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Menace II Society

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Along with Boyz N The Hood, this marks the film world's awakening to a dark period of gang violence in early-'90s LA. The story of Caine Lawson (Tyrin Turner), a young black man looking to escape the daily treadmill of bloodshed, isn't particularly original, but the Hughes brothers pull few punches. It's not a pretty sight, but the film now stands as a curious period piece.

Along with Boyz N The Hood, this marks the film world’s awakening to a dark period of gang violence in early-’90s LA. The story of Caine Lawson (Tyrin Turner), a young black man looking to escape the daily treadmill of bloodshed, isn’t particularly original, but the Hughes brothers pull few punches. It’s not a pretty sight, but the film now stands as a curious period piece.

Johnny Got His Gun

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Left limbless, deaf, dumb and blind by a WWI landmine, US GI Timothy Bottoms is locked away in a hospital. Considered beyond medical help, he drifts in memories and fantasies, until, years later, he finally finds a way to communicate?to little avail. Based on his 1939 novel, this 1971 anti-war parable was the only film directed by blacklisted scriptwriter Dalton Trumbo. At times awkward, it's nonetheless driven by an acute, angry intelligence. Hard to forget.

Left limbless, deaf, dumb and blind by a WWI landmine, US GI Timothy Bottoms is locked away in a hospital. Considered beyond medical help, he drifts in memories and fantasies, until, years later, he finally finds a way to communicate?to little avail. Based on his 1939 novel, this 1971 anti-war parable was the only film directed by blacklisted scriptwriter Dalton Trumbo. At times awkward, it’s nonetheless driven by an acute, angry intelligence. Hard to forget.

Elephant

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Gus Van Sant's Palme d'Or-winning take on the Columbine massacre makes for understandably difficult viewing. Van Sant deliberately shoots the movie flat and spare, looping the story, Rash...

Gus Van Sant’s Palme d’Or-winning take on the Columbine massacre makes for understandably difficult viewing. Van Sant deliberately shoots the movie flat and spare, looping the story, Rash

Head

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In 1968, Raybert productions?a Hollywood hotbed of drugged-out '60s fornication?saw fit to hand would-be-Fellini Bob Rafelson The Monkees as a vehicle for his auteurist debut. This was the result. Hiring B-movie 'bum' Jack Nicholson to 'write' the film, Rafelson took the freewheeling zaniness of The Monkees' television series, added grainy Vietnam footage and hallucinatory visuals that could have been lifted from Roger Corman's The Trip, and let the quartet-next-door dig their own collective grave. In one fell swoop, Head alienated the group's pop fan base and was wide-berthed by the lysergic cognoscenti. Ah well, you can't blame 'em for trying. The film consists of a string of barely related tableaux that play out around a movie lot and feature various washed-up celebs (Sonny Liston, Victor Mature, Annette Funicello). Mickey Dolenz kicks an empty Coke dispenser in the desert. Peter Tork wanders through snow. Davy Jones does his winsome top-hat routine. Mike Nesmith is vaguely disdainful as usual. A few good tunes?Goffin-King's Anglo-psych classic "Porpoise Song" above all?help some. "Hey hey, we're The Monkees," the foursome gleefully sing, "a manufactured image with no philosophies." Frank Zappa tells Jones that "the youth of America depends on you to show them the way." Nicholson's message is that the medium is the (empty, illusory) message. But we all know that by now.

In 1968, Raybert productions?a Hollywood hotbed of drugged-out ’60s fornication?saw fit to hand would-be-Fellini Bob Rafelson The Monkees as a vehicle for his auteurist debut. This was the result. Hiring B-movie ‘bum’ Jack Nicholson to ‘write’ the film, Rafelson took the freewheeling zaniness of The Monkees’ television series, added grainy Vietnam footage and hallucinatory visuals that could have been lifted from Roger Corman’s The Trip, and let the quartet-next-door dig their own collective grave.

In one fell swoop, Head alienated the group’s pop fan base and was wide-berthed by the lysergic cognoscenti. Ah well, you can’t blame ’em for trying.

The film consists of a string of barely related tableaux that play out around a movie lot and feature various washed-up celebs (Sonny Liston, Victor Mature, Annette Funicello).

