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Spirit Of ’64

A fine British example of the kind of '60s gothic thriller more commonly associated with post-war Hollywood (Sunset Boulevard, Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?), this finds Richard Attenborough creepily convincing as the weak-willed husband of deluded clairvoyant Kim Stanley, cajoled into abducting a child in a preposterous scheme to legitimise her supernatural abilities. First released in 1964, Bryan Forbes' psycho-drama remains a powerful and all too believable morality tale (disturbing echoes of the Moors and Soham murders), irredeemably chilling in its splendidly unhinged John Barry score and the terrifying on-screen insanity of Stanley herself. Others in Carlton's crop of '60s Brit-flicks include All Night Long, Victim, Hell Drivers and The League Of Gentlemen (that's the brilliant Jack Hawkins heist comedy?nowt to do with Royston Vasey).

A fine British example of the kind of ’60s gothic thriller more commonly associated with post-war Hollywood (Sunset Boulevard, Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?), this finds Richard Attenborough creepily convincing as the weak-willed husband of deluded clairvoyant Kim Stanley, cajoled into abducting a child in a preposterous scheme to legitimise her supernatural abilities.

First released in 1964, Bryan Forbes’ psycho-drama remains a powerful and all too believable morality tale (disturbing echoes of the Moors and Soham murders), irredeemably chilling in its splendidly unhinged John Barry score and the terrifying on-screen insanity of Stanley herself. Others in Carlton’s crop of ’60s Brit-flicks include All Night Long, Victim, Hell Drivers and The League Of Gentlemen (that’s the brilliant Jack Hawkins heist comedy?nowt to do with Royston Vasey).

Ripley’s Game

Amazing how rapidly John Malkovich has plummeted from exquisite art-house bloom to a kind of Graham Norton version of Donald Pleasance, but his teetering vanity is quite well suited to Liliana Cavani's absurd yarn. This time, Ripley is pseuding it up among the renaissance treasures of Italy's Veneto region, and takes his revenge on tactless English picture-framer Dougray Scott by turning him into a reluctant serial killer. Diverting but hugely forgettable.

Amazing how rapidly John Malkovich has plummeted from exquisite art-house bloom to a kind of Graham Norton version of Donald Pleasance, but his teetering vanity is quite well suited to Liliana Cavani’s absurd yarn. This time, Ripley is pseuding it up among the renaissance treasures of Italy’s Veneto region, and takes his revenge on tactless English picture-framer Dougray Scott by turning him into a reluctant serial killer. Diverting but hugely forgettable.

Daisy Miller

One of the turkeys which derailed Peter Bogdanovich's career. Hubris-fuelled on the back of runaway success, he cast other half Cybill Shepherd as the Henry James heroine who flits around 19th-century Europe falling in love and dying. The costumes are fine, but there's no feel for what was anyway a mediocre James story, and no momentum. Cybill's a fish out of water. A pretty folly.

One of the turkeys which derailed Peter Bogdanovich’s career. Hubris-fuelled on the back of runaway success, he cast other half Cybill Shepherd as the Henry James heroine who flits around 19th-century Europe falling in love and dying. The costumes are fine, but there’s no feel for what was anyway a mediocre James story, and no momentum. Cybill’s a fish out of water. A pretty folly.

A Good Marriage

Eric Rohmer's 1981 movie stars B...

Eric Rohmer’s 1981 movie stars B

The End Of Summer

A Kyoto skyscraper is contrasted with a crematorium chimney, gravestones abound, as do sinister black crows. And yet despite the lugubrious undertow of this, Yasujiro Ozu's penultimate movie (made two years before his death), there's a warmth to the tale of the Kohayagawa family, their ailing business and their eccentric patriarch that somehow transforms post-war angst into sublime acceptance.

A Kyoto skyscraper is contrasted with a crematorium chimney, gravestones abound, as do sinister black crows. And yet despite the lugubrious undertow of this, Yasujiro Ozu’s penultimate movie (made two years before his death), there’s a warmth to the tale of the Kohayagawa family, their ailing business and their eccentric patriarch that somehow transforms post-war angst into sublime acceptance.

