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Barbershop

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Opens 31 January, Cert 12A, 102 mins

Set in a local barbershop in south Chicago, this finds Ice Cube cast as Calvin, a second-generation hairdresser eager to be shot of his late father’s business. It takes a run-in with loan shark Lester (Keith David) for Calvin to realise how important the shop is to its customers, its staff and the community at large.

Barbershop won’t win any prizes for originality, but its feelgood mix of familiar elements makes it much bigger than the sum of its parts. Okay, so a dopey subplot involving a pilfered cash machine tests our patience, and the pressure to sew up the various plot threads results in a rushed and unconvincing conclusion.

Cube is hugely loveable here, but the ace in the hole is comedian Cedric the Entertainer, ideally cast as the shop’s resident sage, Eddie. His comments on OJ Simpson, Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks have whipped up a storm of controversy in the States, and they’re evidence that Barbershop wants its audience to think as well as laugh.

Perfume De Violetas

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Opens January 10, Cert 15, 90 mins

Although set in the same urban sprawl that emblazoned Amores Perros and Y Tu Mam

Ghost Ship

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Opens January 10, Cert 15, 88 mins

Former special effects man Steven Beck hasn’t mastered original filmmaking just yet. Ghost Ship is a clich

The Tuxedo

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Opens January 10, Cert 12A, 98 mins

James Bond has had a lot of competition recently: Matt Damon in The Bourne Identity, Vin Diesel in xXx and the pint-sized heroes of Spy Kids 2. Now it’s Jackie Chan’s turn to take on 007 in this entertaining if disposable caper about a boy, a girl and a hi-tech dinner jacket.

Jackie Chan plays a humble chauffeur who turns into… well, Jackie Chan the moment he dons his employer’s prized tuxedo. Equipped with more gadgets than the whole of Q Branch, Jackie finds he can walk up walls, turn invisible and move like James Brown?talents that come in handy when he’s called upon to battle a madman out to contaminate the world’s water.

As Chan vehicles go this is fairly average, and sidekick Jennifer Love Hewitt is a poor substitute for Rush Hour’s Chris Tucker. Still, Kevin Donovan’s feature debut boasts enough fight scenes, slapstick comedy routines and outlandish stunts to satisfy the most ardent fan, and although this tux might have looked better on someone else, Jackie nonetheless wears it with aplomb

It’s A Wonderful Life—Collector’s Edition

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Frank Capra’s festive classic is one of those rare standards which not only lives up to its rep but reveals new treasures on every viewing. James Stewart is forlorn George Bailey, who thinks life just isn’t worth living, ’til it’s revealed to him how meaningful his meaningless existence really is. Containing more snow than a TV presenter’s nostril, it’ll melt even the frostiest among you.

The Sacrifice

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Retired actor Alexander (Erland Josephson) is celebrating his birthday with friends and family when an imminent nuclear catastrophe is announced on TV. So Alexander offers to make a deal with God to avert the disaster. Andrei Tarkovsky’s final film is as powerful as you’d expect.

I’m Alan Partridge

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More personal than Knowing Me, Knowing You and sharper than the series just broadcast, this masterfully observed, grotesquely populated comedy is to the ’90s what Fawlty Towers was to the ’70s?but you know all that. Buy this, then, for the meaty extras and as a handy reminder that UK comedy can still be the best in the world.

Paul Weller—Two Classic Performances

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Comprising this summer’s Hyde Park concert (a rocking preview of the Illumination album that followed) and last year’s BBC Later… special of Paul unplugged circa Days Of Speed, this double-header is a timely celebration of the Modfather’s continuing success. Both blinding, though the latter set of acoustic Jam and TSC chestnuts (a Noel Gallagher assisted “That’s Entertainment” included) is pretty much unbeatable.

Marion And Geoff Series One

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Tight script and fantastic acting from Rob Brydon, but what is the actual point of this much lauded two-hour divorcee monologue? In theory it’s a comedy, but with not a single laugh in the entire series there’s a very real danger for non-pseuds that its supposed greatness will completely pass you by. They won’t be running repeats of this at Christmas next year, that’s for sure.

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In an ideal world, Blondie would have existed only on video. The golden Deborah, adored by the camera, would now live forever as a shimmering punk siren, blessed with a voice of both honey and crystalline clarity. Harry fronts Blondie at their 1983 farewell concert in Toronto uncomfortably, inelegantly, and sings without any of the vitality of the sassy little Kittens whose success has prompted this release.

