2/19/10
THIS BLOG IS MOVING TO A NEW SITE
2/17/10
CULURE JAMMING -- FEBRUARY 17
TOP PICK GoodFellas 20th Anniversary
(Warner)
One of the greatest mob movies of all time celebrates its 20th anniversary with a Blu-ray book version that includes tons of cool extras, like a feature-length Golden Age of the Gangster Film documentary. Martin Scorsese’s wiseguy epic is the centerpiece, with great performances by Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta and an Oscar-winning (and yeah, funny) Joe Pesci.
Atonement
(Universal)
This adaptation of Ian McEwan’s novel about a lie that changes the lives of World War II-era lovers was nominated for a half-dozen Oscars in 2007. (Indeed, it’s part of a series of Academy Award releases on Blu-ray.) Keira Knightley has never been better, and the story – there’s a war going on, so you know things won’t end well -- will tear you apart.
CD
Buzzcocks reissues
(Mute)
One of punk’s all-time greatest singles bands also released three albums in the ’70s: Another Music in a Different Kitchen, Love Bites and A Different Kind of Tension. These reissues each include a bonus disc filled with demos, live versions, radio performances and some previously unreleased material. Best: All of the essential singles are here too.
VIDEO GAME
(Sony)
Think Modern Warfare 2’s playing field isn’t claustrophobic enough? This groundbreaking first-person shooter for the PlayStation 3 is an online-only behemoth capable of equipping 256 players with weapons at the same time. Since it’s a war game by the makers of the SOCOM series, prepare for some heated battles. Get ready for a bloody good time too.
BOOK
Me, the Mob and the Music: One Helluva Ride With Tommy James and the Shondells
(Scribner)
Apparently there was plenty of hanky panky going on behind the scenes of James’ music in the ’60s. In this absorbing chronicle of James’ chart run (co-written by James and Martin Fitzpatrick), we learn that his record-company boss had some very brutal ties inside and outside of the industry. It wasn’t all crimson and clover as they chased the money, money.
--Michael Gallucci
2/12/10
MOVIE REVIEW -- PERCY JACKSON & THE OLYMPIANS: THE LIGHTNING THIEF

You’d think a bestselling book series about kids with mythical powers would at least try to divert attention from the inevitable Harry Potter comparisons for its initial turn on the big screen. But The Lightning Thief, the first film based on Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson & the Olympians books, is directed by Chris Columbus, the same guy who helmed the first two (and most undeveloped) Harry Potter movies. There are some differences between American Percy and Brit Harry – most significantly, Percy’s roots are in Greek mythology instead of budding wizardry. But like Harry, Percy takes two friends (yep --one’s a boy, the other’s a girl and both are demigods) along on his adventures. Turns out teen Percy (Logan Lerman) is the son of Poseidon. After Zeus’ lightning bolt is stolen, Percy and his pals go on a quest to get it back.
2/10/10
MOVIE REVIEW -- BRIGHTON ROCK
Adapted from a Graham Greene novel, this 1947 British gangster film was quite a shocker in its day (Mutilated bodies! Gangland warfare! Double-crossing snitches!). It’s still a solid piece of filmmaking by director John Boulting, even if some of the onscreen violence seems a bit tame by modern standards. After rackets runner Pinkie Brown (Richard Attenborough) murders a rival, a boozy barfly (Hermione Baddeley) who was hanging out with the victim right before he was killed begins snooping around. Meanwhile, Pinkie tries to get his small-time gang some respect on the street and cozies up to a young, innocent waitress (a radiant Carol Marsh), who’s inadvertently connected to the crime. The script (co-written by Greene) is tough. So are the characters. Pinkie is ruthless, at one point tossing one of his cronies off a balcony. The film is also quite suspenseful, particularly during the long opening scene when thugs pursue an unfortunate victim through
CULTURE JAMMING -- FEBRUARY 10
TOP PICK (Warner)
Clint Eastwood directed some of his greatest films in the ’00s – Million Dollar Baby, Letters From Iwo Jima, Gran Torino. This is one of his all-time best. Making its Blu-ray debut, the 2003 movie – about three childhood friends and a murder that pulls them apart – boasts Oscar-winning performances by Sean Penn and Tim Robbins. Kevin Bacon is also terrific.
CD
Animal Collective: Campfire Songs
(Paw Tracks)
Before they became every music snob’s favorite band, these noisemaking weirdos kept the electronic enhancements to a minimum. Their third album (from 2003) features five single-take tracks recorded on a porch with acoustic guitars. Listen for birds and other natural ingredients (like wind rustling through the trees) in the mix. Freaky!