Mickey Dolenz kicks an empty Coke dispenser in the desert. Peter Tork wanders through snow. Davy Jones does his winsome top-hat routine. Mike Nesmith is vaguely disdainful as usual. A few good tunes?Goffin-King’s Anglo-psych classic “Porpoise Song” above all?help some. “Hey hey, we’re The Monkees,” the foursome gleefully sing, “a manufactured image with no philosophies.” Frank Zappa tells Jones that “the youth of America depends on you to show them the way.” Nicholson’s message is that the medium is the (empty, illusory) message. But we all know that by now.

Decasia

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Part of the BFI's intriguing "A History Of The Avant-Garde" series, this is 66 minutes of decaying, nitrate-film archive footage, an artful collage in which figures deteriorate as we watch. Obviously, it's heavily symbolic: nuns, children, boxers go about their endeavours unaware (or are they?) of the oblivion that looms. The dissonant score's a drag, but this is nothing if not haunting.

Part of the BFI’s intriguing “A History Of The Avant-Garde” series, this is 66 minutes of decaying, nitrate-film archive footage, an artful collage in which figures deteriorate as we watch. Obviously, it’s heavily symbolic: nuns, children, boxers go about their endeavours unaware (or are they?) of the oblivion that looms. The dissonant score’s a drag, but this is nothing if not haunting.

Caveman

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In 1980, one year before Anthony Burgess composed a whole new language for Quest For Fire, the producers of this dumbass Neanderthal comedy achieved much the same effect by just having actors go "oog". Insanely, Ringo Starr plays a horny caveman who forms his own tribe of losers (a young Dennis Quaid among them) and gets into scrapes. A must-have for Beatles completists; for everyone else, the animated dinosaurs are sweet. (DL) DVD EXTRAS: None.

In 1980, one year before Anthony Burgess composed a whole new language for Quest For Fire, the producers of this dumbass Neanderthal comedy achieved much the same effect by just having actors go “oog”. Insanely, Ringo Starr plays a horny caveman who forms his own tribe of losers (a young Dennis Quaid among them) and gets into scrapes. A must-have for Beatles completists; for everyone else, the animated dinosaurs are sweet. (DL)

DVD EXTRAS: None.

Mother Night

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Based on the Kurt Vonnegut novel and featuring an amazing central performance from Nick Nolte as an American spy living in pre-WWII Berlin, broadcasting military secrets in code under the guise of anti-Semitic, Nazi propaganda. Once the war is over, though, he's arrested for war crimes and put on trial. Will the truth out? A mixture of the disturbing and the bizarre, it's both haunting and thought-provoking. John Goodman co-stars.

Based on the Kurt Vonnegut novel and featuring an amazing central performance from Nick Nolte as an American spy living in pre-WWII Berlin, broadcasting military secrets in code under the guise of anti-Semitic, Nazi propaganda. Once the war is over, though, he’s arrested for war crimes and put on trial. Will the truth out? A mixture of the disturbing and the bizarre, it’s both haunting and thought-provoking. John Goodman co-stars.

Plein Soleil

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Directed at mercilessly cool, wickedly tense pace by Ren...

Directed at mercilessly cool, wickedly tense pace by Ren

The Human Stain

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Given short shrift by most cinema critics, Robert Benton's flawed adaptation of Philip Roth's novel is wonderfully acted by two stars who've been praised for far inferior performances. Anthony Hopkins is the professor sacked for alleged political incorrectness; Nicole Kidman the damaged younger woman with whom he enjoys "not my first love, not my great love, but my last love." Both risky and tender.

Given short shrift by most cinema critics, Robert Benton’s flawed adaptation of Philip Roth’s novel is wonderfully acted by two stars who’ve been praised for far inferior performances. Anthony Hopkins is the professor sacked for alleged political incorrectness; Nicole Kidman the damaged younger woman with whom he enjoys “not my first love, not my great love, but my last love.” Both risky and tender.

Train Of Thought

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As the film world gears up for the release of Wong Kar-Wai's long-awaited 2046, it's a propitious time for his masterpiece, Chungking Express, to be reissued. When the Hong Kong movie first arrived in the West in 1996, it came with the lavish cheerleading of Quentin Tarantino. But while Wong shares a certain kinetic playfulness with QT, Chungking Express is a much more poetic, romantic film than the connection might suggest. Wong nimbly tells the stories of two policemen whose girlfriends have just left them. One (Takeshi Kaneshiro) counts the days that have passed by buying tins of pineapple, until he falls for a gloomy drug dealer (Brigitte Lin) styled, emblematically, as a '40s femme fatale. The second (Tony Leung) compensates for his loss by talking to the household objects?bars of