Blood Shot

Walter Hill's astonishing, hallucinatory western was a box office disaster on its release in 1995. Tragically so, because this account of the life and death of James Butler Hickok, legendary army scout, sometimes lawman, gambler and gunfighter, is one of the best American movies of the '90s?a film about myth and legend: history as half-truth, lies and exaggeration. Brilliantly played by a bewhiskered, cantankerous Jeff Bridges, this Wild Bill is an elemental force, running out of time. In a series of tremendously violent flashbacks, Hill shows us Bill in his gunfighter pomp?ferocious, terrifyingly intransigent. However, by the time he gets to the teeming hell of Deadwood, where he will die, Bill's weary of everything, especially what he's become. He's 39, going blind, lost in ominous opium dreams, waiting for someone to fill his boots with blood. The film's last scenes assume a grim, desolate absurdity, the conclusion to a long-running joke provoking the kind of point-blank shoot-out Hill does better than anyone.

Walter Hill’s astonishing, hallucinatory western was a box office disaster on its release in 1995. Tragically so, because this account of the life and death of James Butler Hickok, legendary army scout, sometimes lawman, gambler and gunfighter, is one of the best American movies of the ’90s?a film about myth and legend: history as half-truth, lies and exaggeration.

Brilliantly played by a bewhiskered, cantankerous Jeff Bridges, this Wild Bill is an elemental force, running out of time. In a series of tremendously violent flashbacks, Hill shows us Bill in his gunfighter pomp?ferocious, terrifyingly intransigent. However, by the time he gets to the teeming hell of Deadwood, where he will die, Bill’s weary of everything, especially what he’s become. He’s 39, going blind, lost in ominous opium dreams, waiting for someone to fill his boots with blood. The film’s last scenes assume a grim, desolate absurdity, the conclusion to a long-running joke provoking the kind of point-blank shoot-out Hill does better than anyone.

Liebestraum

Possibly Mike Figgis' least-known film, this moody 1991 erotic mystery is like Stormy Monday set in Binghamton, NY. A writer visits his dying mother and uncovers secrets about a 30-year-old murder while shagging his friend's wife. It looks sexy, but the moodiness leads to tedium, and Kim Novak's heinously wasted.

Possibly Mike Figgis’ least-known film, this moody 1991 erotic mystery is like Stormy Monday set in Binghamton, NY. A writer visits his dying mother and uncovers secrets about a 30-year-old murder while shagging his friend’s wife. It looks sexy, but the moodiness leads to tedium, and Kim Novak’s heinously wasted.

Max

Munich, 1918, where (fictional) art dealer Max Rothman (John Cusack) befriends and encourages the young artist Adolf Hitler (Noah Taylor). But Max is Jewish... Even if the overall results are a bit glib and predictable, both of the central performances are terrific?especially Taylor, whose Hitler is a creepily believable human being.

Munich, 1918, where (fictional) art dealer Max Rothman (John Cusack) befriends and encourages the young artist Adolf Hitler (Noah Taylor). But Max is Jewish… Even if the overall results are a bit glib and predictable, both of the central performances are terrific?especially Taylor, whose Hitler is a creepily believable human being.

The Four Feathers

Shekhar Kapur directed this third version of AEW Mason's regimental romance about the Sudanese war. Unfortunately, his ambitions to turn it into a critique of British imperialism are drowned under James Horner's glutinous score and colourless performances from the vapid Heath Ledger and chums. Notable exception?Djimon Hounsou, as the noble nomad who saves our brave English boys from a fiery desert hell. There's also one great battle scene.

Shekhar Kapur directed this third version of AEW Mason’s regimental romance about the Sudanese war. Unfortunately, his ambitions to turn it into a critique of British imperialism are drowned under James Horner’s glutinous score and colourless performances from the vapid Heath Ledger and chums. Notable exception?Djimon Hounsou, as the noble nomad who saves our brave English boys from a fiery desert hell. There’s also one great battle scene.

