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Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

Book review: Modern Romance by Aziz Ansari

Posted on February 14, 2016February 14, 2016 by aussiemoose

  Love may be eternal but as Aziz Ansari makes plain in his book Modern Romance, the way we go about finding it has changed radically in just the course of a few generations. Gone, he notes – to be fair he worked closely with award-winning sociologist Eric Klinenberg – Continue Reading

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Judd Apatow and Netflix are in Love

Posted on February 14, 2016February 9, 2016 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT LOVE follows Gus and Mickey as they navigate the exhilarations and humiliations of intimacy, commitment, and other things they were hoping to avoid. Having recently ended their respective dysfunctional relationships, Gus and Mickey meet each other by chance at a convenience store and forge a connection in the Continue Reading

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Is there a feline cupid? Simon’s Cat Logic looks at love

Posted on February 13, 2016February 13, 2016 by aussiemoose

  Sorry to break it you folks and you’re anthropomorphic-inclined hearts but cats aren’t not intrinsically romantic. Yup, in fact they’ll happily mate with anyone, don’t take a partner for life and can even have multiple partners within one very short breeding window giving you those delightful polyglot litter colourings. Continue Reading

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You know his name: New Jason Bourne trailer makes its presence felt

Posted on February 13, 2016February 12, 2016 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT Matt Damon returns to his most iconic role in Jason Bourne. Paul Greengrass, the director of The Bourne Supremacy and The Bourne Ultimatum, once again joins Damon for the next chapter of Universal Pictures’ Bourne franchise, which finds the CIA’s most lethal former operative drawn out of the Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Movie review: Trumbo

Posted on February 12, 2016February 11, 2016 by aussiemoose

  It is a curious quirk of the human condition that passionate devotion to an ideal can so often become fundamentalist zealotry that ultimately ends up trampling across the very belief system it is meant to uphold and protect. It has happened time and again throughout history but perhaps one of Continue Reading

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You need the bare necessities of life! Jungle Book debuts new poster and trailer

Posted on February 12, 2016February 9, 2016 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT The Jungle Book is directed by Jon Favreau (Iron Man, Cowboys & Aliens, Elf, Zathura, Made) and written by Justin Marks (Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li), based on Rudyard Kipling’s classic book of the same name. The film follows a young boy named Mowgli, a man-cub raised Continue Reading

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Book review: The Happy Ever Afterlife of Rosie Potter (RIP) by Kate Winter

Posted on February 10, 2016February 9, 2016 by aussiemoose

  So what’s a young woman like Rosie Potter supposed to do? One morning she wakes up in her favourite blue flannel pajamas, feeling a little worse for wear – most likely from one of her big nights out in village of Ballycarragh that she calls home – her bedroom trashed, Continue Reading

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If only all the Oscar Best Picture nominated films starred Winnie the Pooh! Oh wait now they do

Posted on February 10, 2016February 9, 2016 by aussiemoose

  If you have ever wished that someone would give movies nominated for an Academy Award a delightfully Winnie the Pooh twist, then you’re in luck. Polish film blogger David Adamek has taken up an idea first proposed by Twitter user @dilsexia aka Daniel to give movies caught in Oscars orbit this Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Movie review: The Danish Girl

Posted on February 9, 2016February 9, 2016 by aussiemoose

  A sense of identity is intrinsic to what it means to be human. But all too often our ability to express that in an authentic and meaningful way is subverted or denied, falling victim to societal demands that we behave a certain way in order to meet traditional or Continue Reading

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The short and the short of it: The touching stages of life in After You

Posted on February 9, 2016February 5, 2016 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT In 2013, Irish filmmaker Damien O’Connor of Brown Bag Films created “After you“, a short animated film that tells the incredibly touching story of a Dublin hotel doorman throughout his career – his first day, his first door opened, his fear of the revolving door and his ability Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

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Recent Posts

  • Book review: The Lost Story by Meg Shaffer
  • Songs, songs and more songs #123: Maribou State, Moncrief, Hylite, Mild Minds and MYRNE & Shallou
  • Time to fly? Wicked: For Good trailer lands atop flying monkeys and enduring friendship
  • Get her home: Thoughts on Doctor Who S2 (S15) E2-8
  • Book review: Painting Portraits of Everyone I’ve Dated by Joseph Earp

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Book review: The Lost Story by Meg Shaffer
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) Imagination is a powerful thing. In a world held fast by the often tight and deadening hand of grim, dark and soulless reality, the ability to imagine places, people and times that operate above and beyond the everyday is a salvation, a gift that allows us to Continue Reading
  • Songs, songs and more songs #123: Maribou State, Moncrief, Hylite, Mild Minds and MYRNE & Shallou
    (via Shutterstock) Everything feels so damn fast and intense. We’re all burnt out, we all need to chill and bliss out but apart from going and hiding in am eco-cabin in the woods far from wi-fi (not at all a bad idea, honestly), what can you do to stop your Continue Reading
  • Time to fly? Wicked: For Good trailer lands atop flying monkeys and enduring friendship
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOT“You’re the only friend I ever had…” The final chapter of the untold story of the witches of Oz begins with Elphaba and Glinda estranged and living with the consequences of their choices. Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo), now demonized as The Wicked Witch of the West, lives in Continue Reading
  • Get her home: Thoughts on Doctor Who S2 (S15) E2-8
    (courtesy IMDb (c) BBC/Disney+) When you approach a series that’s been around as long as Doctor Who, which launched in 1963 making it now a grand old dame of TV and streaming programming, you have two options. If you are a devoted fan of longstanding who knows their Daleks from Continue Reading
  • Book review: Painting Portraits of Everyone I’ve Dated by Joseph Earp
    (courtesy Hardie Grant Publishing) There’s something utterly beguiling about protagonists who don’t march to the beat of a conventional drum. In a world addicted to the idea that conventionality and a certain level of self-censoring propriety are the only way to go, lead characters who break the mould, even to Continue Reading
  • Surrealist something out of nothing: Thoughts on Government Cheese
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Dreams are powerful things. No, we’re not talking about strange nocturnal interludes where you’re naked in front of a hall of rabid lemmings who are demanding you sit your senior year French exam in five minutes time; instead, we’re referencing that mostly hope-springs eternal vibe inside all Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Phoenix Ballroom by Ruth Hogan
    (courtesy Allen & Unwin Book Publishers) Depending on your perspective, old age is a time where you either throw in the towel and admit life is what it is and there’s no changing it, and by extension, you, or you give things a long, hard look and carpe diem the Continue Reading
  • Cover reveal party: The Way of the Walker by Salinee Goldenberg
    (courtesy Angry Robot Books) SNAPSHOTReturn to the Thai-inspired world of Suyoram in this sharp follow up to 2024’s The Last Phi Hunter, exploring mythology, colonialism, and feminine rage. Ree is born with her eyes open to the Everpresent — a heightened awareness where Phi Hunters pull their magic and can Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Fountain of Youth
    (courtesy IMP Awards) We are a people consumed by endless wonder and curiosity. Evidence of it is everywhere if you care to look for it, but if you’re a pop culture tragic like this reviewer, you see it most often in movies and books and streaming shows where stories lean Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Stardust Grail by Yume Kitasei
    (courtesy Harper Collins Publishers Australia) Good lord but swashbuckling space operatic fun is good for the too tightly tied down soul. When all the stresses and obligations of life have you feel suffocatingly pinned into a very small and ever-diminishing space, picking up a superlatively good piece of wide-ranging sci-fi Continue Reading
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