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Paul Schrader deals with intriguing, uncomfortable issues here, but with, for him, a slightly saddening conservatism. Telling the story of Bob Crane, the '50s star of Hogan's Heroes, whose career nosedived as he became increasingly addicted to filming his own sexploits, it's initially vibey and buzzing, with a terrific turn from Greg Kinnear, but later lapses into soggy moralising and mopey depression.

Paul Schrader deals with intriguing, uncomfortable issues here, but with, for him, a slightly saddening conservatism. Telling the story of Bob Crane, the ’50s star of Hogan’s Heroes, whose career nosedived as he became increasingly addicted to filming his own sexploits, it’s initially vibey and buzzing, with a terrific turn from Greg Kinnear, but later lapses into soggy moralising and mopey depression.

Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machines

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Impossible to watch this already without wondering how Arnie must've calculated it'd boost his electoral campaign. The Governor of California returns in a shiny sequel to T2 which borrows much of that film's story and dynamics. Jonathan Mostow helms explosively, Nick Stahl and Kristanna Loken stand up strong, and it's loudly functional. But thank God he can't be Prez.

Impossible to watch this already without wondering how Arnie must’ve calculated it’d boost his electoral campaign. The Governor of California returns in a shiny sequel to T2 which borrows much of that film’s story and dynamics. Jonathan Mostow helms explosively, Nick Stahl and Kristanna Loken stand up strong, and it’s loudly functional. But thank God he can’t be Prez.

Let It Ride

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You would have thought that Richard Dreyfuss might have analysed his own contribution to the wretched Krippendorf's Tribe. Yet here he is again, hamming wildly from start to fin, as a perennial loser enjoying one startlingly successful day at the races. David Johansen and the adorable Jennifer Tilly provide brief but inspired moments of comic brilliance, but it's dear, dear Dickie's show. More's the pity.

You would have thought that Richard Dreyfuss might have analysed his own contribution to the wretched Krippendorf’s Tribe. Yet here he is again, hamming wildly from start to fin, as a perennial loser enjoying one startlingly successful day at the races. David Johansen and the adorable Jennifer Tilly provide brief but inspired moments of comic brilliance, but it’s dear, dear Dickie’s show. More’s the pity.

The Happiness Of The Katakuris

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Truly wonderful Japanese black comedy about a nice family who open a quiet B&B in the mountains, only to watch all their guests accidentally perish in increasingly macabre ways. Utterly barking stuff, this has something for everyone?surreal musical numbers with dancing zombies, claymation sequences and an exploding volcano! With movies like this around, who needs drugs?

Truly wonderful Japanese black comedy about a nice family who open a quiet B&B in the mountains, only to watch all their guests accidentally perish in increasingly macabre ways. Utterly barking stuff, this has something for everyone?surreal musical numbers with dancing zombies, claymation sequences and an exploding volcano! With movies like this around, who needs drugs?

Kid Galahad

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As boxing movies go, it's not exactly Raging Bull. As Elvis movies go, it's not exactly King Creole either (though Michael Casablanca Curtiz directed both). Even so, Presley's 10th movie is no turkey, aided by some half-decent tunes and solid support from a youngish Charles Bronson.

As boxing movies go, it’s not exactly Raging Bull. As Elvis movies go, it’s not exactly King Creole either (though Michael Casablanca Curtiz directed both). Even so, Presley’s 10th movie is no turkey, aided by some half-decent tunes and solid support from a youngish Charles Bronson.

Soylent Green

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Pre-Star Wars, '70s Hollywood loved its post-apocalyptic sci-fi dystopias?think The Omega Man, Rollerball and Logan's Run. With a brilliant cast?Charlton Heston, Edward G Robinson in his final role?and a superbly ghoulish twist, few come bleaker or better than this.

Pre-Star Wars, ’70s Hollywood loved its post-apocalyptic sci-fi dystopias?think The Omega Man, Rollerball and Logan’s Run. With a brilliant cast?Charlton Heston, Edward G Robinson in his final role?and a superbly ghoulish twist, few come bleaker or better than this.

