Reviews

Shane

The definitive Hollywood western, George Stevens' Shane has inimitable narrative momentum, rolling effortlessly from the introduction of Alan Ladd's buckskin dandy to the initial saloon tensions ("You talking to me?") and the epic punch-up, through the homesteader murder and the final confrontation with Jack Palance's beguiling assassin. Magnificent.

Ursula Rucker – Silver Or Lead

Second album from Philadelphia roots poet and nu-soul star

Amy Rigby – Til The Wheels Fall Off

NYC singer-songwriter covered by Ronnie Spector and Laura Cantrell

The Distillers – Coral Fang

Stadium punk from ambitious LA quartet

Primal Scream – Live In Japan

Japanese import, recorded in Tokyo last November

Buddy Guy – Blues Singer

Rare unplugged outing for leading Chicago bluesman

Linda Perhacs – Parallelograms

Gorgeous, ethereal folk, recommended to Uncut by Devendra Banhart

XX – XY

Excellent debut in style of Hartley or Labute

Trapped

Insane collision of thriller and farce, with a kidnapping plot played at volume 11 and cast by a person on amyl. Kevin Bacon and Courtney Love are the bad couple, Charlize Theron and Stuart Townsend the goodies. Charlize attacks Kev with a scalpel hidden down her knickers, but is still less raving bonkers than Courtney. Gloriously dreadful.

The Fisher King

Terry Gilliam's epic 1991 fable has both admirers and detractors: it now seems ambitious, unique and charming. The superb Jeff Bridges is a burned-out DJ who's at first irritated then revitalised by oddball visionary tramp Robin Williams and his hallucinatory Arthurian quests. The latter's hyper-babbling (like the director's flourishes) holds because Bridges is so magnificently solid and believable.
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