Blu-ray: The Thousand Eyes of Dr Mabuse

★★★★ THE THOUSAND EYES OF DR MABUSE A Weimar supervillain reborn in Cold War Berlin for Fritz Lang's archaic, prophetic farewell

A Weimar supervillain reborn in Cold War Berlin for Fritz Lang's archaic, prophetic farewell

The Thousand Eyes of Dr Mabuse (1960) was Fritz Lang’s final film, resurrecting his Weimar villain in Cold War Berlin and forming a satisfying circle with his career’s German first half, which included Metropolis and M.

Album: Protomartyr - Ultimate Success Today

★★★★ PROTOMARTYR - ULTIMATE SUCCESS TODAY Another last stand from Detroit post-punk underdogs

Another last stand from Detroit post-punk underdogs, facing defeat with thrilling defiance

Joe Casey is the final refugee from the Detroit garage-rock scene which spawned The White Stripes. He has led this otherwise young band for five albums now, every one of which feels like an indignant last stand. Feeling under the baleful influence of unspecified, pre-Covid sickness, and unsure if the source lay in his body or an increasingly depressing world, he conceived this record as a raging epitaph, “last words...while I still had breath to say them”.

Album: The Magnetic Fields - Quickies

★★★ THE MAGNETIC FIELDS - QUICKIES Musical capsules that pack a short, sharp punch

Musical capsules that pack a short, sharp punch

In pop music, less is often more and it doesn't come much shorter-and-sweeter than Quickies, the new collection from New York songwriter Stephin Merritt. The tracks range in length from a brisk 13 seconds to a whisker over two and a half minutes, all chock-full of wry humour.

Blu-ray: The Apu Trilogy

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: THE APU TRILOGY An enduring Bengali epic

An enduring Bengali epic from India's greatest filmmaker

Over the years, the legend of The Apu Trilogy has been much-repeated. Now widely considered India’s greatest filmmaker, Satyajit Ray was little more than a small-time commercial artist when, failing to find a sponsor for his script, he assembled what few funds he could in order to begin filming.

Album: Diplo Presents Thomas Wesley - Chapter 1: Snake Oil

★ DIPLO PRESENTS THOMAS WESLEY EDM megastar teases a change of direction

EDM megastar teases a change of direction but doesn’t deliver

Word has been out for a while that EDM megastar Diplo has decided to throw a curve ball with his musical career, don a cowboy hat and release a country and western album. If that is truly the case, then there must be another disc in the pipeline because the somewhat awkwardly titled Diplo Presents Thomas Wesley – Chapter 1: Snake Oil certainly isn’t anything which displays any meaningful kinship with the likes of Willie Nelson or Hank Williams.

Album: Footsie - No Favours

★★★★ FOOTSIE - NO FAVOURS The grime mainstay's first album is here

It's only taken two decades but the grime mainstay's first album is here

Footsie might not have the profile of a Skepta or Wiley, or even his Newham Generals partner and recent IKEA advert soundtracker D Double E. But anyone halfway schooled in grime will know that both as MC and producer he's a key player from grime's original generation, and still a pillar of the scene. Amazingly, though, despite the fact he's released a couple of mixtapes and four compilations of his instrumentals, he's never made an official solo album until now. So given that, since his beginnings in N.A.S.T.Y.

Album: Badly Drawn Boy - Banana Skin Shoes

BADLY DRAWN BOY - BANANA SKIN SHOES Damon Gough returns with his strongest release in nearly two decades

No slip-ups as Damon Gough returns with his strongest release in nearly two decades

In 2000, when Badly Drawn Boy released his debut album, The Hour of Belwiderbeast, it felt like an embarrassment of riches. Along with the string of singles he’d previously put out, ranging from the lo-fi to the luminous, Damon Gough’s creative tap was in full flow. His 2002 follow-up, the soundtrack for hit film About a Boy, was similarly sublime.