Short Cuts

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The seemingly ageless Chrissie Hynde storms her way through 26 songs on Pretenders Loose in LA EAGLE VISIONRating Star , recorded at the Wiltern Theater in February this year. The run-in is particularly impressive as she turns the clock back almost a quarter of a century to the band's spectacular debut album with a sequence that includes "Tattooed Love Boys", "Precious", "Mystery Achievement" and the mighty "Brass In Pocket". The Human League DVD VIRGINRating Star is a compilation of 19 videos plus a handful of bonus TOTP performances. If the aliens landed tomorrow and demanded a crash course in '80s-pop style, you'd probably play them "Open Your Heart". Or perhaps you'd opt for "Is There Something I Should Know?" from Duran Duran?Greatest VIRGINRating Star , which also contains that notorious promo for "Girls On Film" and the extravagant mini-Mad Max-isms of "Wild Boys". These days, the DVD has become a more ubiquitous way to celebrate an anniversary than a greetings card. Jethro Tull?The 25th Anniversary Collection CHRYSALISRating Star is a 1993 documentary that cleverly cuts back and forth between archive and reunion footage. Toto?Live In Amsterdam EAGLE VISIONRating Star marks the band's 25th anniversary with a concert performance shot earlier this year. Their corporate pop-rock was anonymous enough at the time. Today it's positively offensive. Kiss Symphony SANCTUARYRating Star is a double disc set marking the band's 30th anniversary with a "concert in three acts", featuring band, string quartet and symphony orchestra. Preposterous isn't the word. But then this is Kiss. It's coming up to the 40th anniversary of Sam Cooke's death, which means there's limited primary source material available. But Sam Cooke Legend ABCKORating Star is a serious DVD biography scripted by Peter Guralnick and mixes what rare footage there is with interviews with the likes of Aretha Franklin and Bobby Womack. Finally, Giants WARNER VISIONRating Star , is another Later... With Jools Holland compilation, featuring 30 legendary names, many of them sadly no longer with us, including Joe Strummer, Johnny Cash, Dusty Springfield and Ian Dury. But would someone explain how the fuck Robbie Williams barged his way into such illustrious company?

The seemingly ageless Chrissie Hynde storms her way through 26 songs on Pretenders Loose in LA EAGLE VISIONRating Star , recorded at the Wiltern Theater in February this year. The run-in is particularly impressive as she turns the clock back almost a quarter of a century to the band’s spectacular debut album with a sequence that includes “Tattooed Love Boys”, “Precious”, “Mystery Achievement” and the mighty “Brass In Pocket”. The Human League DVD VIRGINRating Star is a compilation of 19 videos plus a handful of bonus TOTP performances. If the aliens landed tomorrow and demanded a crash course in ’80s-pop style, you’d probably play them “Open Your Heart”. Or perhaps you’d opt for “Is There Something I Should Know?” from Duran Duran?Greatest VIRGINRating Star , which also contains that notorious promo for “Girls On Film” and the extravagant mini-Mad Max-isms of “Wild Boys”. These days, the DVD has become a more ubiquitous way to celebrate an anniversary than a greetings card. Jethro Tull?The 25th Anniversary Collection CHRYSALISRating Star is a 1993 documentary that cleverly cuts back and forth between archive and reunion footage. Toto?Live In Amsterdam EAGLE VISIONRating Star marks the band’s 25th anniversary with a concert performance shot earlier this year. Their corporate pop-rock was anonymous enough at the time. Today it’s positively offensive. Kiss Symphony SANCTUARYRating Star is a double disc set marking the band’s 30th anniversary with a “concert in three acts”, featuring band, string quartet and symphony orchestra. Preposterous isn’t the word. But then this is Kiss. It’s coming up to the 40th anniversary of Sam Cooke’s death, which means there’s limited primary source material available. But Sam Cooke Legend ABCKORating Star is a serious DVD biography scripted by Peter Guralnick and mixes what rare footage there is with interviews with the likes of Aretha Franklin and Bobby Womack. Finally, Giants WARNER VISIONRating Star , is another Later… With Jools Holland compilation, featuring 30 legendary names, many of them sadly no longer with us, including Joe Strummer, Johnny Cash, Dusty Springfield and Ian Dury. But would someone explain how the fuck Robbie Williams barged his way into such illustrious company?