In The Cut

Dour, long-winded erotic thriller, directed by Jane Campion like her favourite recent films have all been made by Joel Schumacher. Meg Ryan, apparently auditioning for a re-make of Klute, is the New York teacher shagging Mark Ruffalo's homicide cop who she begins to suspect is a serial killer. Bollocks, frankly.

Dour, long-winded erotic thriller, directed by Jane Campion like her favourite recent films have all been made by Joel Schumacher. Meg Ryan, apparently auditioning for a re-make of Klute, is the New York teacher shagging Mark Ruffalo’s homicide cop who she begins to suspect is a serial killer. Bollocks, frankly.

La Lore

The '70s stranglehold on 21st-century pop culture continues. If it's not fashion-victim bands like Jet and Kings Of Leon, it's Ice Storm/Boogie Nights-style movies set in the last decade, before corporate consolidation truly homogenised popular art. Welcome back, then, to actual '70s cinema?of the offbeat and maverick kind, naturally. Itself nostalgic for an earlier time?the '40s of Raymond Chandler's noir LA?Robert Altman's The Long Goodbye transposed the false paradise of that novel to the scuzzy, flared decadence of the year in which it was made: 1972. In The Long Goodbye, sylph-like hippie chicks disrobe in the Hollywood hillside apartment opposite private dick Philip Marlowe's own abode. A vicious Jewish gangster looks like a cross between Frankie Valli and Mickie Most. Marlowe's buddy, Terry Lennox, resembles an Owen Wilson version of Dennis Wilson. Here the rich and indolent fritter their lives away in the Malibu Colony. Women waft about in gauzy chiffon blouses. There's chicken Kiev for dinner, and Grand-Marnier afterwards. It's Steely Dan's world, these characters just live in it. The Long Goodbye, made in an era when not all leading Hollywood men had to be buff action-hero goyim, isn't exactly Chinatown (1974). Roman Polanski's film looks as seductive and troubling as it ever was, whereas Goodbye is just a touch quaint now. Some of that has to do with Chandler himself, whose LA novels have dated less well than those of, say, Ross MacDonald. (Sadly, no one as yet has managed to translate MacDonald, a hero of the late Warren Zevon, to the screen with anything that approaches his psychological complexity.) Still Altman, with M*A*S*H and McCabe And Mrs Miller behind him, creates a beguiling mood for The Long Goodbye?and genuine suspense. We don't desperately care about any of these people?Marlowe included?but there's a shimmering southern-Californian vibe to the film that vaguely mesmerises. A mix of comedy and creepiness, Leigh Brackett's screenplay is unsophisticated next to the psychopathic retro-noir of Ellroy and LA Confidential. Elliott Gould plays an unshaven, unheroic Marlowe?picture a Jewish Tom Waits?who's unravelling the threads that connect his fugitive friend Lennox to the shrill, ruthless mobster (Mark Rydell) as well as to a huge, Hemingway-esque drunk (Sterling Hayden) and his lissome Brit-blonde spouse (Nina Van Pallandt). Not to mention sinister little Henry Gibson, subsequently a star of Altman's Nashville and here playing a puffed-up quack whose relationship to Hayden's dipso novelist is scarily redolent of Dr Eugene Landy's to Brian Wilson. The Long Goodbye has some fine montages and thematic repetitions. We see Gould on the beach, reflected in the window as Hayden rages impotently at Van Pallandt?the Patsy Kensit of her time. Later, at night, we see Gould and Van Pallandt in the same window as Hayden?a barking Nick Nolte in thrall to his own bogus machismo?strides suicidally into the dark crashing waves. The moment where Hayden's Doberman emerges from the surf with his master's walking stick is still dramatic and moving. The movie also packs the predictable twist that we're inured to these days. Again, it's hardly on a par with Coppola's The Conversation, but I remember being satisfyingly shocked by the ending when I first saw the film. There are shades of Peckinpah's Bring Me The Head Of Alfredo Garcia in the closing scenes in Mexico. Twenty years later, back from his wilderness years, Altman took a more sprawling look at LA in the epic Short Cuts. At its heart, one could feel the presence of the earlier, more compact film. The reputation of Altman's '70s oeuvre has dwindled a little, but The Long Goodbye is worth more than a nodding acquaintance.

