Reviews

The Heroes Of Telemark

Cracking old-school account of the Norwegian resistance's WWII attempts to destroy the Nazi factory responsible for developing Germany's atom bomb. Rousingly directed by Anthony Mann with the visual sweep typical of all his later productions (EI Cid, the first hour of Spartacus). Watch out for the curious sight of Kirk Douglas, in his prime here, acting brooding hambone Richard Harris off the screen.

Van Morrison – What’s Wrong With This Picture?

Belfast cowboy hitches his wagon to legendary jazz label

Soft Cell – Live

More cabaret from non-stop electro-neurotics

Shelby Lynne – Identity Crisis

Down-home comeback by Alabama maverick. Little Feat's Bill Payne guests

I Am Kloot

Manchester trio deliver second album of wonderfully wistful, perfectly underplayed pop

The Neptunes – The Neptunes Present… Clones

A future greatest hits compilation from the hip hop producers with the keys to the kingdom

Old School Ties

Second wave hip hop pioneers, unfairly best known for donating a little bit of that hip to Aerosmith

Waiting For Happiness

Playing patience under African skies

Once Upon A Time In The Midlands

With untenable Leone motifs and broad comedy caricatures, this final part of Shane Meadows' "Midlands Trilogy" (after Twenty-Four Seven and A Room For Romeo Brass) is a disappointment. Robert Carlyle is solid as the Glaswegian rogue determined to win back ex-partner Shirley Henderson. Yet, despite a re-shot 'dramatic' ending, it feels slight.

Igby Goes Down

Burr Steers' debut as writer-director is perhaps a little too self-consciously off-kilter, but the film's humour is satisfyingly sour and the performances of a large ensemble cast are impeccable. Pitched somewhere between the macabre and the merely eccentric, Igby stars a convincingly debauched Kieran Culkin as the film's eponymous rebellious teen.
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