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Peter Gabriel—Secret World Live

No stranger to stage dramatics, Peter Gabriel created one of rock's great spectacles on 1993's "Secret World" tour. Seen by over a million people across five continents, only U2 and the Stones have rivalled it for theatrical excess. Robert LePage's stage designs still astound?and a still youthful-looking Gabriel matches them with his own charismatic presence on songs like "Sledgehammer".

No stranger to stage dramatics, Peter Gabriel created one of rock’s great spectacles on 1993’s “Secret World” tour. Seen by over a million people across five continents, only U2 and the Stones have rivalled it for theatrical excess. Robert LePage’s stage designs still astound?and a still youthful-looking Gabriel matches them with his own charismatic presence on songs like “Sledgehammer”.

The Transporter

Luc Besson oversaw this brain-batteringly stoopid collision between hopped-up, old-school kung-fu flick and Lock Stockish Brit gangster movie. Jason Statham just about gets his mouth around some sub-Tarantino dialogue as an ex-special forces getaway driver caught up in bad business involving a slave ring in Nice. Risible.

Luc Besson oversaw this brain-batteringly stoopid collision between hopped-up, old-school kung-fu flick and Lock Stockish Brit gangster movie. Jason Statham just about gets his mouth around some sub-Tarantino dialogue as an ex-special forces getaway driver caught up in bad business involving a slave ring in Nice. Risible.

Bright Lights, Big City

Underrated 1989 adaptation of Jay McInerney's seminal NY nightlife novel, riddled with "Bolivian marching powder", period electro-pop and a brave (though criticised) performance from Michael J Fox as a broken-hearted magazine fact-checker who's burning the candle at three ends. Kiefer Sutherland's a bad influence. Dryly comic, painfully candid.

Underrated 1989 adaptation of Jay McInerney’s seminal NY nightlife novel, riddled with “Bolivian marching powder”, period electro-pop and a brave (though criticised) performance from Michael J Fox as a broken-hearted magazine fact-checker who’s burning the candle at three ends. Kiefer Sutherland’s a bad influence. Dryly comic, painfully candid.

Trainspotting—The Definitive Edition

The umpteenth retail release for this era-defining cash-cow of Scottish junkies, and the cracks are now beginning to show. Yes, it's a beautiful burst of propulsive film-making, but after the likes of Jesus's Son and Requiem For A Dream, it seems a little too eager to please, a little too chipper, too Ewan McGregor to be wholly credible.

The umpteenth retail release for this era-defining cash-cow of Scottish junkies, and the cracks are now beginning to show. Yes, it’s a beautiful burst of propulsive film-making, but after the likes of Jesus’s Son and Requiem For A Dream, it seems a little too eager to please, a little too chipper, too Ewan McGregor to be wholly credible.

The Hitcher

C Thomas Howell picks up homicidal hitch-hiker Rutger Hauer while driving through the desert and very wisely boots him out of the car at the first opportunity, setting in motion a duel between the two that involves a lot of exploding cars and a huge body count. Utter tosh.

C Thomas Howell picks up homicidal hitch-hiker Rutger Hauer while driving through the desert and very wisely boots him out of the car at the first opportunity, setting in motion a duel between the two that involves a lot of exploding cars and a huge body count. Utter tosh.

Un Homme Et Une Femme

Claude Lelouch arguably never surpassed this 1966 Oscar-winning romance, which sweetened French new wave experimentation for the global mainstream. For all the heart-tugging lyricism, it's still immensely affecting. Bright Anouk Aim...

Claude Lelouch arguably never surpassed this 1966 Oscar-winning romance, which sweetened French new wave experimentation for the global mainstream. For all the heart-tugging lyricism, it’s still immensely affecting. Bright Anouk Aim

Big Wednesday—Special Edition

John Milius' deeply personal take on the surf generation of the '60s is everything you'd expect from Hollywood's last great iconoclast. It's a sumptuous visual feast, an epic journey charting the testosterone-packed lives of three surfing buddies (Jan-Michael Vincent, William Katt and Gary Busey) and an unbelievably heavy-handed extended metaphor, as the ebb and flow of the tide is mirrored in our heroes' lives. It's also the best surf movie ever made and a career peak for Vincent, Katt and Busey (only Busey has sustained the level of performance he delivers here). Despite Milius' trademark bull-in-a-china-shop approach, this is a truly beautiful film, and Bruce Surtees' awesome surf photography looks great on this DVD transfer. Watch the film, be amazed, then watch it again with Milius' booming thunder-voiced commentary turned up LOUD. You can almost taste his Cuban cigar.