Method Madness

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It's one of the sharpest shoot-outs in western history. Early morning in a rough Monterey saloon and angst-ridden bandit Rio (Marlon Brando) has just pulped heavyweight boozer Howard Tetley (Timothy Carey) for abusing a young Flamenco dancer. Tetley, groggy, on the floor, reaches out, grabs a shotgun, cocks it and points at Rio who, with preternatural cool, drops down gracefully, dodges Tetley's shot and, simultaneously spinning round a saloon pillar, mercilessly, excessively, riddles Tetley with five of the best. Efficient, brutal and beautiful?welcome to the world of One Eyed Jacks. Overloaded with cultural baggage, often to the point of being overlooked, One Eyed Jacks has always been an anomaly in the western canon. For a start, there's the fabulous lineage. Based on an adapted script by B-movie producer Frank Rosenberg and The Twilight Zone's Rod Serling, it was the typically mythic tale of best-buddy bank robbers Rio and Longworth (to be played by Karl Malden), the latter's double-cross, and Rio's all-consuming desire for vengeance. The screenplay was first re-written in 1960 by a rising TV writer/director called Sam Peckinpah and then by Rosenberg's newly hired tyro director, Stanley Kubrick, who duly fired Peckinpah and brought in his own writer, Calder Willingham (Paths Of Glory). After six months of pre-production, Kubrick 'left' the movie over 'creative differences' and star Brando assumed directorial duties, shooting a whopping one million feet of film, pushing a 60-day shooting schedule up to 180, a $2m budget up to $6m, and eventually handing the movie's backers, Paramount Pictures, a massive, unwieldy four-hour director's cut. Which is usually where the story ends. Which is to neglect the fact that One Eyed Jacks, even in its current 141-minute studio cut, is a classic in its own right, and deserves a place up there with Shane, The Searchers, The Wild Bunch and the best of the iconic Hollywood westerns. For this is a movie, perhaps due to the legacy of both Kubrick and Peckinpah, that bristles with a level of moral ambiguity that the likes of Ford and Hawks rarely displayed. Yes, Longworth betrays Rio by leaving him for a posse of Federales, but he does so impulsively, and is subsequently wracked with guilt. When Rio finally tracks his nemesis down, Longworth has become Monterey's deeply moral town sheriff. The two men meet, Longworth lies about the betrayal, then Rio lies in return and, in a subplot worthy of its own movie, Rio lies to Longworth's delicate daughter Louisa (the otherworldly Pinar Pellicer, who committed suicide in 1964), seduces her, and then hates himself for his own lies. By the final reel, the concepts of hero and villain have become so muddied that whoever rides into the sunset without a fatal bullet wound is simply declared the winner. Brando and Malden, two Actors Studio show-offs, are in Method heaven here. Malden, while bull-whipping a tethered Brando, is fantastically creepy, grinning and savouring each crack as he both avenges and perversely channels the seduction of his own daughter. Brando, meanwhile, deftly takes casual cool right to the edge of comatose chic, munching on a banana during the opening bank robbery, speaking through gritted toothpicks and generally slouching masterfully throughout. And what of Brando the director? Naturally, he shoots himself gorgeously, often tilting his pristine white hat back so that his immaculate head appears to be framed by a halo, like a Renaissance saint. Or else he's done in perfect profile, with that trademark Brando nose dripping down sharply from the bridge, a powerful visual counterpoint to Malden's bulbous honker. Otherwise, he displays a gift with character actors and gives Ford regular Ben Johnson one of the meatiest roles of his career (as bad-apple bandit Bob Amory), ditto Slim Pickens, and ditto High Noon's Katy Jurado. He doesn't shy away from the script's darker, Peckinpah-esque elements (the callous slaying of a young girl), while he also has an eye for bright incidental detail, like the diverting Mexican fiesta, complete with long Flamenco routines. We can only guess at what other distracting diversions lie in the Paramount vaults, but in the meantime we can acknowledge the classic that remains, and savour a hint of the gifted director behind it.

It’s one of the sharpest shoot-outs in western history. Early morning in a rough Monterey saloon and angst-ridden bandit Rio (Marlon Brando) has just pulped heavyweight boozer Howard Tetley (Timothy Carey) for abusing a young Flamenco dancer. Tetley, groggy, on the floor, reaches out, grabs a shotgun, cocks it and points at Rio who, with preternatural cool, drops down gracefully, dodges Tetley’s shot and, simultaneously spinning round a saloon pillar, mercilessly, excessively, riddles Tetley with five of the best. Efficient, brutal and beautiful?welcome to the world of One Eyed Jacks.

Overloaded with cultural baggage, often to the point of being overlooked, One Eyed Jacks has always been an anomaly in the western canon. For a start, there’s the fabulous lineage. Based on an adapted script by B-movie producer Frank Rosenberg and The Twilight Zone’s Rod Serling, it was the typically mythic tale of best-buddy bank robbers Rio and Longworth (to be played by Karl Malden), the latter’s double-cross, and Rio’s all-consuming desire for vengeance. The screenplay was first re-written in 1960 by a rising TV writer/director called Sam Peckinpah and then by Rosenberg’s newly hired tyro director, Stanley Kubrick, who duly fired Peckinpah and brought in his own writer, Calder Willingham (Paths Of Glory). After six months of pre-production, Kubrick ‘left’ the movie over ‘creative differences’ and star Brando assumed directorial duties, shooting a whopping one million feet of film, pushing a 60-day shooting schedule up to 180, a $2m budget up to $6m, and eventually handing the movie’s backers, Paramount Pictures, a massive, unwieldy four-hour director’s cut.

Which is usually where the story ends. Which is to neglect the fact that One Eyed Jacks, even in its current 141-minute studio cut, is a classic in its own right, and deserves a place up there with Shane, The Searchers, The Wild Bunch and the best of the iconic Hollywood westerns.

For this is a movie, perhaps due to the legacy of both Kubrick and Peckinpah, that bristles with a level of moral ambiguity that the likes of Ford and Hawks rarely displayed. Yes, Longworth betrays Rio by leaving him for a posse of Federales, but he does so impulsively, and is subsequently wracked with guilt. When Rio finally tracks his nemesis down, Longworth has become Monterey’s deeply moral town sheriff. The two men meet, Longworth lies about the betrayal, then Rio lies in return and, in a subplot worthy of its own movie, Rio lies to Longworth’s delicate daughter Louisa (the otherworldly Pinar Pellicer, who committed suicide in 1964), seduces her, and then hates himself for his own lies. By the final reel, the concepts of hero and villain have become so muddied that whoever rides into the sunset without a fatal bullet wound is simply declared the winner.

Brando and Malden, two Actors Studio show-offs, are in Method heaven here. Malden, while bull-whipping a tethered Brando, is fantastically creepy, grinning and savouring each crack as he both avenges and perversely channels the seduction of his own daughter. Brando, meanwhile, deftly takes casual cool right to the edge of comatose chic, munching on a banana during the opening bank robbery, speaking through gritted toothpicks and generally slouching masterfully throughout.