Dr. Who: The Complete Specials
(
As we prepare for yet another actor to step into the doctor’s time-traveling shoes, look back on David Tennant’s run in this five-disc set, which gathers five specials from the long-running sci-fi series: The Next Doctor, Planet of the Dead, The Waters of Mars and The End of Time, Parts One & Two. Extras include deleted scenes, commentary and a video diary.
CD
The Jerry Garcia Collection, Vol. 2: Let It Rock, Jerry Garcia Band, November 17 & 18, 1975, Keystone Berkeley
(Jerry Garcia Family/Rhino)
Garcia’s solo gigs weren’t all that different than the shows he played with the Grateful Dead (except there’s no Bob Weir to weigh things down). There’s still plenty of 15-minute jams and covers of other people’s classics -- like the Rolling Stones’ “Let’s Spend the Night Together,” a highlight of this two-disc set.
VIDEO GAME
Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games
(Sega)
Just in time for the Olympics, this Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 game piles on the snow and events -- 14 of them, in fact, many including snowboards, bobsleighs or skis. The first-person point of view is cool (tumbling down a mountain is both exhilarating and nauseating), but best are the multiplayer options, where you can show off your virtual medals across the globe.
--Michael Gallucci
2/5/10
MUSIC REVIEW -- GIL SCOTT-HERON

Gil Scott-Heron
I’m New Here
(XL)
Badass poet and ex-con Scott-Heron was the guy who declared “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised” back in 1971. On the 60-year-old artist’s first album in 13 years, he still sounds like the coolest guy in the room and someone you probably wouldn’t want to mess with. He covers Robert Johnson’s “Me and the Devil” on I’m New Here, but it’s his own compositions (like the opening “On Coming From a Broken Home”) that set the climate for this mostly autobiographical song cycle. Scott-Heron’s battered rasp – sometimes singing, sometimes reading or rapping -- gives the songs suitable gravity, especially when he looks back on a life of some bad decisions. The music ranges from spare handclaps to full-band throttle. But Scott-Heron – reflective, defiant -- provides the most volume. --Michael Gallucci
2/4/10
MOVIE REVIEW -- UNMADE BEDS
In the opening scene of Unmade Beds, 20-year-old bisexual Axl (Fernando Tielve) wakes up next to a girl he doesn’t recognize, wondering if he slept with her the night before. It’s a typical morning for the kid from
While their paths rarely cross (until the end of the film, of course), Axl and Vera share a warehouse with other young European hipsters who are hanging on to their adolescence. Unmade Beds often plays like a series of vignettes featuring the pair going through their daily lives. Scenes switch back and forth between them: She works and flirts with a guy she meets at a club; he trails a real-estate agent who may be his long-lost father.
The boys and girl on the brink of adulthood here aren’t as wayward as most of their indie-film contemporaries. Many of them have jobs, even if they do spend most of their free time hanging out in clubs, drinking and looking for love (or at least sex). Director Alexis Dos
It doesn’t help that Axl is needy and annoying (he tends to forget people’s names, especially the ones he’s in bed with), and Vera is boring and aloof (her face is perpetually blank, whether she’s having sex or stocking books). Whatever resolution Unmade Beds offers takes place in the bedroom; characters hang out there, fuck there and make art there. They’ll also put you to sleep there. --Michael Gallucci
MUSIC REVIEW -- HOT CHIP
Hot Chip
One Life Stand
(Astralwerks
British electro-pop duo Hot Chip want it both ways. Like other European (and European-sounding) groups that play around with synths and target the dance floor, Hot Chip welcome the distance that being a smartass provides. Yet they can’t help but get all cuddly once in a while. Some of the songs on their fourth album, One Life Stand, were inspired by Alexis Taylor becoming a parent. So much for hipster cool. But there’s still plenty here to get both butts bumping and hearts pumping. One Life Stand isn’t as frantic as 2008’s Made in the Dark (being a dad wears you down); the focus is mostly on songs, not sounds, this time. Many of the ballads flatline, but tracks like “Thieves in the Night” and “Hand Me Down Your Love” throb with nightlife neon, pulling at the corners as squeals and shrieks escape into the air. --Michael Gallucci
2/3/10
CULTURE JAMMING -- FEBRUARY 3
TOP PICK The Simpsons Season 20
(Twentieth Century Fox)
The Simpsons celebrates its 20th anniversary with its first batch of HD episodes on its inaugural Blu-ray set. All 21 episodes from the 2008-09 season are on these four discs, including a funny Da Vinci Code spoof. Plus, Homer and Ned become bounty hunters.
