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Book Review
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Movie Review
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Mott's CD review
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Book Review: The Eyewitness
by Lang Reid
The latest book from Stephen Leather, that prolific
British author, is now on the bookshelves. The Eyewitness (ISBN
0-340-73409-4) is his 14th novel and follows his penchant for penning
thrillers.
The story commences in the former Yugoslavia where
principal character Jack Solomon is working for a UN-backed agency that is
attempting to put names to the bodies found in mass graves following the
waves of ethnic cleansing, to use a euphemism for attempted genocide.
Solomon has no axe to grind, believing that both sides
of the conflict were just displaying the more base sides of human nature,
and for an atheist such as himself this was understandable, even if not
acceptable.
The novel moves to the finding of a truck in a lake,
with twenty-six bodies in the refrigerated van, all from one family. This
somewhat different method of disposal, rather than the mass grave
approach, catches Solomon’s interest and he attempts to find the reasons
‘why’ and the next of kin.
The search for the one family member who must have been
an eyewitness takes Solomon to the UK and then dredging through the
underworld of vice and prostitution, meeting the people who run the vice
rings and the women caught up in the world’s oldest ‘profession’.
On the way, Solomon attracts more than a trifling of
unwanted attention to himself, resulting in a couple of bullets and a
broken leg. However, these are but grazes and scratches compared to the
treatment meted out to some of the other players on Stephen Leather’s
stage. While it is easy to deny that these types of people exist, a brief
but critical scan of the tabloids will prove that they do. And the
existence of their empires.
It is a spellbinding yarn. Stephen Leather manages to
show many apparent contradictions, such as the fact that good cops are not
always exemplary and bad cops are really not all bad. Likewise, hardened
criminals can have compassion and enslaved prostitutes can even be content
with their lot in life. Especially if they have come from Eastern Europe.
It is his ability to describe ‘real’ characters
that makes his novels compelling. You can believe in his book’s
performers, not just the hero of the show, who is presented with all his
human frailties, as is Jack Solomon in this one. The ‘wisdom of Solomon’
does not apply here. Attention to detail and a good understanding of human
nature is required by an author to describe ‘real’ people, and Stephen
Leather is obviously an expert witness of the human psyche.
The pace of the book is maintained all the way through,
picking up as you get to the final pages, whereupon it begins to gallop.
The ending will have you gasping as it turns 90 degrees, just when you are
sure you have it all sussed out. Brilliant finish.
This is not just a book for the Stephen Leather fans, but one for
anyone who enjoys a well crafted thriller that will keep you reading right
till the last page. Get it! The review copy was supplied by Bookazine (RRP
B. 395).
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Movie Review: The Lizzie McGuire Movie
By Poppy
I thought I would check this one out for the younger
viewers. It’s ok if you’re a teenager and a fan, but the movie doesn’t
live up to the popular Disney TV series, at least that is what I was told
having never watched the TV series myself!
In the movie 15-year-old Lizzie, played by Hilary Duff,
is graduating from junior high school (she plays the same character in the
TV series). She goes on a two-week class trip to Rome. Lizzie soon gets
bored touring the sights with the bossy tour guide Miss Ungermeyer (Alex
Borstein) so she is easily convinced by her best friend Gordo (Adam
Lamberg) to drop the group and go off together looking for excitement and
adventure.
While searching for this excitement and adventure
Lizzie is discovered by an Italian pop star named Paolo (Yani Gellman),
who thinks she is an exact look alike for his former singing partner,
Isabella. It turns out that Isabella is refusing to appear with Paolo at
an upcoming music awards show and he needs Lizzie to double as Isabella to
avoid a publicity nightmare. Needless to say, Lizzie does not need much
persuasion to act the part of a singing diva.
The young people are great in the movie, especially
Hilary who could be the next Brittany Spears, by all accounts.
The movie is a teenage fantasy like the old time Disney
stories, for example one of my favourites ‘The Parent Trap’. If you’re
into innocent inoffensive easy watching, then this is the movie for you.
Directed by Jim Fall
Cast:
Hilary Duff ... Lizzie McGuire/Isabella
Adam Lamberg ... Gordo
Hallie Todd ... Jo
Robert Carradine ... Sam
Jake Thomas ... Matt
Ashlie Brillault ... Kate
Clayton Snyder ... Ethan
Alex Borstein ... Miss Ungermeyer
Yani Gellman ... Paolo
Brendan Kelly (I) ... Sergei
Carly Schroeder ... Melina
Daniel Escobar ... Mr. Escobar
Jody Racicot ... Giorgio
Peter Kelamis ... Dr. Comito
Terra MacLeod ... Franca
Mott’s CD review:
Metallica - Garage Inc
by Mott the Dog
re-mastered By Ella Crew
2 Stars **
Oh, how the mighty sometimes come crashing down to the
ground with a great big thump. Metallica started off the nineties right on
top of the tree, probably the #1 working Rock ‘n’ Roll band in the
world. Don’t get me wrong, they were never going to challenge the likes
of the true greats of ‘The Beatles’, ‘Led Zeppelin’, etc., but
they had just released their magnum opus simply called ‘Metallica’
(1991) with its famous black cover, and had toured all over the world to
sell out arenas. I will say something for Metallica, at least they turned
up in Bangkok and were on stage for nearly four hours, unlike our dear
friends ‘The Rolling Stones’. They toured with ‘Guns N’ Roses’,
headlined Donnington, played at the Freddie Mercury Tribute concert ...
