Reviews

Chop ‘Til You Drop

Tarantino's back. Crouching Uma, spurting stumps...

House Of 1000 Corpses

Metal vocalist's impressive horror debut

The Last Great Wilderness

Young Adam's David MacKenzie makes an impressive directorial debut with this low-key but unpredictable thriller about two travellers who stumble across a strange community in the remote Scottish Highlands. It benefits from a nice mix of quirky humour and quiet menace, plus a sprinkling of the supernatural for good measure. Bleak, but still well worth the journey.

Intacto

Potentially ridiculous premise about a cabal of gamblers who harness the power of, er, luck, is admirably sustained by gutsy turns from Leonardo Sbaraglia as a lucky plane crash survivor mentored by lucky earthquake survivor Eusebio Poncela in order to take revenge on casino owner and lucky holocaust survivor Max Von Sydow. Fractured narrative, arty mise-en-scène and punchy pacing from director Juan Carlos Fresnadillo also help.

Teenage Wasteland

Lukas Moodysson's bleak tale of a Slavic girl's suffering

Flight Fantastic

Sole creative survivor of Canterbury scene further refines his art on eighth LP

The High Llamas – Beet, Maize & Corn

Seventh studio album from inveterate Beach Boys fans

Sad Café

The four-track debut solo EP becomes 157 minutes of music over two CDs, with a bonus DVD

Party Monster – Island

Celebrating the '80s electro-dance era, at least as it was perceived in New York clubs, this mixes period pounders with updated readings from contemporary exponents. Electroclash may not have taken off on cue, but there's a trickle-down situation now. You'll both laugh at and bounce about to Miss Kittin & The Hacker's irreverent "Frank Sinatra", Ladytron's comic "Seventeen" and Felix Da Housecat's "Money, Success, Fame, Glamour".

Radio 4 – Gotham!

Re-release of NY punk-funk debut, with bonus disc
Advertisement

Editor's Picks

Advertisement