John Milius’ deeply personal take on the surf generation of the ’60s is everything you’d expect from Hollywood’s last great iconoclast. It’s a sumptuous visual feast, an epic journey charting the testosterone-packed lives of three surfing buddies (Jan-Michael Vincent, William Katt and Gary Busey) and an unbelievably heavy-handed extended metaphor, as the ebb and flow of the tide is mirrored in our heroes’ lives. It’s also the best surf movie ever made and a career peak for Vincent, Katt and Busey (only Busey has sustained the level of performance he delivers here).

Despite Milius’ trademark bull-in-a-china-shop approach, this is a truly beautiful film, and Bruce Surtees’ awesome surf photography looks great on this DVD transfer. Watch the film, be amazed, then watch it again with Milius’ booming thunder-voiced commentary turned up LOUD. You can almost taste his Cuban cigar.

China Moon

Detective Kyle Bodine (Ed Harris) meets the unhappily married-to-money Rachel Monro (Madeleine Stowe) and before you can say Body Heat he's dumping the hubby (Charles Dance) in a lake, and his own career along with it. Harris is dependable as ever but Stowe curiously inanimate, leaving China Moon with a central relationship that's about as steamy as a bowl of cold soup.

Detective Kyle Bodine (Ed Harris) meets the unhappily married-to-money Rachel Monro (Madeleine Stowe) and before you can say Body Heat he’s dumping the hubby (Charles Dance) in a lake, and his own career along with it. Harris is dependable as ever but Stowe curiously inanimate, leaving China Moon with a central relationship that’s about as steamy as a bowl of cold soup.

Trouble Every Day

Stylish but disturbing French art thriller starring Vincent Gallo and B...

Stylish but disturbing French art thriller starring Vincent Gallo and B

Bande À Part

The definitive example of High Godard (that brief period after his spectacular debut,...

The definitive example of High Godard (that brief period after his spectacular debut,

The Funeral The Addiction

Abel Ferrara made these almost simultaneously in '95, and they're especially intense even for him. The more successfully operatic first (Chris Walken, Chris Penn, Vincent Gallo) follows a family of '30s gangsters on a revenge mission; the second's a gory monochrome vampire flick starring Lili Taylor (and Walken again). Nietzschean, neurotic.

Abel Ferrara made these almost simultaneously in ’95, and they’re especially intense even for him. The more successfully operatic first (Chris Walken, Chris Penn, Vincent Gallo) follows a family of ’30s gangsters on a revenge mission; the second’s a gory monochrome vampire flick starring Lili Taylor (and Walken again). Nietzschean, neurotic.

Insomnia

Memento man Christopher Nolan's elegant cop drama with Al Pacino magnificently muted as the hollow-eyed LA cop, sent to Alaska to hunt a killer and forming a strange relationship with Robin Williams' skin-crawlingly ingratiating psycho.

Memento man Christopher Nolan’s elegant cop drama with Al Pacino magnificently muted as the hollow-eyed LA cop, sent to Alaska to hunt a killer and forming a strange relationship with Robin Williams’ skin-crawlingly ingratiating psycho.

Spy Kids 2

More pint-size espionage from Robert Rodriguez as Carmen and Juni tackle an island full of monsters created by mad scientist Steve Buscemi. The cute kids factor is kept on a tight rein, there are great gizmos (and gags) galore, and the blend of Bond, Dr Seuss and Ray Harryhausen is irresistible.

More pint-size espionage from Robert Rodriguez as Carmen and Juni tackle an island full of monsters created by mad scientist Steve Buscemi. The cute kids factor is kept on a tight rein, there are great gizmos (and gags) galore, and the blend of Bond, Dr Seuss and Ray Harryhausen is irresistible.

Great Balls Of Fire

A Jerry Lee Lewis biopic from Jim (The Big Easy) McBride, starring an energetic Dennis Quaid as the piano-bashing, God-fearing rock'n'roller. He upsets the applecart (and middle America) by marrying the underage Myra (Winona Ryder), whose book provided the source material. Thus biased, it doesn't show the great balls it should, but Quaid amps it up.