And what of Brando the director? Naturally, he shoots himself gorgeously, often tilting his pristine white hat back so that his immaculate head appears to be framed by a halo, like a Renaissance saint. Or else he’s done in perfect profile, with that trademark Brando nose dripping down sharply from the bridge, a powerful visual counterpoint to Malden’s bulbous honker. Otherwise, he displays a gift with character actors and gives Ford regular Ben Johnson one of the meatiest roles of his career (as bad-apple bandit Bob Amory), ditto Slim Pickens, and ditto High Noon’s Katy Jurado. He doesn’t shy away from the script’s darker, Peckinpah-esque elements (the callous slaying of a young girl), while he also has an eye for bright incidental detail, like the diverting Mexican fiesta, complete with long Flamenco routines.

We can only guess at what other distracting diversions lie in the Paramount vaults, but in the meantime we can acknowledge the classic that remains, and savour a hint of the gifted director behind it.

Russian Ark

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Already a by-word for meaningfully ambitious technical accomplishment, Alexander Sokurov's epic was shot in St Petersburg's Hermitage Museum in one unbroken steadicam shot. Moving through the rooms, we're tossed across history, from Peter the Great to Catherine the Great. And it IS great: saying much about Mother Russia then and now, but also visually gorgeous.

Already a by-word for meaningfully ambitious technical accomplishment, Alexander Sokurov’s epic was shot in St Petersburg’s Hermitage Museum in one unbroken steadicam shot. Moving through the rooms, we’re tossed across history, from Peter the Great to Catherine the Great. And it IS great: saying much about Mother Russia then and now, but also visually gorgeous.

Ghost In The Shell

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The year is 2029, the city is Hong Kong, and the subject is a semi-naked cyborg supercop Major Kusanagi (Atsuko Tanaka). She's an anim...

The year is 2029, the city is Hong Kong, and the subject is a semi-naked cyborg supercop Major Kusanagi (Atsuko Tanaka). She’s an anim

The Hunted

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William Friedkin's thriller casts Benicio Del Toro as a Special Forces killing machine running amok and Tommy Lee Jones as the man who trained him and now has to bring him in. Hokum, basically, but the knife fights are the best since David Carradine and James Remar went at each other with some gusto in The Long Riders.

William Friedkin’s thriller casts Benicio Del Toro as a Special Forces killing machine running amok and Tommy Lee Jones as the man who trained him and now has to bring him in. Hokum, basically, but the knife fights are the best since David Carradine and James Remar went at each other with some gusto in The Long Riders.

The Pink Panther Collection

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Six slightly funny films emerged from the Inspector Clouseau franchise through the '60s and '70s: they're not as hilarious as you recall. Peter Sellers is always looking for the humorous nugget, but pratfalls and silly accents do not make comedy gold. The Return Of... and ...Strikes Again are the high spots of the sextet. Nothing outshines Mancini's sexy theme tune.

Six slightly funny films emerged from the Inspector Clouseau franchise through the ’60s and ’70s: they’re not as hilarious as you recall. Peter Sellers is always looking for the humorous nugget, but pratfalls and silly accents do not make comedy gold. The Return Of… and …Strikes Again are the high spots of the sextet. Nothing outshines Mancini’s sexy theme tune.

Dire Straights

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Who'd have thought after the debacle of Velvet Goldmine that Todd Haynes' next film would be as clever, meaningful and powerfully resonant as this masterpiece of stylised social commentary? In the 1950s, the expatriate German director Douglas Sirk directed a series of Hollywood films that at the ti...

Who’d have thought after the debacle of Velvet Goldmine that Todd Haynes’ next film would be as clever, meaningful and powerfully resonant as this masterpiece of stylised social commentary?

In the 1950s, the expatriate German director Douglas Sirk directed a series of Hollywood films that at the time were sniffily known as “women’s pictures”, which only later were recognised as brilliantly crafted satires, as sharply observed as novels like Revolutionary Road, Richard Yates’ classic dissection of the Eisenhower years. Haynes here appropriates Sirk’s uniquely melodramatic template?the heightened emotions, the ravishing colour schemes, soaring music?and subverts the form further than Sirk would’ve dared. The result is a riveting expos

Hulk

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A film of two halves and dual tones, director Ang Lee extrapolates from Stan Lee's original Marvel comic book Hulk both the dark angst of scientist Bruce Banner and the fluorescent fury of the eponymous monster. So, depending on your taste, you'll either prefer the hi-tech CGI set-pieces, or the low-rent monochrome drama of Nick Nolte and Eric Bana hamming/Hamlet-ing it up as the id-unleashing father and son.

A film of two halves and dual tones, director Ang Lee extrapolates from Stan Lee’s original Marvel comic book Hulk both the dark angst of scientist Bruce Banner and the fluorescent fury of the eponymous monster. So, depending on your taste, you’ll either prefer the hi-tech CGI set-pieces, or the low-rent monochrome drama of Nick Nolte and Eric Bana hamming/Hamlet-ing it up as the id-unleashing father and son.

