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SparklyPrettyBriiiight

Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

That’s some original artwork you have there, Charlie Brown

Posted on October 13, 2013January 11, 2020 by aussiemoose

  Along with tens of millions of people worldwide, I am a lifelong, diehard Peanuts fan. Some of my earliest memories are of buying the paperback editions of Peanuts collection from the local second-hand store for 10 and 20c each and settling back into the delightful world of Charlie Brown Continue Reading

Posted In Comics

RIP Us & Them: We barely knew you at all

Posted on October 13, 2013October 13, 2013 by aussiemoose

  Well, a TV network has finally managed to cancel a show I was really looking forward to before it even airs. In a move that wasn’t entirely unexpected since its producers had been sent away to tinker further with the scripts, which is rarely a good sign, it’s been Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Comic book zombies: Afterlife with Archie joins the undead revolution

Posted on October 13, 2013October 12, 2013 by aussiemoose

  With The Walking Dead‘s return to our TV screens so imminent we can feel the undead breathing down our necks, and the fascination with all things zombie showing no signs of abating, it makes perfect sense that even Archie is getting in on the afterlife action. And in a Continue Reading

Posted In Uncategorized

Here comes Greg Poehler! Welcome to Sweden set for NBC

Posted on October 12, 2013October 11, 2013 by aussiemoose

  It looks like the Poehlers are getting ready to rule the entertainment world! Or at least the NBC portion of it anyway. With Amy Poehler’s witty take on life in public service, Parks and Recreation, heading into its sixth season on the Peacock Network, younger brother and show business Continue Reading

Posted In TV

TV review: Hostages (Pilot episode / E2 “Invisible Leash”)

Posted on October 10, 2013October 10, 2013 by aussiemoose

  *Minor spoilers ahead* If any more proof was needed that American TV’s great love affair with re-making successful overseas television in their own image is showing no signs of dimming, it’s CBS’s new political thriller,  Hostages. Following in the footsteps of State-side versions of shows like Scandinavia’s The Bridge or Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Poster me this #3: Imaginative alternate promotional artwork for Gravity

Posted on October 10, 2013October 10, 2013 by aussiemoose

  Gravity is one of those rare movies that is every bit as good, and indeed possibly even better, than the buzz that preceded its release. A masterfully immersive movie from Alfonso Cuarón, it makes you feel as if you in space with the astronauts in mortal peril, Dr Ryan Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

New sci-fi shows incoming! Extant and Red landing soon (ish)

Posted on October 9, 2013October 9, 2013 by aussiemoose

  Time to blast off into space, or come hurtling back down to earth, or both, depending on your sci-fi tastes. Steven Spielberg, who knows a thing or two about crafting a compelling tale, especially sci-fi ones (Minority Report, Falling Skies) is bringing the 13 part thriller Extant to CBS Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Hot diggity dog! The Walking Dead S3 retold with puppets and much hilarity

Posted on October 9, 2013October 9, 2013 by aussiemoose

  If you’re anything like me, and let’s just assume for your sake that you’re not, you likely have trouble remembering what you had for breakfast, let alone what happened in the long ago broadcast season 3 of AMC’s The Walking Dead. Well fear not! For the good folks at Continue Reading

Posted In TVTagged In The Walking Dead

Some thoughts on … Revolution: “There Will Be Blood” (S2, E2)

Posted on October 9, 2013October 8, 2013 by aussiemoose

  I will admit, I wasn’t planning on blogging beyond the premiere episode of Revolution season 2 but there was something so compelling, so epic about “There Will Be Blood” (buckets of it apparently and not a mop to be seen) that I had to quickly thrown some observations down Continue Reading

Posted In TVTagged In Revolution

Rip’d from the pages of my childhood: Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators

Posted on October 8, 2013October 8, 2013 by aussiemoose

I loved the Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators series as a child. Jupiter “Jupe” Jones, Peter “Pete” Crenshaw, and Robert “Bob” Andrews, from Rocky Beach, California, who were all surmised to be around 13-14 years old – their true ages were never revealed save for being too young to get Continue Reading

Posted In Uncategorized

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Recent Posts

  • Book review: The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother) by Rabih Alameddine
  • Songs, songs and more songs #129: Georgia, BENEE, Sigrid, Ella Collier + Moyka
  • Don’t let the bullies win … The Twits drops its feisty trailer
  • Book review: The Shattering Peace by John Scalzi
  • Movie review: All of You

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Book review: The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother) by Rabih Alameddine
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) Life can often like a series of existentially testing events, punctuated by rare moments of levity and joy and wrapped in a lifetime of pain, hurt, loss and hard-won gains. That might seem bleak but for most it’s an accurate take on this thing called life, and Continue Reading
  • Songs, songs and more songs #129: Georgia, BENEE, Sigrid, Ella Collier + Moyka
    (via Shutterstock) There are some months that just reward you with brilliant songs. Songs that, for a whole host of reasons, you play over and over again and which, for this beleaguered commuter reviewer at least, making walking to the train station and back not feel quite so arduous and Continue Reading
  • Don’t let the bullies win … The Twits drops its feisty trailer
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTAcademy Award-nominated filmmaker Phil Johnston reimagines Roald Dahl’s iconic characters, Jim & Credenza Twit, in their first feature animated adventure. The Twits tells the story of Mr. & Mrs. Twit, the meanest, smelliest, nastiest people in the world who also happen to own and operate the most Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Shattering Peace by John Scalzi
    (courtesy Pan Macmillan Australia) Plunging into the latest novel by John Scalzi, and fortunate to have read a number of his books before this, I was well aware of just good a writer this man is and how well he imagines realities beyond our own, bringing them to life with Continue Reading
  • Movie review: All of You
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Knowledge, especially when it’s anchored in scientific truth, is a good and powerful thing. Though there are far too many in the world today who believe that facts are situational and malleable and able to bent at will to suit whatever purpose you have in mind, the Continue Reading
  • Book review: Foreign Country by Marija Peričić
    (courtesy Ultimo Press) One of the ways we survive the many vagaries of life is to tell ourselves stories; they’re usually self-serving storylines that reinforce the internal narrative we have long told ourselves to help us make sense of events that would otherwise defy easy categorisation. Are they always truthful? Continue Reading
  • One week for a lifetime … Emily Henry’s People We Meet on Vacation gets the cinematic treatment
    (courtesy BRIT + CO via Yahoo) SNAPSHOTFree-spirited Poppy (Emily Bader) and routine-loving Alex (Tom Blyth) have been unlikely best friends for a decade, living in different cities but spending every summer vacation together. The careful balance of their friendship is put to the test when they begin to question what Continue Reading
  • Movie review: The Lost Bus
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Survival against all odds stories can often descend into overwrought melodrama with uncanny ease. Maybe it’s because the creators of these larger than life tales are dealing with such hyperbolically enhanced events that it’s all too easy for them to get swept up in the adrenaline-rushed facts Continue Reading
  • Book review: Eva Reddy’s Trip of a Lifetime by Fiona McKenzie Kekic
    (courtesy Harper Collins Publishers Australia) Life, we are told, is a series of sliding door moments. Step one way, and your life will head down one, hopefully beneficial and rewarding course; go in the other direction and your trajectory takes on another look and feel entirely. If the choices were Continue Reading
  • The building always wins … Thoughts on Only Murders in the Building S5 E1-5
    (courtesy IMP Awards) As season five dawns, many shows are struggling to remain buoyant, fresh and divertingly interesting, with a significant number succumbing to the inevitable ennui that afflicts many a once vital program. But thanks to its previous insistence on sparkling writing, richly idiosyncratic characterisation and a willingness to Continue Reading
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