Reviews

Anthem For Doomed Youth

Steve McQueen on mesmerising form in Don Siegel's bleak anti-war classic

Jet – Get Born

Gormless, arrogant Australian bar band. May do well

Ben & Jason – Goodbye

Final set from now sadly disbanded duo

Heather Nova – Storm

Mercury Rev sign on as backing band to Bermuda-based songstress

Luke Vibert – Yoseph

Warp debut from The Artist Sometimes Known As Wagon Christ

LFO – Sheath

Comeback of sorts for long-dormant Leeds techno pioneer

Brett Smiley – Breathlessly Brett

As detailed in Uncut (see Strange Days, Take 76), this 1974 debut from the super-effete Smiley has been rotting in obscurity for nearly 30 years. Unashamedly over-produced by Loog Oldham (who saw Brett as "the British Jobriath" rather than a pale Bowie), it's clear on the glam-baroque of "Queen Of Hearts" alone that Smiley had superstar potential. Just listen to his angelic cover of Neil Sedaka's "Solitaire" and mourn the career that might have been.

In The Cut

Meg Ryan drops good-girl act in Jane Campion chiller

The Good Thief

Patchy, visually flashy remake by Neil Jordan of his favourite film, Melville's classic Bob Le Flambeur. Its art-robbery-scam story's all over the place, in truth, but Nick Nolte proves to be a wildly compelling force of nature as he kicks heroin, woos a young girl and beats casinos at their own game, all the while looking like he hasn't slept for a very taxing fortnight.

Japón

This strange, haunting film follows a middle-aged man who arrives in a remote Mexican village where he plans to commit suicide. Heavily indebted to Tarkovsky, the film strains for arthouse credibility with pretentious religious symbolism and achingly slow pace. Still much of the imagery is arresting, and its glimpses of rural life are raw and underpinned by an earthy comedy.
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