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Tuesday, 13 May 2014

"As Good As It Gets" on BLU RAY – A Review Of The 1997 James L. Brook’s Movie Now Reissued Onto BLU RAY In 2013...



"…A Better Person…" – As Good As It Gets on BLU RAY

Melvin is a bit of a boor. And that’s not even taking into account that he’s full of crap too. Ensconced in his plush 5th Avenue apartment  – famous and wealthy author Melvin Udall (Jack Nicholson) sits in front of his beautifully lit computer. Speaking softly and eloquently to himself as he composes the revelatory ending of his 62nd book - he types warm words about love and deep relationships. The only problem is that in the real world Melvin sucks at both with the ferocity of a gummy budgie on several uppers.

Then there’s the compulsive behaviour he indulges in privately and publicly because he’s a bank account that afford it – foil-wrapped bars of soap he uses only once (tapping the cabinet mirror each time he opens a new one) and leather gloves he bins after one outing. Mountains of expensive LPs all lined up in perfect alphabetical order - luxurious foot platters in the fridge in shrinkwrap that he won’t eat. In fact compulsion dominates his every action – locks on his door that have to be turned back and forth five times followed by the light switches. He can’t cross cracks in paving stones when he’s out on the New York streets and can’t abide anyone touching him ("get a life" one pedestrian cries). He carries plastic knives and forks with him in sealed bags because eating off immaculate silverware is a "judgement call". But these rituals are small beer to his motor mouth - that more often than not - would make an open drain seem fragrant.

"I've got Jews on my table!" Melvin protests when a man and a woman are found sitting where he always sits (early roles for Peter Jacobson and Lisa Edelstein – Dr. Taub and Dr. Cuddy in Hugh Laurie's "House"). He calls gay men "fudge-packers" while a coloured Art Agent has an "accent thick with molasses…" "Sell crazy some place else!" he tells the cleaning lady who wishes him God in his life. He calls an overweight waitress "elephant girl" and screams "Now!" at her to get his food - finally getting himself barred for life from his favourite eating hole to the applause of every single patron. But worse than his uncontrollable verbal diarrhoea is his persistent obnoxious behaviour – acts so unfeeling – they’d make The Hitler Youth tremble with pride.

There’s his gay neighbour Simon Bishop (Greg Kinnear) – an idealistic painter who obsessively worships his small fluffy dog Verdell – so Melvin chucks the tiny Brussels Griffin down the garbage chute for urinating on the hall radiator ("wizzed for the last time you dirty dog!"). On a visit to his publisher a worshiping secretary foolishly asks, "How do you write women so well?" Unable to resist Melvin replies, "I think of a man – and take away all reason and accountability…" Even the warm-hearted waitress Carol Connolly (Helen Hunt) who works at CAFÉ (the only restaurant he’ll use in Manhattan) - the one person in the whole wide world who will put up with his God awful mannerisms and impatience - is having a hard time not poking his eyes with a red hot poker after a staggeringly offhand and cold remark about her sick Asthmatic son.

Both Jack Nicholson and Helen Hunt won the Oscar for 1997’s "As Good As It Gets" – and not without reason. They’re simply fabulous in their roles as polar opposite people – weary souls who long for release from their respective personal prisons. But for my money the writing of Mark Andrus and Director James L. Brooks should have pulled a statue too. The movie has a ballbreakingly funny script that relishes in the attack - but also knows when to turn on the heart. Melvin shouts as a cackle of school kids on the sidewalk - "Children Stop!" - and all do in abject terror. When Dr. Bettes (the wonderful Harold Ramis) tells working-mum Carol that her sick son Spencer will now suffer less from his breathing problems and allergies because Melvin has stumped up $61,000 in medical bills to get her back to work and waiting on him – it’s funny, moving and beautiful. It drew tears in our house.

The CAFÉ scene where Carol tries to explain her gratitude for the miracle of life Melvin has given her son - is tender and awkward and genuinely touching – and his response of "lovely" when he just wants her to stop is so utterly on the money for his character’s inner demons. When they do finally have dinner together on a car trip to Baltimore to raise cash from Simon’s rich parents (he’s broke and needs to keep his apartment) – Melvin pays Carol a real compliment for the first time (dialogue above) and a softer better person emerges.

