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Parent Category: Film and the Arts
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Category: Reviews
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Published on Wednesday, 30 April 2025 23:53
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Written by Kevin Filipski
In-Theater Release of the Week
The Trouble with Jessica
(Music Box Films)
When Jessica, the depressed friend of two middle-class couples, decides after dinner to hang herself in the garden, the foursome goes through hell—unexpected police visits, unexpected potential house buyer visits, a fan of Jessica’s book visits—as they try and move the body so an impending house sale won’t be affected.
Matt Winn’s scattershot black comedy (Winn also wrote the script with James Handel) has a great setup and quotable dialogue but soon goes overboard with ridiculous coincidences and unlikely reveals that make this start to drag even though it's only 89 minutes. The sledgehammer use of music doesn’t help either; at least the formidable cast—Olivia Williams, Shirley Henderson, Rufus Sewell, Alan Tudyk, and Indira Varma as Jessica—keeps things percolating even when it becomes risible instead of funny.
Streaming Release of the Week
Artie Shaw—Time Is All You’ve Got
(Film Movement Classics)
Brigitte Berman’s recently restored documentary of jazz clarinetist, composer and band leader Artie Shaw was cowinner of the 1986 Oscar for best documentary feature (along with Lee Grant’s Down and Out in America) is an engaging look at a complicated musical artist that benefits from a sit-down interview with Shaw, who’s a chatty and forthcoming subject.
Berman also uses lots of well-chosen vintage clips and interviews with fellow musicians and some of the women in his life (Shaw was married eight times) to present a sympathetic but never fawning portrait.
4K/UHD Releases of the Week
The Outlaw Josey Wales
(Warner Bros)
In this 1976 western, Clint Eastwood plays the title character, who looks to avenge the slaughter of his wife and son on his Missouri farm by Union troops in the waning days of the Civil War—his joining the Confederates and facing down bounty hunters form the crux of the drama, which, at 137 minutes, is overlong if never dull.
Although Eastwood directs as laconically as ever, he conjures up a vivid atmosphere of lawlessness that outweighs the cliched moments. The UHD transfer is transfixing; extras include Richard Schickel’s commentary as well as new and vintage featurettes about Eastwood the filmmaker and western icon.
(Warner Bros)
In this 1985 western, Clint Eastwood plays the title character (who’s nicknamed “Preacher”), arriving in a gold-rush town and finding himself in the middle of a clash between a lawless mining syndicate and several prospectors in a stripped-down but familiar western (Shane, anyone?) that makes director Eastwood its understated star, along with the charming presence of then teen performer Sydney Penny as one of the locals he protects.
There’s an excellent UHD transfer; extras include the usual new and vintage featurettes, along with the full-length 2010 documentary The Eastwood Factor.
Blu-ray Releases of the Week
The Alchemy of the Piano
(Naxos)
Italian pianist Francesco Piemontesi talks with inspirational keyboard practitioners from superstars Alfred Brendel and Maria João Pires to reclusive American Stephen Kovacevich and French priest Jean-Rodolphe Kars, who vividly dissects and plays the sacred music of Messiaen.
Piemontesi also takes a tour of the Swiss home of Russian composer and pianist Sergei Rachmaninoff with colleagues Yulianna Avdeeva and Zlata Chochieva. This lovely exploration of artistry and genius has the right balance of talk and performance to spread the gospel of the keyboard. The lone extra is an hour-long Rachmaninoff concert by Piemontesi, Avdeeva and Chochieva.
(Severin Films)
This 1976 entry in an increasingly bizarre oeuvre begins with an orgy featuring Adolf Hitler (hiding out in a Bavarian castle in California under an assumed name) and gets progressively stranger—but Russ Meyer doesn’t care: he loves showing off buxom, attractive women onscreen, whether they are sexually ravished or violently violated, sometimes in the same scene.
Here he has real finds: leading ladies Raven De La Croix and Janet Wood are alluring and appealing personalities (they’re not really actresses) and the immortal Kitten Natividad—who was married to Meyer for a few years—plays the nude Greek chorus. The film has a good hi-def restoration; extras include a commentary by film historian Elizabeth Purchell and De La Croix interview.
Édouard Lalo—Le roi d'Ys
(Palazzetto Bru Zane)
Outside of France, Edouard Lalo (1823-92) is best known for his Symphonie espagnole, but this fantastical opera—which contains a lot of attractive music and a marvelous lead role for a mezzo-soprano—deserves a surer foothold in the repertoire based on this superb recording by the Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra and Hungarian National Choir under conductor György Vashegyi.
This fairy-tale evocation of a Breton city torn by war and filial jealousy begins with an appropriately drama overture and culminates with a thrilling evocation of a flood, and this disc’s soloists—led by the excellent American mezzo Kate Aldrich as Margared, whose decisions propel the story toward tragedy—make vocal magic.
The Complete Songs of Ravel
(Signum Classics)
The music of Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) is more varied than his greatest hit, the metronome-like Bolero, would suggest. His finely crafted songs, for example, are eclectic in the best sense. Pianist Malcolm Martineau, who has traversed the complete vocal works of Duparc, Fauré and Poulenc on disc, is the sensitive accompanist on nearly all of these graceful mélodies.
An array of singers—Lorna Anderson, Julie Boulianne, John Chest, Sarah Dufresne Dafydd Jones, Simon Keenlyside, Paula Murrihy, Nicky Spence and William Thomas—and instrumental combos (quartet, flutes, cello) greatly contribute to Martineau’s wonderfully alive exploration of such great song cycles as Shéhérazade, 3 Poèmes de Stéphane Mallarmé and Chansons madécasses.