The ’70s stranglehold on 21st-century pop culture continues. If it’s not fashion-victim bands like Jet and Kings Of Leon, it’s Ice Storm/Boogie Nights-style movies set in the last decade, before corporate consolidation truly homogenised popular art. Welcome back, then, to actual ’70s cinema?of the offbeat and maverick kind, naturally.

Itself nostalgic for an earlier time?the ’40s of Raymond Chandler’s noir LA?Robert Altman’s The Long Goodbye transposed the false paradise of that novel to the scuzzy, flared decadence of the year in which it was made: 1972.

In The Long Goodbye, sylph-like hippie chicks disrobe in the Hollywood hillside apartment opposite private dick Philip Marlowe’s own abode. A vicious Jewish gangster looks like a cross between Frankie Valli and Mickie Most. Marlowe’s buddy, Terry Lennox, resembles an Owen Wilson version of Dennis Wilson.

Here the rich and indolent fritter their lives away in the Malibu Colony. Women waft about in gauzy chiffon blouses. There’s chicken Kiev for dinner, and Grand-Marnier afterwards. It’s Steely Dan’s world, these characters just live in it.

The Long Goodbye, made in an era when not all leading Hollywood men had to be buff action-hero goyim, isn’t exactly Chinatown (1974). Roman Polanski’s film looks as seductive and troubling as it ever was, whereas Goodbye is just a touch quaint now. Some of that has to do with Chandler himself, whose LA novels have dated less well than those of, say, Ross MacDonald. (Sadly, no one as yet has managed to translate MacDonald, a hero of the late Warren Zevon, to the screen with anything that approaches his psychological complexity.)

Still Altman, with M*A*S*H and McCabe And Mrs Miller behind him, creates a beguiling mood for The Long Goodbye?and genuine suspense. We don’t desperately care about any of these people?Marlowe included?but there’s a shimmering southern-Californian vibe to the film that vaguely mesmerises.

A mix of comedy and creepiness, Leigh Brackett’s screenplay is unsophisticated next to the psychopathic retro-noir of Ellroy and LA Confidential. Elliott Gould plays an unshaven, unheroic Marlowe?picture a Jewish Tom Waits?who’s unravelling the threads that connect his fugitive friend Lennox to the shrill, ruthless mobster (Mark Rydell) as well as to a huge, Hemingway-esque drunk (Sterling Hayden) and his lissome Brit-blonde spouse (Nina Van Pallandt).

Not to mention sinister little Henry Gibson, subsequently a star of Altman’s Nashville and here playing a puffed-up quack whose relationship to Hayden’s dipso novelist is scarily redolent of Dr Eugene Landy’s to Brian Wilson.

The Long Goodbye has some fine montages and thematic repetitions. We see Gould on the beach, reflected in the window as Hayden rages impotently at Van Pallandt?the Patsy Kensit of her time. Later, at night, we see Gould and Van Pallandt in the same window as Hayden?a barking Nick Nolte in thrall to his own bogus machismo?strides suicidally into the dark crashing waves. The moment where Hayden’s Doberman emerges from the surf with his master’s walking stick is still dramatic and moving.

The movie also packs the predictable twist that we’re inured to these days. Again, it’s hardly on a par with Coppola’s The Conversation, but I remember being satisfyingly shocked by the ending when I first saw the film. There are shades of Peckinpah’s Bring Me The Head Of Alfredo Garcia in the closing scenes in Mexico.

Twenty years later, back from his wilderness years, Altman took a more sprawling look at LA in the epic Short Cuts. At its heart, one could feel the presence of the earlier, more compact film.

The reputation of Altman’s ’70s oeuvre has dwindled a little, but The Long Goodbye is worth more than a nodding acquaintance.

