Reviews

The Wisdom Of Harry – Torch Division

Third album from erstwhile Weather Prophet Pete Astor and pal

Garlic – Jam Sabbatical

Second LP from oddball London six-piece, produced by Lenny (Tricky) Franchi

The Dirtbombs – Dangerous Magical Noise

Enjoyable set from garage veteran

Mojave 3 – Spoon And Rafter

Contemplative fourth album from Thames Valley five-piece

The Fiery Furnaces – Gallowsbird’s Bark

The most exciting US boy/girl duo since The White Stripes

Biting Tongues

Re-release of albums by legendary '80s Factory band featuring 808 State's Graham Massey

Compilations Of The Month

More of the best various-artist releases

It’s A Guy Thing

Quality Australian thriller about fraternal bank robbers

Othello

Filming in Venice and Morocco whenever funds permitted, Orson Welles shot this adaptation of The Bard's play in scraps over four years in the late 1940s. The circumstances—there were literally years between shots—inspired kaleidoscopic editing and audacious improvisation:when costumes failed to arrive for a critical murder, Welles restaged it half-naked in a Turkish bath. The result:the most vibrant slice of Shakespeare-noir ever filmed.

Trapeze

Burt Lancaster, gruff and manly, and Tony Curtis, delicately fey, star in Carol Reed's howlingly homoerotic tale of two leotard-clad acrobats in '50s Paris, vying for each other's respect, for the affections of Gina Lollobrigida, and for mastery of the triple somersault. "Teach me the triple!" says wide-eyed Curtis to Lancaster. "Are you crazy?!" splurts Lancaster, outraged.
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