VIDEO GAME
Army of Two: The 40th Day
(EA)
You gotta play this third-person shooter (for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3) with a pal in co-op mode. As a pair of mercenaries in war-town
The Bourne Trilogy
(Universal)
Universal kicks off its new dual-format discs (Blu-ray on one side,
Moon
(Sony)
No wonder director Duncan Jones nails his debut movie about a psychological space odyssey: His dad, David Bowie, sang about the same subject 40 years ago. Sam Rockwell plays an astronaut at the end of a three-year space mission, where his only companion is a talking computer. It’s like a cool mash-up of 2001, Silent Running and Major Tom.
BOOK
Phish: The Biography
(Da Capo)
Writer Parke Puterbaugh has spent the past 15 years covering Phish, often as the band’s official biographer. So his book is stuffed with insider details – from their early barnyard gigs to last year’s massive reunion shows. He touches on frontman Trey Anastasio’s recent drug problems, but mostly The Biography is about the music and the band’s (and fans’) relationship to it.
--Michael Gallucci
2/2/10
MUSIC REVIEW -- SADE
SadeSoldier of Love
(Epic)
You can’t rush Sade. In the 25 years since her debut, she’s released only six albums. Her latest, Soldier of Love, comes a full 10 years after her last one, 2000’s Lovers Rock. But it’s always worth the wait. Here, the warm, simmering R&B of her 1984 debut, Diamond Life, receives a few nips and tucks (marching drums, skittering electronic noises). Yet it’s unmistakably Sade – smooth, cool and impeccably arranged. Her deep, rich voice has lost none of its force over the years. She coats opener “The Moon and the Sky” with lush, smoky tones that make the wide-open spaces she’s singing about the most intimate place in the world. On the title track, a single percussion roll pulls along a spare hook that’s all about the surrounding elements: random sound bursts, handclaps, Sade’s voice. Soldier of Love isn’t always this exciting; some of the late-night ballads drag at a nearly crippling pace. But there’s enough gorgeous music to keep you satisfied for another decade. --Michael Gallucci
2/1/10
MUSIC REVIEW: LIL WAYNE
LIL Rebirth
(Universal Motown)
White guys with backward baseball caps and lousy attitudes aren’t the only ones who shouldn’t jump genres. Apparently it goes both ways. On his long-delayed “rock album” Rebirth, rapper Lil Wayne replaces hard hip-hop beats with soggy guitar riffs and primeval drum thumps straight outta 1999. Opener “American Star” even launches the album with a semi-scorching fret workout that could have been hiding in Eddie Van Halen’s closet all these years. But Rebirth quickly falls into a hard-rock trap. Either Weezy has lousy taste in rock or he actually believes this is what it sounds like. His sole contribution to the genre? Auto-Tune. Only “Drop the World” (as in “I’m gonna pick the world up and drop it on your fuckin’ head”) manages to pack some weight. Just as Fred Durst and dozens of other rap-rock clowns could never quite grasp the fundamentals of either music, Lil Wayne temporarily abandons his rap throne for a record that mistakes volume for power. --Michael Gallucci
1/28/10
MOVIE REVIEW -- STORM
The tempest at the center of Storm has nothing to do with a thunder- and lightning-packed downpour. It’s a political thriller about a Dutch attorney who stumbles on a new batch of war crimes while building evidence against a Serbian army general who may be responsible for ethnic cleansing in
At the center of this storm is lawyer Hannah Maynard (Kerry Fox), determined to bring the army commander to justice, especially after her chief witness kills himself -- but not before the witness lies in court, effectively damaging whatever case Hannah and her prosecuting team had made against the general (who has been in prison three years awaiting trial).
It doesn’t help matters that Hannah was hoping to head the prosecutor’s office, a job that instead went to the man who’s now her boss (and who’s more than eager to pass on the flimsy case to her). Starting from basically scratch, Hannah begins to uncover new details. For starters, her key witness was telling the truth about the horrors in
Director Hans-Christian Schmid steers his smart, probing drama into a mystery for much of the film, as Hannah peels away parts of her witnesses’ lives, uncovering new layers of terror. Schmid slowly ratchets up the danger as Hannah burrows deeper and deeper: She dodges a rock thrown through her car window; Mira’s son disappears from school. Both incidents are not-so-subtle, menacing messages to the women to stop meddling. Plus, Hannah’s boss and the court just want to reach a settlement and put the whole thing behind them. So much for justice.