Lynyrd Skynyrd – Lyve: The Vicious Cycle Tour

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

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

The Old Grey Whistle Test: Volume 3

Another random trawl through the Whistle Test archives proves perhaps just too random?it's unlikely fans of Half Man Half Biscuit (their 1986 TV debut) or The Jam ('78's "'A' Bomb...") will be tempted by strange bedfellows like Supertramp and Chris Rea. So something for everyone but far too diverse a range to fully satisfy any camp.

Another random trawl through the Whistle Test archives proves perhaps just too random?it’s unlikely fans of Half Man Half Biscuit (their 1986 TV debut) or The Jam (’78’s “‘A’ Bomb…”) will be tempted by strange bedfellows like Supertramp and Chris Rea. So something for everyone but far too diverse a range to fully satisfy any camp.

Jacques Brel – Comme Quand On Etait Beau

It's too much to digest in one sitting?three discs, seven hours and almost 100 songs, released in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of Jacques Brel's death. But it's fascinating to watch him turn so rapidly from the hesitant, gauche performer of the late-'50s into the charismatic equivalent of a Gallic Sinatra.

It’s too much to digest in one sitting?three discs, seven hours and almost 100 songs, released in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of Jacques Brel’s death. But it’s fascinating to watch him turn so rapidly from the hesitant, gauche performer of the late-’50s into the charismatic equivalent of a Gallic Sinatra.

OutKast – The Videos

Andre 3000 and Big Boi's early clips are superior but fairly routine 'hood dramas, all booty calls and gaudy pimpmobiles. But around their ATLiens album, the day-glo psychedelic X Files wig-outs begin creeping in, reaching a peak in the sexofunkatronic freakerama of "Bombs Over Baghdad". Also lushly cinematic is the stormy Deep South pastoral of "Ms Jackson" and, of course, the multiple Andres of last year's super-catchy retro-futurist soul fantasia "Hey Ya". Pure pop genius.

Andre 3000 and Big Boi’s early clips are superior but fairly routine ‘hood dramas, all booty calls and gaudy pimpmobiles. But around their ATLiens album, the day-glo psychedelic X Files wig-outs begin creeping in, reaching a peak in the sexofunkatronic freakerama of “Bombs Over Baghdad”. Also lushly cinematic is the stormy Deep South pastoral of “Ms Jackson” and, of course, the multiple Andres of last year’s super-catchy retro-futurist soul fantasia “Hey Ya”. Pure pop genius.

American Folk Blues Festival 1962-66 Volumes One & Two

For years, it was believed that no footage survived of the pioneering American Folk Blues Festival tours of Europe in the early '60s. Now a vast cache of performances has miraculously turned up by the likes of John Lee Hooker, Sonny Boy Williamson, Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf. Magic moments, every one.

For years, it was believed that no footage survived of the pioneering American Folk Blues Festival tours of Europe in the early ’60s. Now a vast cache of performances has miraculously turned up by the likes of John Lee Hooker, Sonny Boy Williamson, Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf. Magic moments, every one.

Dave Gahan – Live Monsters

Shot last July at Paris' Olympia theatre, Dave Gahan's stripped-down solo show proved he can cut it as a Byronic rock god away from Depeche Mode. From the sleazy confessional of "Black And Blue Again" to the swaggering blues behemoth "Dirty Sticky Floors", Gahan gives it 200 per cent in the Dionysian Messiah stakes. And Paris loves it, especially the roughed-up DM covers.

Shot last July at Paris’ Olympia theatre, Dave Gahan’s stripped-down solo show proved he can cut it as a Byronic rock god away from Depeche Mode. From the sleazy confessional of “Black And Blue Again” to the swaggering blues behemoth “Dirty Sticky Floors”, Gahan gives it 200 per cent in the Dionysian Messiah stakes. And Paris loves it, especially the roughed-up DM covers.

R.E.M. – Perfect Square

With none of the inventiveness of 1990's brilliant Tourfilm?but sturdier than the disappointing Road Movie (1995)?this engrossing July 2003 gig from Wiesbaden, Germany, is pure Greatest Hits stuff. The usual stadium-thumpers are good, but true highlights are Stipe's own favourite, "Country Feedback" (no longer delivered with back to the audience), "She Just Wants To Be", "Walk Unafraid" and a dusted-off "Maps And Legends".