Bruce Almighty

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If Jim Carrey was suddenly declared God, what would he do? That's the premise, and only the easy, obvious routes are taken. But, as he did in Liar Liar, Carrey makes them funny even if you're determined he won't. Thus he enlarges Jennifer Aniston's breasts and you guffaw like a goon because the man is a comedy giant: you want him to fall on his ass, he does, you laugh again.

If Jim Carrey was suddenly declared God, what would he do? That’s the premise, and only the easy, obvious routes are taken. But, as he did in Liar Liar, Carrey makes them funny even if you’re determined he won’t. Thus he enlarges Jennifer Aniston’s breasts and you guffaw like a goon because the man is a comedy giant: you want him to fall on his ass, he does, you laugh again.

The Fifth Element—Special Edition

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Nothing dates faster than camp, and here The Fifth Element (aka David LaChappelle does Blade Runner), barely six years old, is already fraying around its fluorescent edges. The plot is nonsensical (Gary Oldman's Zorg aiding giant ball of evil etc), the model work is ropey, and the production design very Munchkinland. Thankfully, Bruce Willis' taciturn hero and Milla Jovovich's super-femme still hold firm at the heart.

Nothing dates faster than camp, and here The Fifth Element (aka David LaChappelle does Blade Runner), barely six years old, is already fraying around its fluorescent edges. The plot is nonsensical (Gary Oldman’s Zorg aiding giant ball of evil etc), the model work is ropey, and the production design very Munchkinland. Thankfully, Bruce Willis’ taciturn hero and Milla Jovovich’s super-femme still hold firm at the heart.

Terror Firma

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Almost 40 years after its initial award-winning release, Gillo Pontecorvo's The Battle Of Algiers is still searing with political urgency. Paying meticulous attention to the rules of neo-realism (street-shooting, non-professional actors etc), Pontecorvo films the 1954-62 Algerian Revolution as a punishing hand-held documentary. There are some minor characters here, including Nation Liberation Front leader Ali La Pointe (Brahim Haggiag) and icy French Lieutenant Colonel Mathieu (Jean Martin), but the movie's protagonists are the populace of Algiers?depicted as odious coffee-sipping French colonials (boooh!) or righteous Arab revolutionaries (hurrah!). Lauded, bizarrely, for his alleged 'objectivity,' Pontecorvo ingeniously deploys everything from an emotive Ennio Morricone score to repeated scenes of French brutality in order to highlight the plight of disenfranchised Arabs and to, gasp, politicise 'acts of terror.' A thrilling film, shocking and often unsubtle, it's also an eerily prescient snapshot of 21st-century global politics.

Almost 40 years after its initial award-winning release, Gillo Pontecorvo’s The Battle Of Algiers is still searing with political urgency. Paying meticulous attention to the rules of neo-realism (street-shooting, non-professional actors etc), Pontecorvo films the 1954-62 Algerian Revolution as a punishing hand-held documentary. There are some minor characters here, including Nation Liberation Front leader Ali La Pointe (Brahim Haggiag) and icy French Lieutenant Colonel Mathieu (Jean Martin), but the movie’s protagonists are the populace of Algiers?depicted as odious coffee-sipping French colonials (boooh!) or righteous Arab revolutionaries (hurrah!). Lauded, bizarrely, for his alleged ‘objectivity,’ Pontecorvo ingeniously deploys everything from an emotive Ennio Morricone score to repeated scenes of French brutality in order to highlight the plight of disenfranchised Arabs and to, gasp, politicise ‘acts of terror.’ A thrilling film, shocking and often unsubtle, it’s also an eerily prescient snapshot of 21st-century global politics.

Shack – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, London

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There are few bands, it seems, as disaster-prone as Shack. Ravaged by narcotics, crippled by debt (the sleevenotes to their third album HMS Fable infamously thanked Cash Converters) and nearly torpedoed by missing master tapes and missed opportunities, this Liverpool outfit clearly monopolise the anti-Midas touch. Matters were not helped three years ago when London Records pulled the contractual plug as well. Miraculously, however, this is one armour denting that has proved hugely beneficial. London's expensively piloted HMS Fable (1999), while boasting a clutch of tremendous songs, over-egged Shack into clunky, bad Oasis territory. Frequent comparisons with Arthur Lee?Shack were briefly his backing band in the mid-'90s?seemed slightly fanciful. But all that's changed with their low-key fourth album, Here's Tom With The Weather. Reunited with Helen Caddick, who furnished their The Magical World Of The Strands with lush serenity, the Head bros have rediscovered their lulling qualities. It hasn't gone unnoticed, either. Every morsel from Here's Tom With The Weather is eagerly snapped up at tonight's Uncut-supported show. "As Long As I've Got You", that album's burbling opener, sets the hallucinatory tone. Redolent of Simon & Garfunkel wearing trainers, its bouncing lullaby immediately shows the Mersey new breed how to do cosmic scouse. Liverpool's maritime atmospherics can be heard from The Bunnymen to The La's to The Coral. But nobody quite captures that salt air melancholy as potently as Shack?and they demonstrate this perfectly on "The Girl With The Long Brown Hair". Shack are dewy-eyed romantics and, judging by tonight, so are their audience, who are as unobtrusive as the skeletal rustle and low-key intensity of much of the band's material. At the same time, Shack's grasp of pile-driving, Lovestyle crescendos can be surprisingly forceful. On "Meant To Be", the velocity of swashbuckling drums and mariachi trumpets is so frenetic it provokes booming applause mid-song. Still, it's not always so sublime. Despite a spooky Eastern motif, "Soldier Man" is a trudge and the barrel-chested anthemics of "Pull Together" are as incongruous as they are unconvincing. But these are minor criticisms. For the most part, Shack's hazy, psychedelic folk resounds with luminous splendour. Liberated from grand expectations and no longer hostage to misfortune, Shack's considerable talent can finally blossom. The hunched stroll into Cash Converters may soon be over.