Fox is solid as the strong-minded and dogged Hannah. “I’m not interested in politics,” she says. “My responsibility is to uphold the applicable law.” Storm starts as a courtroom drama, but as her investigation uncovers the secrets behind a bus, a hotel and Serbian officials, it develops into much more. There are no fancy camera moves, stylish visuals or brash mood-setting music -- Schmid builds the dread naturally, and the results are way more suspenseful than most
MUSIC REVIEW -- YEASAYER

Yeasayer
Odd Blood
(Secretly Canadian)
Yet another group of
1/27/10
MUSIC REVIEW -- NICK JONAS & THE ADMINISTRATION

Who I Am
(
As the most talented and ambitious Jonas Brother, Nick carries a lot of weight. Apparently he also carries a head full of ideas that needs cleared every 10 months or so. On Who I Am, a solo project with a group of session musicians called the Administration, Nick doesn’t stray far from JoBros themes of bad-love-turned-worse and the mean girls who make his life such hell. Never mind he’s only 17 and things will likely become totally unbearable once he settles down and gets married; as “State of Emergency” declares, love is a losing battle for the baby Jonas Brother. The Administration is a funkier bunch than Jonas’ siblings, so Who I Am boasts a more soulful sway than anything Nick has recorded before. And the album’s best songs – the snaky “Rose Garden,” the grown-up pop of the title track -- push Jonas out of his familiar teen-pop territory. The ballads are still kinda soggy, but when JoBros eventually go their own ways, Nick should be just fine. As long as he stays away from those evil women. --Michael Gallucci
CULTURE JAMMING -- JANUARY 27
TOP PICK Bayonetta
(Sega)
In the year’s first must-play videogame, you’re a witch with some big weapons and killer moves (including one that gives you humongous fists to bash enemies with). This action game (for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3) blends intense button-mashing with solid storytelling. Best: Finishing moves incorporate old-school torture devices like the guillotine and iron maiden.
CD
Whitney Houston – 25th Anniversary Edition
(Arista/Legacy)
Before the doodie bubbles, before declaring crack-is-whack and before she became one of the world’s top divas,
The Hurt Locker
(
Here’s your chance to see one of last year’s best movies (and an Oscar hopeful), which practically nobody saw in theaters. Too bad, because Kathryn Bigelow’s smart film about a
Magnolia
(Warner)
It celebrated its 10th anniversary last year, but Paul Thomas Anderson’s stunning epic now makes its Blu-ray debut in a set that includes a production diary, extended scenes and an Aimee Mann music video.
9
(Universal)
Last year’s post-apocalyptic
--Michael Gallucci
1/26/10
MUSIC REVIEW -- SHOUT OUT LOUDS
Shout Out LoudsWork
(Merge)
On their third album, these warmhearted Scandinavians scale back the production dramatics of their last album and follow their instincts, which lead them directly to a joyful and slightly fretful mix of ’60s-through-’80s-inspired pop. Work’s opening song is called “1999,” but that’s at least a decade too late for these Cure fans. Riding a skipping drum and synth beat, frontman Adam Olenius reminisces over a cherished concert and other life-changing memories from his youth. The hooky chorus at the center of “Fall Hard” proudly displays Shout Out Louds’ most laudable gift: Olenius and his bandmates wear their hearts on their sleeves, with a ton of compassion and without an ounce of self-consciousness. --Michael Gallucci
1/20/10
MOVIE REVIEW -- THE WEDDING SONG
Two girls – one’s Jewish, the other’s Muslim – are engaged to be married in Karin Albou’s Tunisia-set World War II film. But many things (poverty, family, the war) get in the way of their pre-arranged happily-ever-afters. For one thing, Myriam (Lizzie Brocheré) doesn’t even like the guy she’s supposed to marry. And the Muslim man Nour (Olympe Borval) is set up with works for the Nazis. Plus, Myriam clearly has a thing for her pal. The girls are best friends, sharing every secret, laugh and tear since childhood. The love stories at the center of The Wedding Song are just part of the movie’s drama. There’s class divide (even among the Jews and Muslims themselves, both of whom are persecuted by the Germans, albeit in different ways), racial barriers and sexual politics to overcome too. But mostly the film is about the two girls. The Wedding Song hinges on their relationship, and the terrific Brocheré and Borval save the film from its ponderous thoughts on race, class and sex. Eventually, everything collides and the war catches up to them, exploding their personal problems into something the whole world – regardless of race, class or religion -- can understand. --Michael Gallucci
CULTURE JAMMING -- JANUARY 20
TOP PICK Family Guy: Something, Something, Something, Dark Side
(Twentieth Century Fox)
Family Guy’s second Star Wars spoof is just as funny as 2007’s Blue Harvest. The hour-long
VIDEO GAME
James Cameron’s Avatar: The Game
(Ubisoft)
The movie is a hi-tech knockout. The game – for every console known to man and Na’vi – is a button-mashing tie-in with the same spirit. It’s a third-person shooter, so be prepared to kick ass with various weapons in the jungle setting. Best of all, you can play as either humans or aliens. Either way, there’s plenty of Pandora to explore from mission to mission.