You name it, they had done it, got the T-shirt, and gone home with the
match ball.
This had all begun from very humble beginnings in 1981
by a Danish born aspiring tennis player called Lars Ulrich. He had been
blown away by the resurgent heavy metal scene in the United Kingdom. As a
result adverts were put in Southern Californian newspapers seeking
like-minded souls to form an American based, head banging outfit to play
some of the music of their heroes on the other side of the Atlantic. To
reach the stage that they were at by 1991 is a long convoluted story
involving several superb thrash metal albums on different small labels,
each album selling more than the last, and of course constant gigging all
over the planet. Along the way were several changes of personnel,
including the tragic death of bass player Cliff Burton, who was killed
when their van crashed on the way back from a late night gig, or the
firing of Dave Mustaine for trying to take over the band. Mustaine went on
to form the reasonably successful ‘Megadeath’, which he ruled as a
musical dictator for over fifteen years. However, by 1991 the lineup was
settled with Lars Ulrich on drums, James Hetfield on guitar and lead
vocals, Kirk Hammet on guitars, and new boy Jason Newsted on bass.
Another five years was to slip past before the next
Metallica album was released to great fanfares of the champions to the
ring. ‘Load’ (1996) was released with massive publicity, including
playing the new album in theatres all over the world. The day before its
official release people actually paid to be in a hall to head bang along
to the new recordings. Unfortunately for the band it was not met with high
approval by the critics or their massive fan base. After five years of
waiting they expected more than this rather motley collection of re-hashed
riffs and rather distracted playing. ‘Load’ was not an aspiring
example of what the fans had come to expect. The backlash for the boys in
the band was horrific. Concert attendances fell sharply and the band was
ridiculed every which way they turned. It didn’t help either that they
simultaneously changed their dress code with all of the band members in
nice new short haircuts. That made them look more like bank clerks than
the bank robbers of days of yore, and they further alienating themselves
from their long haired, denim and leather clad hordes of fans.
To try and smooth the waters somewhat the band released
a press statement, apologizing for the album. They admitted that it
probably wasn’t up to snuff, and that everything would be put right the
following year with a quickly recorded new album, which would be back to
previous standards. Unfortunately the following year’s ‘Re-Load’
(1997) was even worse. Basically because all the band had left was song
ideas that were rejected for ‘Load’. The band found themselves in a
situation, which involved canoes, creeks, a long way up, paddles, and the
lack of them.
In desperation the following year Metallica put out a
covers’ album ‘Garage Inc’, which just smacked of milking what was
left of the market. ‘Guns N’ Roses’ had just done the same thing
with ‘The Spaghetti Incident’, when they were riding the crest of
their particular wave and didn’t have any products to release. They
whizzed in the studio and blasted out a whole batch of covers of your
favorite songs. Of course, David Bowie and Brian Ferry had done similar
albums of covers in the seventies, but they managed at least to do it with
dignity.
What you get with ‘Garage Inc’ is a collection of
songs recorded over a 14-year period (1984-1998). Twenty-seven tracks
spread over two CDs. On disc two the first seven tracks are with Cliff
Burton on bass, which do have a naive enthusiasm about them, whereas most
of disc one’s eleven songs were cut at the Plant Studios with producer
Bob Rock in 1998 (who should have known better), and lack any kind of
urgency.
The song selection throughout is quite intriguing, and
about the only thing that is imaginative about this collection. They range
from obscure British heavy metal bands like ‘Mercyful Fate’ to less
obvious tracks from more well known acts such as Sabbra Cadabra by ‘Black
Sabbath’, two from Welsh Rocker’s ‘Budgie’, three from little
known British new wave of heavy metal leaders ‘Diamond Head’, and to
close disc two four from ‘Motorhead’. The trouble is that every single
one of these songs were done better by the original artists. So really,
what is the point? If you want to hear these songs done in their proper
context, please get the songs by the original artist.
Five years later, with all members of the band having
had to come to terms with relative failure (some of them having to resort
to re-hab after too much excess), Jason Newsted moved his bass guitar onto
pastures new, being replaced by ex-suicidal-tendencies bassist Robert
Trujillo. The band is about to come out with an all new album ‘St. Anger’,
which is due the middle of June (2003). The world will have to wait and
see whether Metallica can snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. Don’t
hold your breath.
Songs
Free Speech For The Dumb
It’s Electric. Sabbra Cadabra
Turn The Page
Die, Die My Darling
Loverman
Mercyful Fate
Astronomy
Whisky In The Jar
Tuesday’s Gone
The More I See
Helpless
The Small Hours
The Wait
Crash Course In Brain Surgery
Last/Green Hell.
Am I Evil
Blitzkrieg
Breadfan
The Prince
Stone Cold Crazy
o What
Killing Time
Overkill
Damage Case
Stone Dead Forever
Too Late Too Late
Musicians on this album
James Hetfield - Lead Vocals and Guitar
Lars Ulrich - Drums
Kirk Hammatt - Guitars
Cliff Burton - Bass
Jason Newsted - Bass
To contact Mott the Dog email: [email protected]
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