Even as a seasoned watcher - you forget just how good Jack Nicholson really is. In full flight – he’s an awesome thing to see and his character’s awfulness towards all of humanity is a wonder to behold. And yet you love him – monumental prick that he is – he gives his Melvin a beating heart. Not to be outdone on the robbed-of-an-Oscar front – I’d also state that another statue should have been handed out to Greg Kinnear as sensitive Simon in what has to be a career-best performance from him. Having been beaten to a facial pulp by a model that cased his soft touch place for a robbery (Skeet Ulrich) – the scene where he’s out of hospital and breaks down in front of Nicholson in his apartment is stupendous - and was shown at the Oscar ceremonies. It took real boots to go up against a consummate scene-stealer like JN and our Greg pulled it off convincingly. Look closely too and you’ll catch a few lines by the author of Star Wars: Empire Strikes Back (and the new one too), Raiders Of The Lost Ark and The Big Chill - Lawrence Kasdan - making an appearance as Dr. Green in Melvin’s Fifth Avenue Psychiatric Group.

Defaulted to Aspect Ratio 1.85:1 – the picture fills the entire screen and is gorgeous throughout. Only on a very few occasions do faces go slightly out of focus – mostly it just looks like quality all the way.
I bought the German Region B version (Besser Geht’s Nicht on Barcode 4030521707481) that has the Region ABC Logo on the rear - meaning it’s all regions or region free. A very real let down however is the complete absence of any Extras – not even a Trailer for God’s sake. I say this because I’ve long raved about the commentary that accompanies the whole film on the DVD release where Nicholson gives it some seriously informative and funny raconteur throughout "I'm upstaged by a fucking dog!" What a shame it isn’t on here. Subtitles are extensive too (details available from Amazon).

There are some Directors I will seek out – Terry Gilliam, Wes Anderson, Nadine Labaki, Peter Howitt, John Borman, Peter Chelsom, Mira Nair, Paul Haggis, Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Paul Greengrass, Nadine Lahti and James L. Brooks are among them. They produce movies of depth, wit and hope – and the brill "As Good As It Gets" is right up there.

"You make me want to be a better person…" Melvin says to Carol in a rare moment of genuine breakthrough.


Make your home a sweeter place too by adding this dysfunctional nugget of love to your shopping basket…

Sunday, 11 May 2014

"The T.Rex Wax Co. Singles: A's and B's 1972-77" by T.REX (April 2002 UK Edsel 2CD Remasters - Reissued In 2014) - A Review by Mark Barry...



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MORE THAN A FEELING 
1976

Your All-Genres Guide To 
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"...Tippy-Toed Vamp A Rider..."

Although it doesn't contain his first four monster hits as T. Rex - "Ride A White Swan" (Oct 1970), "Hot Love" (February 1971), "Get It On" (July 1971) and "Jeepster" (November 1971) - this stunning April 2002 2CD set on Edsel MEDCD 714 (Barcode 740155171421) gives us everything afterwards and is a fantastic listen for it.

"A's and B's 1972 - 1977" does exactly what it says on the tin – providing you with all those EMI/T.Rex Wax Co Label UK 7" singles we bought in those distinctive T.Rex label bags (it stills gives me a kick to look at them to this day). Here's a detailed breakdown of the Metal Gurus and 20th Century Boys:

Disc 1 (69:56 minutes):
1. Telegram Sam b/w Cadillac and Baby Strange - January 1972, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label T-REX 101

2. Metal Guru b/w Thunderwing and Lady – May 1972, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 1

3. Children Of The Revolution b/w Jitterbug Love and Sunken Rags – September 1972. EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 2

4. Solid Gold Easy Action b/w Xmas Riff and Born To Boogie – December 1972, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 3

5.  20th Century Boy b/w Free Angel – March 1973, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 4

6. The Groover b/w Midnight – June 1973, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 5

7. Truck On (Tyke) b/w Sitting Here – November 1973, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 6

8. Teenage Dream b/w Satisfaction Pony – January 1974, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co Label MARC 7

9. Light Of Love b/w Explosive Mouth – July 1974 – EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 8

10. Zip Gun Boogie b/w Space Boss – November 1974 – EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 9

Disc 2 (56:35 minutes):
1. New York City b/w Chrome Sitar – June 1975, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 10

2. Dreamy Lady b/w Do You Wanna Dance? and Dock Of The Boy – September 1975, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co Label MARC 11

3. London Boys b/w Solid Baby – February 1976, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 13

4. I Love To Boogie b/w Baby Boomerang – June 1976, EMI. T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 14

5. Laser Love b/w Life's An Elevator – September 1976, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co Label MARC 15

6. To Know You Is Love You (To Know Him Is To Love Him) b/w City Port by MARC BOLAN and GLORIA JONES – January 1977, EMI Records EMI 2572

7. The Soul Of My Suit b/w All Alone – March 1977, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 16

8. Dandy In The Underworld b/w Groove A Little and Tame My Tiger – May 1977, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 17

9. Celebrate Summer b/w Ride My Wheels – August 1977, EMI/T.Rex Wax Co. Label MARC 17

The fold-out inlay with liner notes by T.Rex/Marc Bolan expert MARK PAYTRESS is jam-packed with details on the all the tracks and pictures those famous labels we bought in Woolworths with the excitement of buying the next Beatles seven.
The remasters are fabulous – full of power and muscle – giving "20th Century Boy" and "I Love To Boogie" huge punch.

