds of cattle and ponies, living off the plentiful land. Unfortunately, the land in question is increasingly owned by malignant ranchers like Michael Gambon’s ruthless Denton Baxter, a man of demonic temperament much given to violence, intimidation and murder.

When Baxter’s feral regulators make the grim mistake of shooting up Boss and Charley’s camp, in the process killing Charley’s dog, Boss and Charley do what they have to do?which in this typical instance means killing everyone who stands against them, whatever the fucking odds. Cue a protracted gunfight that would, I’m sure, bring approving nods from Hill and Peckinpah, past masters at this kind of unilateral bloody mayhem.

Le Chignon D’Olga

A debut from 24-year-old J...

A debut from 24-year-old J

Great Eastern

Has anyone done baffled disenchantment and bone-weary melancholy as brilliantly as Bill Murray in Sofia Coppola's achingly beautiful, wonderfully droll and dreamily sad Lost In Translation? Murray is Bob Harris, a Hollywood film star, in Tokyo to shoot a whiskey commercial. When we first meet him, he's just arrived in Japan. He seems smirking, flippant, a condescending prick. We soon discover, however, that Bob's world is a diminished place. He's lonely, adrift: his movie career is faltering, the parts not coming to him like they used to, and his marriage is becalmed?his wife someone he no longer knows well enough to talk to, prone to faxing him carpet samples for an opinion she's not really interested in. Unable to sleep, Bob spends the dismal early hours in the hotel bar where he meets Scarlett Johansson's Charlotte?much younger, newly married, but similarly lost, abandoned to restless introspection by her husband, a celebrity photographer, here on an exotic assignment from which she is entirely excluded. Bob and Charlotte are drawn together by loneliness, boredom, a sense of futility, a need for uncomplicated affection, the attention of someone who cares. Anyone with a taste only for the noise and commotion of most modern movies will probably be somewhat puzzled by what happens next, because nothing really does. Which isn't the same thing as saying Lost In Translation is uneventful. In fact, it's packed with incident?and a lot of its scenes have become classics of their kind for the film's fans: Bob's growing bewilderment during the filming of the whiskey ad, a karaoke party where Murray sings Nick Lowe's "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding" and Roxy Music's "More Than This" and Johansson vamps to The Pretenders' "Brass In Pocket", Bob waiting for Charlotte in a hospital waiting room, Bob battling with an exercise machine. Coppola's screenplay doesn't have to be explicit about Bob's jaded desperation. It's all in Murray's face, the crumpled sag and hanging droop of sallow skin, the somnambulant stare, the wistful gaze: the sense of something missing in his life that he's beginning to feel nothing now will fill. It's a magnificent performance that doesn't seem like acting at all?which is probably why this year's Oscar for Best Actor went to Sean Penn for his noisy turn in Mystic River?and is one of many reasons to cherish this extraordinary film.

Has anyone done baffled disenchantment and bone-weary melancholy as brilliantly as Bill Murray in Sofia Coppola’s achingly beautiful, wonderfully droll and dreamily sad Lost In Translation?

Murray is Bob Harris, a Hollywood film star, in Tokyo to shoot a whiskey commercial. When we first meet him, he’s just arrived in Japan. He seems smirking, flippant, a condescending prick. We soon discover, however, that Bob’s world is a diminished place. He’s lonely, adrift: his movie career is faltering, the parts not coming to him like they used to, and his marriage is becalmed?his wife someone he no longer knows well enough to talk to, prone to faxing him carpet samples for an opinion she’s not really interested in.

Unable to sleep, Bob spends the dismal early hours in the hotel bar where he meets Scarlett Johansson’s Charlotte?much younger, newly married, but similarly lost, abandoned to restless introspection by her husband, a celebrity photographer, here on an exotic assignment from which she is entirely excluded.

Bob and Charlotte are drawn together by loneliness, boredom, a sense of futility, a need for uncomplicated affection, the attention of someone who cares.

Anyone with a taste only for the noise and commotion of most modern movies will probably be somewhat puzzled by what happens next, because nothing really does. Which isn’t the same thing as saying Lost In Translation is uneventful. In fact, it’s packed with incident?and a lot of its scenes have become classics of their kind for the film’s fans: Bob’s growing bewilderment during the filming of the whiskey ad, a karaoke party where Murray sings Nick Lowe’s “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding” and Roxy Music’s “More Than This” and Johansson vamps to The Pretenders’ “Brass In Pocket”, Bob waiting for Charlotte in a hospital waiting room, Bob battling with an exercise machine.

Coppola’s screenplay doesn’t have to be explicit about Bob’s jaded desperation. It’s all in Murray’s face, the crumpled sag and hanging droop of sallow skin, the somnambulant stare, the wistful gaze: the sense of something missing in his life that he’s beginning to feel nothing now will fill. It’s a magnificent performance that doesn’t seem like acting at all?which is probably why this year’s Oscar for Best Actor went to Sean Penn for his noisy turn in Mystic River?and is one of many reasons to cherish this extraordinary film.