Here are the week's best releases from the pop-culture universe:

David Lynch Garbage sports sim videogames great video games ’60s nostalgia books about TV bad sci-fi TV shows
DVD -- Inland Empire: David Lynch's latest mind-fuck is about an actress who falls a little too deep into her latest movie. We think. Like most of the director's films, interpretation is left to the viewer. Either way, it's a stunning work. Disc extras include more than an hour's worth of additional scenes and a segment in which Lynch cooks dinner -- shot in black-and-white, and with his trademark ominous hum rattling on the soundtrack. It's like the Food Network from hell.

CD -- Absolute Garbage: This compilation gathers 17 songs by the world's best Wisconsin-based band fronted by a sexy Scot. Singer Shirley Manson was Garbage's focal point (check out the companion DVD, which is available separately), but it's the loops-lovin' musicians who gave fuel to songs like "Vow" and "Queer." Drummer Butch Vig (who produced Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins, and other '90s alt-rock giants) piled on the beats -- which skim the line between pop sass and electronic thrash.

VIDEO GAME -- Hot Shots Tennis: Don't let the anime-style animation and cute backdrops fool you -- this is one fierce sim (for the PlayStation 2). Gamers can unlock 10 courts and more than a dozen characters. Intense training yields super skills -- which come in handy in single-player mode. Two- and four-player matches are even more addictive. Besides, we really love characters who think happy thoughts about bunnies between serves.

CD -- Those the Brokes: The British pop hippies in the Magic Numbers -- two pairs of hirsute brothers and sisters -- cram hook after hook onto their second album of plaintive love songs. Sixties nostalgia runs through the grooves -- part of the record was made in Woodstock, New York, and the nimble, organic tunes recall the best folk rock of the era -- yet there's nothing out there that sounds quite like it.

BOOK -- TV Year Volume 1: The Prime Time 2005-2006 Season: John Kenneth Muir's stat-heavy read details more than 200 dramas, comedies, game shows, and reality programs that you may or may not have seen. It's a valuable reference volume -- anyone remember Pepper Dennis? But it's best for spotting small-screen bombs like Freddie and Tuesday Night Book Club, which was canceled after a mere two weeks.

COURTESY FLUSH, PLEASE -- Space: 1999 30th Anniversary Edition: This DVD set collects all 48 episodes of the cult sci-fi TV show. You can't fault it for jumping on the Star Wars bandwagon -- it actually debuted two years before George Lucas' crew. But its bantha-like pace and technobabble would tempt even Obi-Wan to join the dark side. It makes the laborious Star Trek look like Transformers.

Scroll to read more Local Music articles

Newsletters

Join Cleveland Scene Newsletters

Subscribe now to get the latest news delivered right to your inbox.