It’s not all magic of course – "Dreamy Lady" is terrible dreck and I still recall the feeling of disappointment when "Truck On (Tyke)" came out – it was the end for him by that time. But tracks like "New York City", "Teenage Dream" and "Laser Love" still have that Bolan magic - and how good is to hear all those cracking non-album B-sides - "Thunderwing" (lyrics above), "Sunken Rags", "Free Angel" and "Life's An Elevator" to name but a few. He used album tracks only twice to my knowledge – "Solid Baby" from "Bolan's Zip-Gun" and "Baby Boomerang" from 1972's "The Slider" – but again they're superb inclusions. It's also nice to have that Marc Bolan and Gloria Jones rare 7" on CD too. Speaking of one-off oddities – it's worth mentioning the lone exclusion on this set – "Christmas Bop" which was to be MARC 12 in December 1975 – but was withdrawn.

Sometimes you don't have to pay the earth to get great sound, fab music, nice presentation and a reasonable price for 2CDs. What a blast...and what a loss. I miss him…

Saturday, 10 May 2014

"Badfinger/Wish You Were Here/In Concert At The BBC 1972-3" by BADFINGER - July and October 1974 Albums Plus 1972-1973 BBC in-Concert Material (October 2013 UK Edsel/Rhino 2CD Compilation of Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...



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"…A Victim Of The Circumstance…"

After their 4-album beginnings with The Beatles Apple label – it was time for Badfinger to move on – and as history would show – they made a financially and personally disastrous signing to the behemoth of Warner Brothers Records. Contractual and legal crap left them penniless and drove their gifted songwriter Pete Ham to despair – literally taking his own life in April 1975.

The band had little control over the title of their first album on their new label (originally to be known as "For Love Or Money" as a pun) and little control over the curious 'girl with a cigarette and riding crop' naff artwork. And with Badfinger’s last album on Apple having only just hit the UK shops in March of 1974 ("Ass") – it probably wasn’t the smartest of moves to hit punters with two more albums that same year. But history also shows that Badfinger had an ace up their sleeve - their songs. And it’s very evident from the opening salvo on the first four tunes on "Badfinger" – that they were back in top form – sort of England’s answer to Big Star – all tunes and melodies and great hooks that stay with you.

This fantastic October 2013 2CD set - "Badfinger/Wish You Were Here/In Concert At The BBC 1972-3" by BADFINGER on Edsel/Rhino EDSK 7036 (Barcode 740155703639) is a 2CD Compilation of Remasters that gives us both of their 1974 albums on Warner Brothers and a further disc of 14 BBC In Concert tracks between 1972 and 1973. It breaks down as follows:

Disc 1 (76:03 minutes):
1. I Miss You [Side 1]
2. Shine On
3. Love Is Easy
4. Song For A Lost Friend
5. Why Don’t We Talk
6. Island
7. Matted Spam [Side 2]
8. Where Do We From Here?
9. My Heart Goes Out
10. Lonely You
11. Give It Up
12. Andy Norris
Tracks 1 to 12 are their 5th album "Badfinger" – released July 1974 in the UK on Warner Brothers K 56023 and August 1974 in the USA on Warner Brothers BS 2762

13. Just A Chance [Side 1]
14. Your So Fine
15. Got To Get Out Of Here
16. Know One Knows
17. Dennis
18. In The Meantime/Some Other Time [Side 2]
19. Love Time
20. King Of The Load (T)
21. Meanwhile Back At The ranch/Should I Smoke 
Tracks 13 to 21 are their 6th album "Wish You Were Here" – released October 1974 in the UK on Warner Brothers K 56076 and November 1974 in the USA on Warner Brothers BS 2827

Disc 2 (68:03 minutes):
1. Better Days
2. Only You Know And I Know
3. We’re For The Dark
4. Sweet Tuesday Morning
5. Feelin’ Alright
6. Take It All
7. Suitcase
8. Love Is Easy
9. Blind Owl
10. Constitution
11. Icicles
12. Matted Spam
13. Suitcase
14. I Can’t Take It
Tracks 1 to 7 were recorded in concert at the Paris Theatre in London on 8 June 1972. Tracks 8 to 14 were recorded at the same venue but on 10 August 1973. JEFF GRIFFIN expertly produced both BBC sessions for the “In Concert” program and their additions here are most welcome.

