New Films
THE HI-LO COUNTRY (15, 114 mins)
Director: Stephen Frears
Starring: Woody Harrelson, Billy Crudup
Hailing from the dying days of the Old West, The Hi-Lo Country has cowboy brothers Harrelson and Crudup adrift in an increasingly modernised New Mexico and falling out over a foxy femme fatale (Patricia Arquette). The acting rings tough and true, and the 'Scope photography is endlessly beguiling. Meantime, Brit-abroad Frears moves his yarn at a leisurely (at times too leisurely) pace, giving us plenty of time to drink it in.
West End: Clapham Picture House, Odeon Swiss Cottage, The Tricycle Cinema, Virgin Haymarket, Warner Village West End
IT ALL STARTS TODAY (12, 117 mins)
Director: Bertrand Tavernier
Starring: Philippe Torreton, Maria Pitarresi
See The Independent Recommends, right.
West End: Curzon Soho, Renoir Repertory: Cine Lumiere, Phoenix Cinema
KOYAANISQATSI (U, 71 mins)
Director: Godfrey Reggio
This protracted stretch of eco decoration zips from city to canyon to power station to rainforest in a blur of time-lapsed coloured spaghetti, National Geographic greenery and chill Philip Glass strings. Shed a tear over the evil we're doing to our world. And pass the bong while you're about it.
West End: Curzon Soho
MULAN (U, 89 mins)
Director: Barry Cook & Tony Bancroft
Voiced by: Eddie Murphy
And so the historic nine-and-a-bit-month anniversary of the original British release of Mulan is commemorated with a re-issue perfectly timed for those dry days between the end of school and that trip to Disneyland Paris. Still, as Disney re-releases go, there's a lot to like about Mulan, a spry, witty epic about a little slip of a lass who saves first-century China from an invasion by the Hun. A bit like Kurosawa at times. Except funny, and with Eddie Murphy as a jive-talking lizard.
West End: Odeon Kensington, Odeon Mezzanine, UCI Whiteleys, Virgin Chelsea, Virgin Trocadero, Warner Village West End
NIGHTS OF CABIRIA (PG, 117 mins)
Director: Federico Fellini
Starring: Giulietta Masina
Re-issued with a restored seven minutes, Fellini's 1957 favourite turns a loving lens on Masina's wide-eyed whore with a heart of gold. Less flamboyant than the fancies that characterised the director's later years, Nights of Cabiria goes a bundle on stark neo-realism (prowling Rome's shabby fringes) and bold Vaudeville emoting.
West End: Chelsea Cinema, Curzon Soho, Screen on the Hill
SOUTH (NC, 71 mins)
Director: Frank Hurley
Hurley's stirring, silent-screen antique looks less documentary than time-capsule, trailing Ernest Shackleton through the ice flows during the course of his 1914 push down through Antarctica. Colour tints give an eerie beauty to the endless white-on-white imagery.
Repertory: National Film Theatre
WEST BEIRUT (15, 105 mins)
Director: Ziad Doueiri
Starring: Rami Doueiri, Mohamed Chamas
See The Independent Recommends, right.
Repertory: ICA Cinema
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