reviews

Craven New World. Film review - Tom Jennings

Polly II: A Plan For Revolution in Docklands

A comparison of UK near-future nightmares, including Taking Liberties, Faceless, Children Of Men, The Last Enemy, Exodus and Polly II: A Plan For Revolution in Docklands.

Craven New World, by Tom Jennings

Lust, Caution, directed by Ang Lee, 2007. Film review – Tom Jennings

Review of Ang Lee’s Chinese wartime espionage drama, the follow-up to Brokeback Mountain.

Sex, War by Tom Jennings

Britz, dir. Peter Kosminsky, Channel 4, 2007. Television review – Tom Jennings

Juggling simplistic stereotypes, Channel 4’s Britz illuminates neither the attitudes of UK Muslims nor the motivations of homegrown jihadists, concludes Tom Jennings.

A Bipolar Exposition by Tom Jennings

Sicko, dir. Michael Moore, 2007 Film review – Tom Jennings

Tom Jennings’ review of Michael Moore’s new documentary tragi-comedy on the American health (dis)service

Body Politics by Tom Jennings

The Street, by Jimmy McGovern, BBC 1, November-December 2007. Television review

Review of The Street, series 2 - the latest TV drama from Jimmy McGovern .

That Kitchen Sinking Feeling

Taking Liberties, written and directed by Chris Atkins, 2007. Film review - Tom Jennings

Reviews this documentary lambasting Labour's assault on freedom.

Doing the Rights Thing

Resist: Protest Art, Crescent Arts, Scarborough, 2003. Art review

Review of a group show of new political art.

Blood Curdling

The Tin Roof Blowdown, by James Lee Burke (2007). Book review – Tom Jennings

The Tin Roof Blowdown, by James Lee Burke

James Lee Burke’s post-Katrina hardboiled crime novel, The Tin Roof Blowdown, exposes and critiques the responses to the disaster.

CSI: The Big Sleazy by Tom Jennings

The Yes Men, dirs. Dan Ollman, Sarah Price, Chris Smith, 2004. Film review

Review of the documentary about the corporate lampooners

The Maybe Men

David Lynch, Contemporary Cinema and Social Class (2000). Film review – Tom Jennings

David Lynch

Tom Jennings’ essay on David Lynch, recent cinema and film criticism.

Class-ifying Contemporary Cinema by Tom Jennings

Vera Drake, dir. Mike Leigh, 2004. Film review – Tom Jennings

Vera Drake vividly portrays the paradoxes of backstreet abortion without passing judgement.

Dilemmas of a Bleeding Heart

Saul Williams, The Fader Label, 2005. Music review

Review which finds that Saul Williams fails to translate potent political polemics into poetic musical magic...

Slam Dunk Funk Sunk by Clunky Punk Junk

Documentary representations of British and European Muslim women. Essay review

Follow-up to ‘Same Difference’ examines images of Muslims in photography and television

Breaking Cover

A History of Violence, dir. David Cronenberg, 2005. Film review

Tom Jennings applauds the success of A History of Violence in linking the attractions of action cinema to ideologies of control and conquest by force.

What A Man’s Gotta Do

A Dirty Shame, dir. John Waters, 2005. Film review

Of several summer film releases tackling themes of sexual expression and repression, this review judges A Dirty Shame the daftest, as well as the most radical.

Bad Taste and Good Sense by Tom Jennings

9 Songs, dir. Michael Winterbottom, 2005. Film review

Review of 9 Songs, the ‘dirtiest film ever shown in Britain’.

Going Through the Motions

Volver, dir. Pedro Almodovar, Spain 2006 (English subtitles). Film review

Review of Almodovar’s latest cinematic delirium

Women’s Troubles

V for Vendetta, dir. James McTeigue, 2006. Film review – Tom Jennings.

Tom Jennings reviews the latest botched adaptation of Alan Moore’s graphic novels.

‘V’ Signs and Simulations by Tom Jennings

Nuthin’ But a “G” Thang: The Culture and Commerce of Gangsta Rap, by Eithne Quinn, Columbia University Press, 2005. Book review

Tom Jennings reviews an invicisve history of an important contemporary music genre.

Can’t Knock the Hustle by Tom Jennings

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