There are few bands, it seems, as disaster-prone as Shack. Ravaged by narcotics, crippled by debt (the sleevenotes to their third album HMS Fable infamously thanked Cash Converters) and nearly torpedoed by missing master tapes and missed opportunities, this Liverpool outfit clearly monopolise the anti-Midas touch. Matters were not helped three years ago when London Records pulled the contractual plug as well. Miraculously, however, this is one armour denting that has proved hugely beneficial.

London’s expensively piloted HMS Fable (1999), while boasting a clutch of tremendous songs, over-egged Shack into clunky, bad Oasis territory. Frequent comparisons with Arthur Lee?Shack were briefly his backing band in the mid-’90s?seemed slightly fanciful. But all that’s changed with their low-key fourth album, Here’s Tom With The Weather. Reunited with Helen Caddick, who furnished their The Magical World Of The Strands with lush serenity, the Head bros have rediscovered their lulling qualities.

It hasn’t gone unnoticed, either. Every morsel from Here’s Tom With The Weather is eagerly snapped up at tonight’s Uncut-supported show. “As Long As I’ve Got You”, that album’s burbling opener, sets the hallucinatory tone. Redolent of Simon & Garfunkel wearing trainers, its bouncing lullaby immediately shows the Mersey new breed how to do cosmic scouse. Liverpool’s maritime atmospherics can be heard from The Bunnymen to The La’s to The Coral. But nobody quite captures that salt air melancholy as potently as Shack?and they demonstrate this perfectly on “The Girl With The Long Brown Hair”.

Shack are dewy-eyed romantics and, judging by tonight, so are their audience, who are as unobtrusive as the skeletal rustle and low-key intensity of much of the band’s material. At the same time, Shack’s grasp of pile-driving, Lovestyle crescendos can be surprisingly forceful. On “Meant To Be”, the velocity of swashbuckling drums and mariachi trumpets is so frenetic it provokes booming applause mid-song. Still, it’s not always so sublime. Despite a spooky Eastern motif, “Soldier Man” is a trudge and the barrel-chested anthemics of “Pull Together” are as incongruous as they are unconvincing.

But these are minor criticisms. For the most part, Shack’s hazy, psychedelic folk resounds with luminous splendour. Liberated from grand expectations and no longer hostage to misfortune, Shack’s considerable talent can finally blossom. The hunched stroll into Cash Converters may soon be over.

Mayhem. Period

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The Cramps THE ASTORIA, LONDON Saturday September 27, 2003 A legendary band. A fantastic set ("Garbageman", "Human Fly", you name it). But let's cut to the chase here and talk about the last 10 minutes. Probably the most insane 10 minutes Uncut has ever witnessed at any gig, ever. The song is The Trashmen's "Surfin' Bird". Five seconds in and the mosh-pit is a slam-dancer's paradise of eyepoking chicken-elbows, but it's what happens on stage that matters. Lux Interior, still lanky, ghoulish and determined to "fuck this place up" after all these years, crawls like a dog on all fours towards his wife, Cramps guitarist "Poison Ivy" Rorschach. He writhes between her legs, unzips one of her boots and drapes it over his face. The song has already descended into a psychotic maelstrom of primeval rock'n'roll excess as Lux rises to his feet again and clambers beyond the confines of the stage, mounting one of the main PA stacks. It's here that he slithers his PVC trousers down. Then bares his arsehole. A blink of an eye and he's vaulted back down, swallowing the mic and gargling like a rabid hell-hound. He takes a manly slug from a bottle of red wine, then smashes it, taking a shard of glass and razoring away at his trousers until all that's left is bare legs and a modest makeshift latex jockstrap. He sidles back over to Ivy, grabs at her curly auburn locks and removes a hairpiece which he dons himself as the music swells louder, ever more ballistic. Next thing, Lux has climbed up the stage rear and tries to dismantle the luminous "Cramps" logo which starts to swing violently. He lobs his mic-stand, now bent in half like a hairpin, into the drum kit, taking half the cymbals with it. Then a hand slips down his crotch. First a fiddle. Followed by a tug. Then he's stood there for all the world to see. Trousers in ribbons. In a red curly wig. Wailing like a banshee. And yanking at his penis. And that's how it ended, bar the sound of a few thousand jaws clunking to the floor. Ladies and gentlemen, that was The Cramps. And that's entertainment!