With none of the inventiveness of 1990’s brilliant Tourfilm?but sturdier than the disappointing Road Movie (1995)?this engrossing July 2003 gig from Wiesbaden, Germany, is pure Greatest Hits stuff. The usual stadium-thumpers are good, but true highlights are Stipe’s own favourite, “Country Feedback” (no longer delivered with back to the audience), “She Just Wants To Be”, “Walk Unafraid” and a dusted-off “Maps And Legends”.

Marianne Faithfull – Sings Kurt Weill: Live In Montreal

In tandem with her recent, more rock-oriented collaborative albums (corralling everyone from Damon Albarn and Jarvis Cocker to Billy Corgan), Faithfull has pursued her other career as a torch singer, the regal ruin of her pristine '60s folk voice now the perfect expression of seen-it-all wisdom/ennui. In the company of pianist Paul Trueblood and at the end of a world tour (recorded at the International Jazz Festival in '97), she's bawdy, wry and always wrenchingly expressive: in short, quite the best exponent of this sort of thing.

In tandem with her recent, more rock-oriented collaborative albums (corralling everyone from Damon Albarn and Jarvis Cocker to Billy Corgan), Faithfull has pursued her other career as a torch singer, the regal ruin of her pristine ’60s folk voice now the perfect expression of seen-it-all wisdom/ennui. In the company of pianist Paul Trueblood and at the end of a world tour (recorded at the International Jazz Festival in ’97), she’s bawdy, wry and always wrenchingly expressive: in short, quite the best exponent of this sort of thing.

Shooting The Breeze

Warren Zevon's decision to go public with his struggle against lung cancer was characteristic of his unflinching approach to his life and his work. But what a shame that he let VH1 shoot this documentary about the making of his final album, The Wind, when surely his many artistic friends could have done a far more illuminating job. Admittedly, it's a unique event, but VH1's effort offers little understanding of the nature of Zevon's iconoclastic gifts?the problem being that the film was prompted by Zevon's illness rather than his work. Interspersed between Billy Bob Thomton's grindingly sincere commentary and some intimate access to the recording sessions, interviews with the ailing songwriter find him terse and laconic rather than keen to wallow in harrowing displays of emotion. The DVD includes the original uncut interviews shot for the film, and the questions are so tepid and unchallenging that you can see Zevon?who didn't suffer fools gladly?making an effort to restrain himself from smashing a bottle of Wild Turkey over his interlocutor's head. The best bits are footage of Springsteen's visit to the studios to sing and play guitar on "Disorder In The House", galvanising the proceedings with his larger-than-life exuberance, and comments from Zevon's diary which offer glimpses into his state of mind as his illness progresses. Now, publication of Warren's full diaries would be worth waiting for.

Warren Zevon’s decision to go public with his struggle against lung cancer was characteristic of his unflinching approach to his life and his work. But what a shame that he let VH1 shoot this documentary about the making of his final album, The Wind, when surely his many artistic friends could have done a far more illuminating job. Admittedly, it’s a unique event, but VH1’s effort offers little understanding of the nature of Zevon’s iconoclastic gifts?the problem being that the film was prompted by Zevon’s illness rather than his work.

Interspersed between Billy Bob Thomton’s grindingly sincere commentary and some intimate access to the recording sessions, interviews with the ailing songwriter find him terse and laconic rather than keen to wallow in harrowing displays of emotion. The DVD includes the original uncut interviews shot for the film, and the questions are so tepid and unchallenging that you can see Zevon?who didn’t suffer fools gladly?making an effort to restrain himself from smashing a bottle of Wild Turkey over his interlocutor’s head. The best bits are footage of Springsteen’s visit to the studios to sing and play guitar on “Disorder In The House”, galvanising the proceedings with his larger-than-life exuberance, and comments from Zevon’s diary which offer glimpses into his state of mind as his illness progresses. Now, publication of Warren’s full diaries would be worth waiting for.