A Jerry Lee Lewis biopic from Jim (The Big Easy) McBride, starring an energetic Dennis Quaid as the piano-bashing, God-fearing rock’n’roller. He upsets the applecart (and middle America) by marrying the underage Myra (Winona Ryder), whose book provided the source material. Thus biased, it doesn’t show the great balls it should, but Quaid amps it up.

Minor Mishaps

Danish director Annette K Olesen's acutely observed tragicomedy about a morose widower (J...

Danish director Annette K Olesen’s acutely observed tragicomedy about a morose widower (J

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Paul McCartney broke box-office records on his US tour of last year. Now comes a three-hour souvenir, Back In The US PARLOPHONERating Star , from which even the painful memory of "Mull Of Kintyre" can't take away the thrill of seeing a Beatle singing "All My Loving" and "Can't Buy Me Love". Lots of behind-the-scenes footage, too, including the most exclusive after-show party ever aboard his chartered jet. It's one way of deterring the gate-crashers, anyway. The cover of Tupac Versus REVOLVER ENTERTAINMENTRating Star bears the legend "icon, philosopher, martyr", rather than "gangsta, thug, woman-beater". But we're all a mass of contradictions, aren't we? The centrepiece of this revisionist portrait is a lengthy never-before-seen interview, recorded a year before Tupac's death, in which he talks with eloquence about his life and the relationship between violence, music and society. Here's a new concept, and not a welcome one?The Byrds Special Edition EP CLASSIC PICTURESRating Star and The Moody Blues Special Edition EP CLASSIC PICTURESRating Star both start well, with evocative TV performances from the early '70s. But when the material by the two headliners runs out (inside 20 minutes in both cases), the discs are padded out with unrelated performances by Leon Russell, Rick Wakeman and other has-beens. Best avoided. Roger Waters?The Wall Live in Berlin UNIVERSALRating Star , recorded in 1989, is strictly for fans only, with high-calibre guest stars like The Band and Van Morrison let down by the presence of Cyndi Lauper and the Scorpions. UK/DK CHERRY REDRating Star documents the early punk scene with interviews and contemporary performances by the likes of The Exploited and Vice Squad. The footage is coupled with film of a 1996 'punk reunion', from which only the Buzzcocks emerge with credit. If you prefer a more contemporary thud to your head-banging, try Kerrang!?Most Requested UNIVERSALRating Star , with Nickelback, Slipknot, Blink 182 et al. (AS)

Paul McCartney broke box-office records on his US tour of last year. Now comes a three-hour souvenir, Back In The US PARLOPHONERating Star , from which even the painful memory of “Mull Of Kintyre” can’t take away the thrill of seeing a Beatle singing “All My Loving” and “Can’t Buy Me Love”. Lots of behind-the-scenes footage, too, including the most exclusive after-show party ever aboard his chartered jet. It’s one way of deterring the gate-crashers, anyway. The cover of Tupac Versus REVOLVER ENTERTAINMENTRating Star bears the legend “icon, philosopher, martyr”, rather than “gangsta, thug, woman-beater”. But we’re all a mass of contradictions, aren’t we? The centrepiece of this revisionist portrait is a lengthy never-before-seen interview, recorded a year before Tupac’s death, in which he talks with eloquence about his life and the relationship between violence, music and society. Here’s a new concept, and not a welcome one?The Byrds Special Edition EP CLASSIC PICTURESRating Star and The Moody Blues Special Edition EP CLASSIC PICTURESRating Star both start well, with evocative TV performances from the early ’70s. But when the material by the two headliners runs out (inside 20 minutes in both cases), the discs are padded out with unrelated performances by Leon Russell, Rick Wakeman and other has-beens. Best avoided. Roger Waters?The Wall Live in Berlin UNIVERSALRating Star , recorded in 1989, is strictly for fans only, with high-calibre guest stars like The Band and Van Morrison let down by the presence of Cyndi Lauper and the Scorpions. UK/DK CHERRY REDRating Star documents the early punk scene with interviews and contemporary performances by the likes of The Exploited and Vice Squad. The footage is coupled with film of a 1996 ‘punk reunion’, from which only the Buzzcocks emerge with credit. If you prefer a more contemporary thud to your head-banging, try Kerrang!?Most Requested UNIVERSALRating Star , with Nickelback, Slipknot, Blink 182 et al.

(AS)

The Mission—Special Edition

Directed by Roland Joff...