Beastie Boys

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The rap trio who defined cool in the ’90s for want-not-to-be-middle-class white boys have probably released this two-disc video compilation just in time, before they become horribly pass

John Lennon And The Plastic Ono Band-Sweet Toronto

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Another dusting-off for the Plastic Ono Band, playing for peace and headlining over Bo Diddley, Jerry Lee, Chuck Berry and Little Richard. Yoko climbs out of a bag to shriek along with the atmospheric desperation of “Yer Blues” and “Cold Turkey”, and provides the highlight, during “John, John (Let’s Hope For Peace)”, by throwing Eric Clapton into such confusion he doesn’t know what to play.

The Studio One Story

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The history of Clement “Coxsone” Dodd’s legendary Jamaican studio is told through interviews, copious amounts of music and historical footage. There are also plenty of interesting diversions, such as a chapter on how vinyl records are made in a Kingston pressing plant. Early performances by the likes of The Skatalites and Ernest Ranglin are the icing on the irie cake.

DVD EXTRAS: Additional interviews with many of the artists featured, plus 16-track CD and 90-page booklet. Rating Star

We Are Skint

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Thought deceased, big beat is in fact set to be the new ska?resurrected every few years by students who think they’ve discovered a new sound. Brighton scene originators Skint are therefore proud of Fatboy Slim, Lo Fidelity Allstars and X-Press 2 with David Byrne, but who’s got time to sit through 26 of their videos? Plenty of laughs here nevertheless, as typified by Doug Aitken’s wigs’n’ breakdancing promo for “Rockafeller Skank”.

God Save Our Mad Parade

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The sex pistols have become as much of a great British institution as the ones they so chaotically threatened more than a quarter of a century ago. Retelling their stories individually, Lydon, Matlock, Jones and Cook today look and sound as harmless as the good old guy down the pub, although Lydon still employs the glittering Stare to dramatic effect. Malcolm McLaren and Jamie Reed join journalists, record company executives and production and studio staff as the history of the Pistols, and the making of their one great album, is related in detail, with live clips accompanied by footage of such splendid outrages as the Bill Grundy show and the Jubilee boat trip. Jones’ real musical strengths in the band are revealed for the first time, and, in another surprising twist, Lydon, Jones and Cook express regrets over their treatment of Matlock.

Festen

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Thomas Vinterberg christened the Dogme genre with immense style in this 1998 Danish classic with edgy docu-drama camerawork and grainy digital video helping to supercharge a time-honoured narrative progression from cosy family gathering to shock revelation. Partly inspired by a real-life radio phone-in confession, Vinterberg’s jet-black farce moves from incest, suicide and racism to cathartic redemption.

DVD EXTRAS: Trailer, Dogme certificate, interview/picture booklet. Rating Star

Europa Europa

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When, in ’91, this wasn’t nominated for a best foreign film Oscar, nearly every living German director signed a protest letter. Agnieszka Holland hasn’t since matched the story of a Polish Jew who pretends to be a Nazi in order to survive. Suspenseful and sensitive, it avoids traps which even Polanski’s The Pianist falls into.

A Time For Drunken Horses

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Bahman Ghobadi’s gruelling account of Kurdish hardships on the Iran/Iraq border has none of the artful self-consciousness of Samira Makhmalbaf’s remarkably similar Blackboards. Instead, this powerful story of eldest child Ayoub trying to smuggle his dying brother into Iraq features brutally uncompromising scenes of bareknuckle kiddie fistfights, savagely battered horses, and the casual physical abuse of a crippled child.

Novocaine

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Steve Martin is dentist Robert Sangster trapped in a too safe relationship with his hygienist (Laura Dern). When he takes a walk on the wild side with drug-dealing patient Susan Ivey (Helena Bonham Carter), Sangster’s pharmaceutical supplies are pilfered and Ivey’s psychopathic brother and the police send his life into tailspin. A laboured attempt to reinvigorate an increasingly tired-looking Martin.

Of Mice And Men

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Gary Sinise directs John Steinbeck’s fatalistic Depression-era fable of friendship and sacrifice with a reverence for the text and a painterly eye for period 1930s detail. Sinise also co-stars alongside Sherilyn Fenn and John Malkovich, who anchors this 1992 remake as mentally challenged gentle giant Lenny. A handsome American classic, even if the overrated Malky’s twitchy mannerisms irritate as much as ever.