soap, chiefly?rendered inconsolable by his girlfriend's departure. His object d'amour is a gamine waitress obsessed with "California Dreamin'" (Faye Wong), who insinuates herself by breaking into his apartment and subtly messing with his belongings. Slight, oblique plots, then. But the spirit of the film is what carries it, expressed in Christopher Doyle's graceful hand-held camerawork, the engaging performances and, most of all, Wong's endearingly whimsical take on urban alienation. Hong Kong's crowds are a permanent blurred presence, with individuals impossible to make out. But Wong's gift is to cut through the throng and find brief, touching stories of people who combat loneliness by cultivating precious eccentricities and dreams of escape. A hip and quirky movie, perhaps, but one that's gently profound, too.

As the film world gears up for the release of Wong Kar-Wai’s long-awaited 2046, it’s a propitious time for his masterpiece, Chungking Express, to be reissued. When the Hong Kong movie first arrived in the West in 1996, it came with the lavish cheerleading of Quentin Tarantino. But while Wong shares a certain kinetic playfulness with QT, Chungking Express is a much more poetic, romantic film than the connection might suggest.

Wong nimbly tells the stories of two policemen whose girlfriends have just left them. One (Takeshi Kaneshiro) counts the days that have passed by buying tins of pineapple, until he falls for a gloomy drug dealer (Brigitte Lin) styled, emblematically, as a ’40s femme fatale. The second (Tony Leung) compensates for his loss by talking to the household objects?bars of

soap, chiefly?rendered inconsolable by his girlfriend’s departure. His object d’amour is a gamine waitress obsessed with “California Dreamin'” (Faye Wong), who insinuates herself by breaking into his apartment and subtly messing with his belongings.

Slight, oblique plots, then. But the spirit of the film is what carries it, expressed in Christopher Doyle’s graceful hand-held camerawork, the engaging performances and, most of all, Wong’s endearingly whimsical take on urban alienation.

Hong Kong’s crowds are a permanent blurred presence, with individuals impossible to make out. But Wong’s gift is to cut through the throng and find brief, touching stories of people who combat loneliness by cultivating precious eccentricities and dreams of escape.

A hip and quirky movie, perhaps, but one that’s gently profound, too.

Pépé Le Moko

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A landmark in the development of the doomed anti-hero, Julien Duvivier's timeless 1936 proto-noir made an icon of Jean Gabin, playing P...

A landmark in the development of the doomed anti-hero, Julien Duvivier’s timeless 1936 proto-noir made an icon of Jean Gabin, playing P

XX – XY

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Excellent, thought-provoking love triangle drama, with Mark Ruffalo for once living up to his overcooked reputation. He's entwined in a threesome at college, but years down the line all the participants have evolved... except him. About to marry, he craves a rekindling of the flame. Not wise. Writer/director Austin Chick keeps it sparky and twisting like a fish, always a jump ahead of you.

Excellent, thought-provoking love triangle drama, with Mark Ruffalo for once living up to his overcooked reputation. He’s entwined in a threesome at college, but years down the line all the participants have evolved… except him. About to marry, he craves a rekindling of the flame. Not wise. Writer/director Austin Chick keeps it sparky and twisting like a fish, always a jump ahead of you.

Battle Royale II: Requiem

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Muddled straight-to-DVD sequel to the 2000 classic. As in part one, a class of schoolchildren are sent to an island to fight or die for the pleasure of their elders. But this time they're battling the survivors of the first film, who've formed a guerrilla army dedicated to overthrowing the sadistic adults responsible. After a promising start, it never recovers from the death of veteran director Kenji Fukasaku during the shoot.

Muddled straight-to-DVD sequel to the 2000 classic. As in part one, a class of schoolchildren are sent to an island to fight or die for the pleasure of their elders. But this time they’re battling the survivors of the first film, who’ve formed a guerrilla army dedicated to overthrowing the sadistic adults responsible. After a promising start, it never recovers from the death of veteran director Kenji Fukasaku during the shoot.

Cleopatra Jones

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Nine out of ten people will tell you Pam Grier starred in this 1973 landmark blaxploitation 'classic'. She didn't: it's Tamara Dobson as the CIA's tough female agent, taking out drug dealers with athleticism, attitude and a healthy amount of sheer spite. The soundtrack is very cool but in truth the film's pretty rubbish: comic-book at best, lazily indulgent throughout. Bring on Foxy Brown!