Directed by Roland Joff

Ichi The Killer

Appallingly violent vigilante satire from Audition's Takashi Miike. The opening scenes, with the film's title spelt out in semen and the head baddie puffing smoke through his slashed-open cheeks, promise OTT entertainment. But as the plot unfolds, only the strongest stomach will handle the scenes of torture, mutilation and rape between the black laughs.

Appallingly violent vigilante satire from Audition’s Takashi Miike. The opening scenes, with the film’s title spelt out in semen and the head baddie puffing smoke through his slashed-open cheeks, promise OTT entertainment. But as the plot unfolds, only the strongest stomach will handle the scenes of torture, mutilation and rape between the black laughs.

White Mischief

With a $25 million budget, major studio backing, special effects from George Lucas' Industrial Light & Magic and epic production design demanding four separate camera units, 1994's The Hudsucker Proxy was the biggest movie the Coen brothers had ever made. It was the logical step for the fraternal film-makers who had progressed with ease, in both popularity and critical acclaim, from 1984's Blood Simple through Raising Arizona (1987) and Miller's Crossing (1990) to Cannes favourite Barton Fink (1991). The Hudsucker Proxy was to be their crowning achievement. Naturally, it was a complete flop. Ambivalent response and a paltry $2.8 million return sent the Coen brothers scuttling home to their native Minnesota with a tiny crew and a cast of character actors in tow. The result, Fargo, is their greatest movie. The opening scene sets the agenda. A tense exchange in a roadside bar in Fargo, North Dakota (the movie never returns to Fargo, and could have been named "Brainerd" or "Minneapolis", after the two main locations). Here, timid car salesman Jerry Lundegaard (Macy) hires criminals Carl Showalter (Buscemi) and Gaear Grimsrud (Stormare) to kidnap his wife and extort cash from his father-in-law. The men bicker about payment and motive until finally the taciturn Grimsrud asks, "Why don't you just ask him [the father-in-law] for the money?" Jerry stutters and blusters, refusing to contemplate the idea, not just because the movie requires the kidnapping in order to execute a calamitous chain reaction of plot-points, but because Jerry doesn't want to lose face. He'd rather torture his wife than be publicly humiliated. As the movie unfolds and the kidnapping sours and local police become entangled in Jerry's deceptions, this same pressure of appearance is underscored with Midwestern politeness. The Coens are fascinated by the banal details of ordinary life, and include scenes of helpful hotel clerks, beaming store assistants, friendly policemen and cheery barmen, all of whom use a homely argot?"You're darn tootin", "Oh yah, you betcha!" And yet when Jerry suddenly trashes his desk in temper, or when a disgruntled customer snaps and calls him a "fucking liar", we get a glimpse of the anger beneath the social veneer. This anger finds expression in the gruesome murders committed by Showalter and Grimsrud, who are possibly the movie's most honest characters?they're pure Id, cursing, screwing and shooting at will. Consequently, there's a chilly misanthropy to Fargo that's consistent with a film-making combo that are often criticised for being too coolly cerebral. Yet it's a chill that's counterbalanced by the movie's greatest creation, police chief Marge Gunderson (Frances McDormand). Marge is a Candide-like heroine who infuses Fargo's bleak world with a quirky sense of optimism. She's a savvy criminologist who's equally at ease with dead bodies and hardened convicts, and still she's naive enough to upbraid a mass murderer, "There's more to life than money, you know. Don't you know that?" She's an attempt to provide the film with a moral centre. And even so, occasionally, in her cosy scenes with docile husband Norm (John Carroll Lynch), and despite McDormand's towering performance, you sense that the Coens aren't too enamoured with her either. The movie's other career-making performance comes from Macy. His fascinating face?red button nose, bug eyes, wide twitchy mouth?has never been better employed, somehow revealing a frightening tenacity underneath Jerry's nervous exterior. Stylistically, Fargo is restrained (for a Coens movie). Production design is mercifully light, and camera work is inconspicuous. Instead, we get a hypnotic study in white. Without horizon lines, cars simply drive away from camera into white space, as if into the margin of the screenplay itself. It's this eerie suspicion that there's nothing beyond the hermetic world of Fargo that makes it such a powerful and claustrophobic experience. That the characters trapped within this world can earn our sympathy despite themselves is a testament to the genius of Joel and Ethan Coen.

