Reviews

The Androids

Ambitious but overbearing young Aussie outfit make identikit MTV-oriented debut album

Devendra Banhart – The Black Babies (UK)

Eight-track mini album from maverick singer-songwriter

Susheela Raman – Love Trap

Follow-up to acclaimed 2001 debut by British-Asian singer

Pat Metheny – One Quiet Night

Quiet acoustic guitar in nocturnal mood

Sandy Dillon – Nobody’s Sweetheart

Third album from ex-Broadway actress

Alternative TV – Action Time Vision: The ATV Anthology

Sniffin' Glue editor Mark Perry's 'greatest hits'

Law & Disorder

Cult director's comedy-drama with Denis Leary as a messed-up cop

Versus

Non-stop Yakuza-v-zombie action shouldn't be this boring. Director Ryuhei Kitamura knows how to stage a flesh-munching, sword-flashing set piece, but simply stringing a bunch of them together doesn't make a movie. Something to watch when you're in a stoned stupor, perhaps.

A rock'n'roll movie without sex and drugs? Tom Hanks' directorial debut is an anachronism and proud of it. This tale of 1960s teen-pop sensation The Wonders (as in "one-hit") is breezy and good-natured, with Steve Zahn providing most of the laughs. The title tune by The Knack's Adam Schlesinger gets heavy rotation; thankfully it's a Beatle-esque beauty.

Cheech & Chong’s The Corsican Brothers

Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong all but eviscerate what remains of their Up In Smoke credibility with this 1984, er, adaptation of Dumas. Suffice to say that the period Parisian setting allows for, ho ho, cross-dressing, painful double-entendres (a villain called "Fuckaire"), and rock-bottom one-liners: "That's the Marquis du Hicky! He's a tri-sexual!" "A tri-sexual?" "Yes, he'll try anything!" Ugh.
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