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SparklyPrettyBriiiight

Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

Falling Skies: “Hatchlings” (S5, E3 review)

Posted on July 24, 2015July 24, 2015 by aussiemoose

  *SPOILERS … AND SKITTERS … AND LAST DITCH OVERLORDS AHEAD*   There’s nothing like a walk in the countryside is there? All that fresh, bracing air, the inspiring views, the sense that you are away from everyone and everything … well, that is, unless, of course you’re Rage Tom Continue Reading

Posted In TVTagged In Falling Skies

Little Golden Books go to a galaxy far, far away with their new Star Wars editions

Posted on July 24, 2015July 23, 2015 by aussiemoose

  Behold a most perfect together of pop culture wonderfulness! It has been announced, no doubt from an orbiting battle cruiser somewhere high above Tattoine that Little Golden Books, that bastion of imaginative childrens’ storytelling in very small packaging, will be soon be journeying to a galaxy far, far away, Continue Reading

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Movie review: Hallå hallå

Posted on July 22, 2015July 22, 2015 by aussiemoose

  Disa (Maria Sid) is one very disappointed woman. Disappointed by life, by the way a resolute playing by the rules – husband TICK! Kids TICK! Job TICK! Compliant acquiescing to everything expected of her TICK! – seems to be have yielded her nothing but dashed hopes and dreams. Though Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Blood red sky: Edvard Munch’s “Scream” comes to life in this brilliant short animated film

Posted on July 22, 2015July 22, 2015 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT I was walking along a path with two friends – the sun was setting – suddenly the sky turned blood red – I paused, feeling exhausted, and leaned on the fence – there was blood and tongues of fire above the blue-black fjord and the city – my Continue Reading

Posted In Movies, Music

Book review: The Little Paris Bookshop by Nina George

Posted on July 21, 2015December 21, 2015 by aussiemoose

  Grief is often an all-consuming state. No matter how we try to lift ourselves out of it, it pulls us back in, unwilling to let us go from the misery, pain and agony of things lost, never to be regained. Or at least, regained in the form in which we Continue Reading

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Norman Reedus fights for breath in Robert Kirkman’s Air (trailer + poster)

Posted on July 21, 2015July 12, 2015 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT Air follows two caretakers of a facility specifically set-up to deal with the fact Earth atmosphere is all but destroyed. They’re humanity’s last hope as they release cryogenically frozen personnel from the underground bunker to test out what they believe to be the last habitable place on the Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Crossovers! When TV show worlds collide

Posted on July 19, 2015July 19, 2015 by aussiemoose

  You can never get too much of a good thing right? Of course not! It’s an ethos that has fuelled many an all-night party, a weekend-long TV watching binge on Netflix and crossover episodes, where “two or more TV shows [are revealed] to exist in the same fictional universe” (according Continue Reading

Posted In TV

“It’s a Mad Mad Mad Max Fury Road” Oh yes it is, it really, really is!

Posted on July 19, 2015July 17, 2015 by aussiemoose

  If you’re anything like me, and you may or may not regret wondering if you are, then it’s probably never have occurred to you to mash up Max Max Fury Road, the latest critically and commercially successful entry in the venerable apocalyptic franchise, and 1963’s road trip comedies to Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Falling Skies: “Hunger Pains” (S5, E2 review)

Posted on July 18, 2015July 17, 2015 by aussiemoose

  * THERE ARE SPOILERS … AND SKITTERS … AND SKITTERS … AND MORE SKITTERS AHEAD * So there goes dinner … Starving and insanely short on good old edibles after an unexpected suicide Skitter attack, one of many waves of seemingly feral Skitter attacks to plague the 2nd Mass. Continue Reading

Posted In TVTagged In Falling Skies

Weekend pop art: Pancakes shaped as pop culture characters? Yum yum chomp!