The Cramps

THE ASTORIA, LONDON

Saturday September 27, 2003

A legendary band. A fantastic set (“Garbageman”, “Human Fly”, you name it). But let’s cut to the chase here and talk about the last 10 minutes. Probably the most insane 10 minutes Uncut has ever witnessed at any gig, ever.

The song is The Trashmen’s “Surfin’ Bird”. Five seconds in and the mosh-pit is a slam-dancer’s paradise of eyepoking chicken-elbows, but it’s what happens on stage that matters. Lux Interior, still lanky, ghoulish and determined to “fuck this place up” after all these years, crawls like a dog on all fours towards his wife, Cramps guitarist “Poison Ivy” Rorschach. He writhes between her legs, unzips one of her boots and drapes it over his face. The song has already descended into a psychotic maelstrom of primeval rock’n’roll excess as Lux rises to his feet again and clambers beyond the confines of the stage, mounting one of the main PA stacks. It’s here that he slithers his PVC trousers down. Then bares his arsehole.

A blink of an eye and he’s vaulted back down, swallowing the mic and gargling like a rabid hell-hound. He takes a manly slug from a bottle of red wine, then smashes it, taking a shard of glass and razoring away at his trousers until all that’s left is bare legs and a modest makeshift latex jockstrap. He sidles back over to Ivy, grabs at her curly auburn locks and removes a hairpiece which he dons himself as the music swells louder, ever more ballistic.

Next thing, Lux has climbed up the stage rear and tries to dismantle the luminous “Cramps” logo which starts to swing violently. He lobs his mic-stand, now bent in half like a hairpin, into the drum kit, taking half the cymbals with it. Then a hand slips down his crotch. First a fiddle. Followed by a tug. Then he’s stood there for all the world to see. Trousers in ribbons. In a red curly wig. Wailing like a banshee. And yanking at his penis.

And that’s how it ended, bar the sound of a few thousand jaws clunking to the floor. Ladies and gentlemen, that was The Cramps. And that’s entertainment!

Shoot For The Stars

0

Jane's Addiction COLUMBIAHALLE, BERLIN Tuesday October 7, 2003 The weather turns bad just as soon as our plane lands, sullen black clouds rolling out across gunmetal skies, and by the time Uncut reaches the Columbiahalle, it's raining something Biblical. We find the venue on the outskirts of town, halfway down a long boulevard lined with an endless parade of stern-looking federal buildings. The Columbiahalle appears to be little more than a glorified school hall, smiling staff wandering around selling pretzels out of huge wicker baskets. Someone thinks it's a good idea to turn the house lights up full between bands, which does a fine job of massacring the atmosphere. It isn't very rock'n'roll. As if in response to this, the support band, New York's The Star Spangles, kick up a ferocious racket, racing through their Ramones-inspired pop-punk with what sounds like a bad case of amphetamine psychosis, everything haring by at breakneck pace. Jane's Addiction are dressed sombrely, lot of blacks, khaki and muted yellows. We're half expecting Perry Farrell to be dressed to the nines, sporting some outlandish work of haute couture?instead he slinks on stage in a nondescript parka, the only flash of colour a purple scarf, swiftly dispensed with. It's been 13 years since Jane's last toured, nearly that long since the band collapsed, burned out by bad drugs, fractious internal relationships, arrests and nasty rumours concerning Farrell's health. It was a disappointing end to an unusual five-year run. The widescreen cosmic rock of 1988's Nothing's Shocking and 1990's Ritual De Lo Habitual, channelled through Farrell's glammed-up junkie poet chic and Dave Navarro's thundering guitar riffs, put them up there with Sonic Youth and the Pixies at the forefront of what some might call the alternative rock explosion. The first time I saw them live was in west London's Subterania in August 1990. The hottest day of the year, condensation pouring from the ceiling and a bare-chested, dreadlocked Farrell launching into lengthy, semi-coherent rants about George Bush, the CIA and the Gulf War like a bedraggled, half-mad prophet of doom. It was, you might guess, quite some show, and with their passing a little bit of colour seemed to leach from the world. Now, here we are with Jane's Addiction circa 2003, Farrell, Navarro and drummer Stephen Perkins joined by former session bassist Chris Chaney, out touring new album Strays, the first new material from the band since 1997's odds-and-sods compilation Kettle Whistle. While Strays was a fine comeback, Jane's have always worked best on stage?Navarro's terror storm of noise can strip the enamel from your teeth and Farrell's mesmerising presence, his unpredictable flights of freewheeling fancy, are best witnessed in the flesh. So they open with the psychedelic prick-tease of "Up The Beach" before slamming head first into the propulsive "Stop!". "True Nature" sounds like a thunderstorm, "Been Caught Stealing" struts and spits, alley-cat feral. "Three Days" is way out there, a little piece of the apocalypse, Navarro whipping up a hellstorm, Perkins' voodoo drumming tight while a stick-thin Farrell preens and sashays round the stage, a crazed poet warrior with an alien voice and eyes as big as oceans. New songs?the acoustic swoon of "Everybody's Friend", the greasy riffs of "Just Because"?sit snugly next to old classics. "Ted Just Admit It" is hideously oppressive, Navarro's guitar squealing like an animal being slaughtered, Farrell shrieking "sex is violent" over and over like the last lunatic left in Bedlam. And on it goes. What you remember, watching Jane's Addiction for the first time in well over a decade, is how quite unlike any other band they are. The flamboyant Farrell is unique, while it's incredible how the muscular Navarro can always manage to make it sound like he's playing 50 guitars and not just the one. The sense of timing, too, is superb?songs careering along, suddenly slamming to a standstill, a pause, then off again at full throttle. After a thundering version of "Coming Down The Mountain", they close with a heartbreaking take on "Jane Says", Perkins' bongos light as a summer breeze, Navarro's rolling acoustic chords and Farrell leading the crowd through a mournful chorus of "I'm gonna kick tomorrow!". A pleasure to have them back.