District 9
(Sony)
One of last year’s best movies looks absolutely stunning on Blu-ray, which zeroes in on the story of displaced aliens and one man’s literal transformation. The payoff finale delivers, but it’s the buildup that counts, as you’re drawn into the world of
Iron Man: Armored Adventures Volume 2
(Marvel Animation/Method/Genius/Vivendi)
Unlike the hit movie, this animated TV show features a teenage Tony Stark putting on an iron suit to fight baddies. But it’s totally fun, especially when heroes and villains collide. This disc includes six episodes (you can find the first six on Volume 1, which was released in October), including a story arc starring the awesome Living Laser.
Robot Chicken Season 4
(Adult Swim/Warner)
The fourth season of this hilarious stop-motion series takes on SpongeBob SquarePants, Star Trek, Indiana Jones and T-Pain. The two-disc set includes all 20 episodes plus tons of special features, like deleted scenes, commentary, alternate audio and clips from the creators’ Comic-Con panel appearances. Plus, the recently aired Christmas special is here.
--Michael Gallucci
1/13/10
MOVIE REVIEW -- ARAYA
This Venezuelan documentary, unreleased in the U.S. for 50 years, plays like a meditation on the history of an ancient land populated by poor salt miners and fishermen. There are many gorgeous black-and-white images here: Director Margot Benacerraf shoots in close-up and from the ground up. Occasionally she peers at the workers from above, viewing them as an army of ants, methodically and ritualistically delivering their bounty to the mountains of “white gold.” There are also some soothing sounds, as miners silently push their boats out to the gently waving sea. But the over-poetic narration (“Salt and sweat, sweat and salt, until the end of time”) is often intrusive; Araya says plenty without the nonstop voiceover (does the narrator really need to tell us a dozen times that everything the villagers eat comes from the sea?). You’ll learn a few things – conquistadors paid their soldiers in salt! – even if we never quite figure out where the salt comes from before the miners pull it from the sea and where it goes after they pile it up on the shore. Mostly, though, you’ll be awestruck by the elegant, tranquil images of a land and people that haven’t changed much since time began.
CULTURE JAMMING -- JANUARY 13

TOP PICK
(500) Days of Summer
(Twentieth Century Fox)
Even though it claims from the start that it isn’t a love story, this terrific movie (one of 2009’s finest) is indeed a love story – the best since Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, in fact. Two twentysomethings hook up, fall in love and then break up. It’s all tossed together, mixing up chronology and emotions. It also breaks for a cool song-and-dance. Watch it on Blu-ray.
BOOK
Another Green World
(Continuum)
The latest book in the music-snob-approved 33 1/3 series takes a look at Brian Eno’s 1975 ambient classic. Writer Geeta Dayal probes the stories and sounds behind the U2 producer’s best album, a tranquil meditation on a cold world, told through synthetic noise. It’s a perfect wintertime record. This book makes an accommodating companion.
CD
Forge Your Own Chains: Heavy Psychedelic Ballads and Dirges 1968-1974
(Stones Throw)
This cool compilation gathers 15 songs from a bunch of bands you never heard of. Some were from Cleveland (the Sensational Saints), some were from
Inglourious Basterds
(Universal)
Last year’s best movie comes to Blu-ray with all of Nation’s Pride, the Nazi propaganda film that’s glimpsed in Basterds. The two-disc set also includes extended and alternate scenes. But the real reason to own this is to watch Quentin Tarantino rework not only war-movie clichés, but World War II itself. A blast.