Posted on July 18, 2015July 12, 2015 by aussiemoose

  I never fail to be amazed at the way true artists like TigerTomato manage to take my favourite breakfast food ever, the humble though delicious pancake – yeah sorry Sultana Bran but you’re not even in the running – and turn it into visually-delighting works of art. Because, my Continue Reading

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  • “You think you’re in control of this… You’re not.” The electric second full trailer for Tron: Ares
  • #ChristmasInJuly book review: Christmas is All Around by Martha Waters
  • #ChristmasInJuly retro movie review: Christmas in July
  • #ChristmasInJuly book review: The Merriest Misters by Timothy Janovsky

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • “You think you’re in control of this… You’re not.” The electric second full trailer for Tron: Ares
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTTron: Ares follows a highly sophisticated program, Ares (starring Jared Leto), who is sent from the digital world into the real world on a dangerous mission, marking humankind’s first encounter with A.I. beings. The highly anticipated sequel to the sci-fi classics Tron (1982) and Tron: Legacy (2010). Continue Reading
  • #ChristmasInJuly book review: Christmas is All Around by Martha Waters
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) When you’re diving into a festive rom-com read, you hope and pray that you’ll be served up lashings of magical romance and renewal and healing in bountiful measure. That’s precise you get in the magnificently heartwarming joy and wonder that is Christmas is All Around by Martha Continue Reading
  • #ChristmasInJuly retro movie review: Christmas in July
    A lot can happen in just one day! Just ask Jimmy MacDonald (Dick Powell), the protagonist of the 1940 Preston Sturges film, Christmas in July, who’s a grunt office worker from a working class neighbourhood of New York City who heads off to his menial day job in an office Continue Reading
  • #ChristmasInJuly book review: The Merriest Misters by Timothy Janovsky
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) Who doesn’t adore a good love story? Even better, one set at Christmas when everything is at a peak of wonderfulness, magic is in the air and anything and everything seems possible (bar finding a parking spot at the locla mall but then, that’s a whole other Continue Reading
  • Movie review: The Fantastic Four: First Steps
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Most superhero movies, if you look beyond the bangs and the booms and the epic struggles for curdely painted yet titanic struggles between god and evil, are about connection. Friendship, camaraderies, even family figure strongly, even with figures like Batman or Iron Man who might otehrwise be Continue Reading
  • Songs, songs and more songs #126: Sally Shapiro, Parcels, Moses Sumney & Hayley Williams, Juno Mamba & edapollo + Tiësto/Odd Mob & Goodboys
    (via Shutterstock) Making music is, like a lot of creative endeavours, driven by individual talent and imagination. But often where the magic really happens is when likeminded, talented souls come together and in this case at least, literally make sweet music together. It’s a thrill to see and a joy Continue Reading
  • Graphic novel review: William of Newbury by Michael Avon Oeming
    (courtesy Penguin Books Australia) Fascinating though it may be for past events junkies like this reviewer, history doesn’t come alive for everyone. It’s a real pity because not only is delving into the annals of history brilliantly interesting but it ensures, as the adage reminds us, that we are familiar Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Imposition of Unnecessary Obstacles (Mossa & Pleiti book #2) by Malka Older
    (courtesy Pan Macmillan Australia) It’s such a delight to come across a sci-fi tale that completely delights and engrosses you with its originality, thoughtfulness, wit & verve and rich characterisation, that when you do stumble across it, it feels like all your reading Christmases have come at once. Such was Continue Reading
  • Star Trek: Strange Worlds review: “Hegemony, Part II” and “Wedding Bell Blues” (S3, E1-2)
    (courtesy IMP awards) One of the things, of many, which I have loved about Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (SNW) from the very start is its embrace of genre-hopping, a willingness to be darkly serious one week and goofily quirky the next. The Original Series (TOS) and Next Generation (NG), Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Phoenix Pencil Company by Allison King
    (courtesy Harper Collins Publishers Australia) All of us, to some extent or another, come to appreciate through the course of our lives just how the present owes to the past. It’s not simply that one leads to the other though that is very much a part of what takes place Continue Reading
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