The outer card wrap gives the whole reissue a quality feel – as does the chunky 28-page booklet which pictures the albums, publicity photos, track by track recording info, American promo Singles, and exceptionally detailed, affectionate and caustic liner notes by Rock Expert and long-time Edsel Associate ALAN ROBINSON. It’s both a pleasure and a horror to read (never had a group such bad luck).

PHIL KINRADE at Alchemy has obviously used the Rhino remasters and the sound quality is fabulous – especially bringing out those layered vocals which original Producer Chris Thomas captured so well.

It’s easy to see why the album openers "I Miss You" and "Shine On" were picked as an A&B for the first single off the record in the USA (Warner Brothers WB 7801) – great tunes. The second 45 "Love Is Easy" was issued in Germany in a band-photo picture sleeve (Warner Brothers WB 16323) but it did little business. Pete Ham's "Lonely You" and the wonderful "Song For A Lost Friend" have such pretty melodies (lyrics above) and were somehow indicative of the band’s overall fortunes.

"Just A Chance" opens the "Wish You Were Here" album with a rocking hit (shame it wasn’t lifted as a radio single). Joey Molland’s "Got To Get Out Of Here" sounds like acoustic Oasis while "No One Knows" and "Dennis" sound like the "Pacific Ocean Blue" album of 1977 by Beach Boy Dennis Wilson – dense with guitars and adventurous vocals. One of the best on here is "Love Time" and it rocks out with "Meanwhile Back At The Ranch/Should I Smoke" loaded with bittersweet lyrics like "should I laugh or should I cry…won’t somebody help me…"

The BBC Stuff is a raucous blast – with the band much rockier than you would imagine. The first session features two great covers of Dave Mason songs – a nine-minute romp through his Traffic hit "Feelin' Alright" and his own solo track "Only You Know And I Know" (superbly covered by Joan Osborne on her 2002 "How Sweet It Is" CD album). "Better Days" even sounds like Lynyrd Skynyrd circa 1974's "Second Helping" at times. They even go funky with "Matted Spam" and Bob Seger boogie on the finisher “I Can’t Take It”. After the ever-so-slightly over-produced nature of both studio albums – these loose live renditions feel like a breath of fresh air.

Why do some bands make it and some don’t – bad luck, bad judgement, bad handling by people who should have known better.

At least we have this excellent reminder of what really matters – the music...

"I Am Sam" by VARIOUS ARTISTS [Doing Beatles Cover Versions] (2002 Soundtrack/Motion Picture CD Album on V2 Music) - A Review by Mark Barry...




"...Pools Of Sorrow...Waves Of Joy..."

"I Am Sam" Original Soundtrack/Motion Picture Album on CD
BEATLES Cover Versions by VARIOUS ARTISTS 

I was watching the superb but cancelled American TV Series "Flash Forward" on DVD and one of the early episodes (I think it was about 5 or 6) featured Rufus Wainwright's gorgeously evocative cover of The Beatles Let It Be classic "Across The Universe". I was blown away and immediately had to own it.

When I got the CD - I then noticed the track choices and the artists - each very cleverly picked and each lending themselves to acoustic interpretations of Beatles songs - especially from 1966 onwards. Their versions are amazing in some cases - Aimee Mann and Michael Penn's "Two Of Us" is so good - sounding like the original - but with a deftness of touch and matching duet vocals like the original. The Stereophonics do a stunning Soulfully slowed down version of the "Get Back" B-side "Don't Let Me Down" - sort of Ryan Adams in its feel. The whole album is filled with beautifully complimentary covers like this.

A hugely satisfying overall listen – "I Am Sam" Original Soundtrack Album is a rare achievement for a collection of Beatles songs.

What a band and what a legacy. Get this ace CD in your life soonest…

1. Two Of Us - Aimee Mann
2. Blackbird - Sarah McLachlan
3. Across The Universe - Rufus Wainwright
4. I'm Looking Through You - The Wallflowers
5. You've Got To Hide Your Love Away - Eddie Vedder
6. Strawberry Fields Forever - Ben Harper
7. Mother Nature's Son - Sheryl Crow
8. Golden Slumbers - Ben Folds
9. I'm Only Sleeping - The Vines
10. Don't Let Me Down - Stereophonics
11. Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds - The Black Crowes
12. Julia - Chocolate Genius
13. We Can Work It Out - Heather Nova
14. Help! - Howie Day
15. Nowhere Man - Paul Westerberg
16. Revolution - Grandaddy
17. Let It Be - Nick Cave

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order