Motown: The
(Motown/UMe)
The greatest pop-music label ever compiles 18 clips from 1965 through 1971, featuring its top artists singing their greatest songs. Many of these TV spots – some from The Ed Sullivan Show, some from lesser-known programs like Teen Town – are lip-synched, but that doesn’t take away the joy of seeing the Temptations, Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder at their best.
--Michael Gallucci
1/8/10
MUSIC REVIEW -- NEIL YOUNG
Neil YoungNeil Young
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
After the Gold Rush
Harvest
Dreamin’ Man Live ’92
(Reprise)
Even though it may not have been evident at first, in hindsight it’s obvious that Neil Young would be Buffalo Springfield’s breakout star. It’s his songs – not Stephen Stills’ or Jim Messina’s or Richie Furay’s – that eventually transcended their era. There’s some hippie-dippy flower waving going on, especially in his earliest songs, but by the time the group recorded its second album, Young had rolled past his bandmates, lyrically and sonically.
So it’s little surprise that Young’s 1968 self-titled solo debut – one of four new remastered reissues and a previously unreleased live set from 1992 that’s just now being released -- sounds like a splintered Buffalo Springfield record. Filled mostly with folkie acoustic songs about youth and love, Neil Young isn’t the statement of purpose many first solo albums tend to be.Young would make his real declaration of independence on 1969’s Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, an electric wave of guitar feedback and epic-length songs recorded with Crazy Horse (who get co-billing on the record), the backing band he’d use on some of his best albums though the years (including Tonight’s the Night, Rust Never Sleeps and Ragged Glory).
From the opening “Cinnamon Girl” to the 10-minute closer, “Cowgirl in the Sand," Everybody is Young’s first classic and one of his best records, an album of unbridled intensity and feral playing. Highlight “Down by the River” includes the first of Young’s many terrific guitar solos – a spiraling surge of pierced notes and breathtaking agility.
The following year’s After the Gold Rush* is Young’s paean to the ’60s, a song cycle of crashed hopes (the title tune), sad passion (“Only Love Can Break Your Heart”) and burning rage (“Southern Man”). There’s some celebration – especially the giddy “When You Dance I Can Really Love” – but mostly Gold Rush sounds like a requiem for a decade defined by the large, and increasingly unmistakable, chasm between youthful dreams and ruthless reality. It’s one of Young’s gloomiest albums but a crucial piece of his catalog.
On his fourth LP, 1972’s Harvest, Young chilled out and was rewarded with his only No. 1 album. Partly recorded in
Young immediately planned a sequel to Harvest, but the album was shelved as he pursued other avenues over the years. He finally got around to recording Harvest Moon -- a sort-of follow-up featuring many of the musicians who played on Harvest -- in late 1992. The new Dreamin’ Man Live ’92 gathers solo acoustic performances of Moon’s 10 songs from a series of gigs played before the album’s release. It’s essentially an unplugged Moon, which is one of Young’s most easygoing records anyway. Still, it offers an intimate portrait of an artist who’s refused to settle into a single groove during his long career, as these five mostly terrific albums confirm. --Michael Gallucci
1/6/10
CULTURE JAMMING -- JANUARY 6
TOP PICK Genesis: The Movie Box
(Rhino)
This
CD
The Doors: Live in
(Rhino/Bright
Recorded a year after Jim Morrison allegedly showed his dick to an audience and a year before he died, this six-disc set collects the Doors’ final four
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
(Universal)
Guy Ritchie’s debut movie is basically British Tarantino. But what a ride. Finally available on Blu-ray, the blazing 1998 film – about a group of guys who owe a mobster a half-million dollars – still kicks ass. Bloody, raunchy and stuffed with lightning-quick dialogue, it’s a great companion piece to Pulp Fiction.
SpongeBob SquarePants: Season 6, Volume 1
(Paramount/Nickelodeon)
The absorbent, yellow and porous dude caps his 10th anniversary with a two-disc set that gathers the first 23 episodes from the sixth season. The bonus shorts are fun for fans, but you gotta see “SpongeBob vs. the Big One,” where Johnny Depp plays surfing guru Jack Kahuna Laguna. Plus, there’s lots of Squidward throughout.
VIDEOGAME
The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks
(Nintendo)
One of Nintendo’s most beloved characters returns with her best portable outing in years. This DS game strays a bit from the ongoing saga, but you’ll hardly notice. There’s a lot going on here, especially great new puzzles that’ll work your brain. The story is typically (and needlessly) convoluted, but like most Zelda adventures, prepare to get lost in her world for a while.
--Michael Gallucci