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Reviews

Crude Awakening

Elvis has flattened the building...

Fried

Mulatto nu-soul from FYC fulcrum

Aliens Vs Predator

Contrived attempt to revive two ailing franchises

Creep

Soulless home-grown horror tries too hard

The Producers: Special Edition

Mel Brooks'gloriously tasteless 1965 comedy, with Zero Mostel's shabby producer and Gene Wilder's timid accountant hatching a plan to make a fortune from a sure-fire Broadway flop, Springtime For Hitler. Brooks' play-within-a-film structure is fiendishly clever, while Kenneth Mars' bug-eyed, paranoid Nazi playwright and Dick Shawn's way-out hippie Hitler steal the show. Superb.

Gozu

Another memorable yakuza thriller from the Takeshi Miike production line, this gets off to a cracking start with a hilarious dog gag, then swerves into Lynchian weirdville with the introduction of a soothsayer, a transvestite or two, a lactating innkeeper and a minotaur. Just when the movie begins to sink into a surrealist stupor, Miike lets loose with a climax outrageous even by his own prodigious standards.

Gallipoli

Occasionally worthy slice of war-is-hell hand-wringing from pre-Hollywood Peter Weir circa 1981 is elevated by eye-popping 'scope photography from Russell Boyd and two credible central turns from Mel Gibson and Mark Lee as the Yin and Yang of Australian machismo. On the other hand, the repeated sampling of Jean-Michel Jarre's Oxygen was possibly a mistake.

Nick Drake – A Treasury

Another trip down the well-worn path of the Drake archive

Rock Goddess

Teenage kicks from heavy metal's female phalanx

Virgin Prunes

Remastered, repackaged and reissued. Beloved of Trent Reznor, Billy Corgan and Michael Stipe
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