Nine out of ten people will tell you Pam Grier starred in this 1973 landmark blaxploitation ‘classic’. She didn’t: it’s Tamara Dobson as the CIA’s tough female agent, taking out drug dealers with athleticism, attitude and a healthy amount of sheer spite. The soundtrack is very cool but in truth the film’s pretty rubbish: comic-book at best, lazily indulgent throughout. Bring on Foxy Brown!

The Ten Commandments: Special Edition

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It's very long and extremely po-faced, and most of the performances are pretty wooden, Yul Brynner's imperious pharaoh aside. Even so, Cecil B DeMille's 1956 account of the life of Moses (Charlton Heston) still has some impressive sequences-notably the Exodus from Egypt, with 60,000 extras?and remains the definitive Biblical epic.

It’s very long and extremely po-faced, and most of the performances are pretty wooden, Yul Brynner’s imperious pharaoh aside. Even so, Cecil B DeMille’s 1956 account of the life of Moses (Charlton Heston) still has some impressive sequences-notably the Exodus from Egypt, with 60,000 extras?and remains the definitive Biblical epic.

The Missouri Breaks

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Arthur Penn's smouldering anti-western tells the story of Nicholson's Montana horse-rustlers and the pursuit of them by Brando's regulator Lee Clayton. The action is rationed into short, ferocious bursts and used as a counterpoint to the director's paced dissection of power and politics on the anarchic frontier. Brando's whispering Irish accent flirts with parody, but ultimately helps to lend Clayton a compelling air of psychotic menace.

Arthur Penn’s smouldering anti-western tells the story of Nicholson’s Montana horse-rustlers and the pursuit of them by Brando’s regulator Lee Clayton. The action is rationed into short, ferocious bursts and used as a counterpoint to the director’s paced dissection of power and politics on the anarchic frontier. Brando’s whispering Irish accent flirts with parody, but ultimately helps to lend Clayton a compelling air of psychotic menace.

The Fog Of War

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Errol Morris' latest Oscar-winning documentary is no Moore-style polemic but an artful interrogation of infamous US Defence Secretary Robert McNamara, who gave Morris 23 hours of filmed interviews in 2001, before 9/11 and the Iraq war, though unspoken parallels are hard to ignore. A formidable intellectual bruiser at 87, the old Cold Warrior seizes what may prove to be his last chance to make peace with history. Riveting.

Errol Morris’ latest Oscar-winning documentary is no Moore-style polemic but an artful interrogation of infamous US Defence Secretary Robert McNamara, who gave Morris 23 hours of filmed interviews in 2001, before 9/11 and the Iraq war, though unspoken parallels are hard to ignore. A formidable intellectual bruiser at 87, the old Cold Warrior seizes what may prove to be his last chance to make peace with history. Riveting.

The Barbarian Invasions

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Denys Arcand reunites the Quebecois characters who made '86's The Decline Of The American Empire so witty and engaging, and despite their age, disillusion and failing health, they're as intellectually provocative as before. Yes, it's talky, but as one lies dying, his friends reminisce about days of drugs and libido, and his son finds a backbone. A moving, note-perfect Oscar-winner.

Denys Arcand reunites the Quebecois characters who made ’86’s The Decline Of The American Empire so witty and engaging, and despite their age, disillusion and failing health, they’re as intellectually provocative as before. Yes, it’s talky, but as one lies dying, his friends reminisce about days of drugs and libido, and his son finds a backbone. A moving, note-perfect Oscar-winner.

Piccadilly

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Shot in 1929 by German...

Shot in 1929 by German

The Singing Detective

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The memory of Dennis Potter is not well-served by this inferior feature version of the fine '80s BBC TV series that confirmed Potter as one of Britain's most original and daring screenwriting talents. Here, Robert Downey Jr takes the Michael Gambon role of Dan Dark, the chronically ill pulp fiction writer who, delirious in hospital, finds reality merging with the fantasy world of his novels.

The memory of Dennis Potter is not well-served by this inferior feature version of the fine ’80s BBC TV series that confirmed Potter as one of Britain’s most original and daring screenwriting talents. Here, Robert Downey Jr takes the Michael Gambon role of Dan Dark, the chronically ill pulp fiction writer who, delirious in hospital, finds reality merging with the fantasy world of his novels.