With a $25 million budget, major studio backing, special effects from George Lucas’ Industrial Light & Magic and epic production design demanding four separate camera units, 1994’s The Hudsucker Proxy was the biggest movie the Coen brothers had ever made. It was the logical step for the fraternal film-makers who had progressed with ease, in both popularity and critical acclaim, from 1984’s Blood Simple through Raising Arizona (1987) and Miller’s Crossing (1990) to Cannes favourite Barton Fink (1991). The Hudsucker Proxy was to be their crowning achievement. Naturally, it was a complete flop. Ambivalent response and a paltry $2.8 million return sent the Coen brothers scuttling home to their native Minnesota with a tiny crew and a cast of character actors in tow. The result, Fargo, is their greatest movie.

The opening scene sets the agenda. A tense exchange in a roadside bar in Fargo, North Dakota (the movie never returns to Fargo, and could have been named “Brainerd” or “Minneapolis”, after the two main locations). Here, timid car salesman Jerry Lundegaard (Macy) hires criminals Carl Showalter (Buscemi) and Gaear Grimsrud (Stormare) to kidnap his wife and extort cash from his father-in-law. The men bicker about payment and motive until finally the taciturn Grimsrud asks, “Why don’t you just ask him [the father-in-law] for the money?” Jerry stutters and blusters, refusing to contemplate the idea, not just because the movie requires the kidnapping in order to execute a calamitous chain reaction of plot-points, but because Jerry doesn’t want to lose face. He’d rather torture his wife than be publicly humiliated.

As the movie unfolds and the kidnapping sours and local police become entangled in Jerry’s deceptions, this same pressure of appearance is underscored with Midwestern politeness. The Coens are fascinated by the banal details of ordinary life, and include scenes of helpful hotel clerks, beaming store assistants, friendly policemen and cheery barmen, all of whom use a homely argot?”You’re darn tootin”, “Oh yah, you betcha!” And yet when Jerry suddenly trashes his desk in temper, or when a disgruntled customer snaps and calls him a “fucking liar”, we get a glimpse of the anger beneath the social veneer. This anger finds expression in the gruesome murders committed by Showalter and Grimsrud, who are possibly the movie’s most honest characters?they’re pure Id, cursing, screwing and shooting at will.

Consequently, there’s a chilly misanthropy to Fargo that’s consistent with a film-making combo that are often criticised for being too coolly cerebral. Yet it’s a chill that’s counterbalanced by the movie’s greatest creation, police chief Marge Gunderson (Frances McDormand). Marge is a Candide-like heroine who infuses Fargo’s bleak world with a quirky sense of optimism. She’s a savvy criminologist who’s equally at ease with dead bodies and hardened convicts, and still she’s naive enough to upbraid a mass murderer, “There’s more to life than money, you know. Don’t you know that?” She’s an attempt to provide the film with a moral centre. And even so, occasionally, in her cosy scenes with docile husband Norm (John Carroll Lynch), and despite McDormand’s towering performance, you sense that the Coens aren’t too enamoured with her either. The movie’s other career-making performance comes from Macy. His fascinating face?red button nose, bug eyes, wide twitchy mouth?has never been better employed, somehow revealing a frightening tenacity underneath Jerry’s nervous exterior.

Stylistically, Fargo is restrained (for a Coens movie). Production design is mercifully light, and camera work is inconspicuous. Instead, we get a hypnotic study in white. Without horizon lines, cars simply drive away from camera into white space, as if into the margin of the screenplay itself. It’s this eerie suspicion that there’s nothing beyond the hermetic world of Fargo that makes it such a powerful and claustrophobic experience. That the characters trapped within this world can earn our sympathy despite themselves is a testament to the genius of Joel and Ethan Coen.

Brazil

Sam (Jonathan Pryce) dreams of love and escape from his clerical job in a monolithic bureaucracy, but finds himself sucked ever deeper into a Kafkaesque nightmare. Michael Palin and Robert De Niro play brilliantly against type, while Terry Gilliam's dystopian vision broke the mould. Dazzling, disturbing, darkly comic and downright essential.

Sam (Jonathan Pryce) dreams of love and escape from his clerical job in a monolithic bureaucracy, but finds himself sucked ever deeper into a Kafkaesque nightmare. Michael Palin and Robert De Niro play brilliantly against type, while Terry Gilliam’s dystopian vision broke the mould. Dazzling, disturbing, darkly comic and downright essential.