Jane’s Addiction

COLUMBIAHALLE, BERLIN

Tuesday October 7, 2003

The weather turns bad just as soon as our plane lands, sullen black clouds rolling out across gunmetal skies, and by the time Uncut reaches the Columbiahalle, it’s raining something Biblical. We find the venue on the outskirts of town, halfway down a long boulevard lined with an endless parade of stern-looking federal buildings. The Columbiahalle appears to be little more than a glorified school hall, smiling staff wandering around selling pretzels out of huge wicker baskets. Someone thinks it’s a good idea to turn the house lights up full between bands, which does a fine job of massacring the atmosphere. It isn’t very rock’n’roll.

As if in response to this, the support band, New York’s The Star Spangles, kick up a ferocious racket, racing through their Ramones-inspired pop-punk with what sounds like a bad case of amphetamine psychosis, everything haring by at breakneck pace.

Jane’s Addiction are dressed sombrely, lot of blacks, khaki and muted yellows. We’re half expecting Perry Farrell to be dressed to the nines, sporting some outlandish work of haute couture?instead he slinks on stage in a nondescript parka, the only flash of colour a purple scarf, swiftly dispensed with.

It’s been 13 years since Jane’s last toured, nearly that long since the band collapsed, burned out by bad drugs, fractious internal relationships, arrests and nasty rumours concerning Farrell’s health. It was a disappointing end to an unusual five-year run. The widescreen cosmic rock of 1988’s Nothing’s Shocking and 1990’s Ritual De Lo Habitual, channelled through Farrell’s glammed-up junkie poet chic and Dave Navarro’s thundering guitar riffs, put them up there with Sonic Youth and the Pixies at the forefront of what some might call the alternative rock explosion. The first time I saw them live was in west London’s Subterania in August 1990. The hottest day of the year, condensation pouring from the ceiling and a bare-chested, dreadlocked Farrell launching into lengthy, semi-coherent rants about George Bush, the CIA and the Gulf War like a bedraggled, half-mad prophet of doom. It was, you might guess, quite some show, and with their passing a little bit of colour seemed to leach from the world.

Now, here we are with Jane’s Addiction circa 2003, Farrell, Navarro and drummer Stephen Perkins joined by former session bassist Chris Chaney, out touring new album Strays, the first new material from the band since 1997’s odds-and-sods compilation Kettle Whistle. While Strays was a fine comeback, Jane’s have always worked best on stage?Navarro’s terror storm of noise can strip the enamel from your teeth and Farrell’s mesmerising presence, his unpredictable flights of freewheeling fancy, are best witnessed in the flesh. So they open with the psychedelic prick-tease of “Up The Beach” before slamming head first into the propulsive “Stop!”. “True Nature” sounds like a thunderstorm, “Been Caught Stealing” struts and spits, alley-cat feral. “Three Days” is way out there, a little piece of the apocalypse, Navarro whipping up a hellstorm, Perkins’ voodoo drumming tight while a stick-thin Farrell preens and sashays round the stage, a crazed poet warrior with an alien voice and eyes as big as oceans. New songs?the acoustic swoon of “Everybody’s Friend”, the greasy riffs of “Just Because”?sit snugly next to old classics. “Ted Just Admit It” is hideously oppressive, Navarro’s guitar squealing like an animal being slaughtered, Farrell shrieking “sex is violent” over and over like the last lunatic left in Bedlam. And on it goes.

What you remember, watching Jane’s Addiction for the first time in well over a decade, is how quite unlike any other band they are. The flamboyant Farrell is unique, while it’s incredible how the muscular Navarro can always manage to make it sound like he’s playing 50 guitars and not just the one. The sense of timing, too, is superb?songs careering along, suddenly slamming to a standstill, a pause, then off again at full throttle. After a thundering version of “Coming Down The Mountain”, they close with a heartbreaking take on “Jane Says”, Perkins’ bongos light as a summer breeze, Navarro’s rolling acoustic chords and Farrell leading the crowd through a mournful chorus of “I’m gonna kick tomorrow!”.

A pleasure to have them back.