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SparklyPrettyBriiiight

Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

Book review: Night Without Stars by Peter F Hamilton

Posted on January 21, 2017January 4, 2019 by aussiemoose

[caption id= (image courtesy Pan Macmillan Australia) One of the delights of diving deeply into a Peter F Hamilton novel – and dive deeply you will with many of his expansive efforts reaching the 700-plus page mark with ease – is being reminded once again that pretty much anything is Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Weekend pop art: Say hello to a Doctor Who-fied time-travelling Snoopy!

Posted on January 21, 2017January 19, 2017 by aussiemoose

  In his day, and it’s been a thoroughly successful 67 years and counting so far, Snoopy has been many things – an aspiring author, a hip rock ‘n’ roll-loving college student named Joe Cool and a dashing World War 1 flying ace, always on the hunt for the Red Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Now this is music #81: Maggie Rogers, Ama Lou, Grandtheft/Delaney Jane, Tanukichan, Tom Misch

Posted on January 20, 2017January 20, 2017 by aussiemoose

  Life can feel like SO MUCH sometimes. It’s hard to catch your breath, to stop and think and take a good look around and think about what’s happening to you, what it all means and where it might take you. That’s why we have artists like the beguiling five Continue Reading

Posted In Music

Delightful pixelated cartoon madness: Rick and Morty get an 8-bit intro

Posted on January 20, 2017January 19, 2017 by aussiemoose

  Rick and Morty, the titular stars of the epic cartoon series created by Dan Harmon and Justin Roiland, are no strangers to zipping to the past, present or future, here on Earth, far out in space or in weird alternate dimensions populated by hilariously crazy, odd creatures, many of Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Movie review: The Edge of Seventeen

Posted on January 18, 2017January 18, 2017 by aussiemoose

  Childhood is often presented as some sort of unfettered idyll, a time of adventurous questioning and exploration unburdened the shoulder-sagging demands of adulthood. But the reality is that for all the depictions of untroubled starry-eyed blissful innocence, that growing hard is damn sight harder than it’s often made out Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

The world is ending AGAIN: The 100 season 4 trailer

Posted on January 18, 2017January 16, 2017 by aussiemoose

  The radiation is coming my friends and trust us it won’t be pretty! Now granted you might have thought that the threat from other people might be a bigger issue for the likes of Skaikru and the Grounders, neither of whom seem too inclined to engage in any kind Continue Reading

Posted In TV

The Boy on the Bridge: M. R. Carey’s sequel to The Girl With All the Gifts

Posted on January 17, 2017October 3, 2019 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT “Once upon a time, in a land blighted by terror, there was a very clever boy. The people thought the boy could save them, so they opened their gates and sent him out into the world. To where the monsters lived.” (source: Sci-Fi Now) You could be forgiven Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Hey Mad Max! Meet Happy Feet … you’re welcome

Posted on January 17, 2017January 13, 2017 by aussiemoose

  I am betting, and yes I have been known to partake in games of chance and gambling on occasion – OK once, ONCE, and as a result my great aunt decided I had a chronic gambling addiction – that none of you have ever thought to combine the sweet, Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Movie review: Rosalie Blum #StGeorgeOpenAir

Posted on January 14, 2017August 7, 2018 by aussiemoose

  One of the great joys and strengths of French cinema is its ability, gifted from a thoroughly unique cultural perspective, to look at the great issues of life in a way that differs markedly from that of Hollywood’s. Films like Rosalie Blum, written and directed by Julien Rappeneau and based on Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Weekend pop art: Comic strips meets TV in creative mashups

Posted on January 14, 2017January 9, 2017 by aussiemoose

  Have you wondered what Linus would look like as a zombie? Or Pigpen as Daryl (he’s the one Peanuts character who’d be untroubled by the ablution-challenged environs of the zombie apocalypse). Or perhaps you think Game of Thrones could do with a dose of Calvin and Hobbes whimsicality? (Let’s Continue Reading

Posted In TV

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Christmas movie preview: Jingle Bell Heist, A Merry Little Ex-Mas, Champagne Problems + My Secret Santa
    (via Shutterstock) If you have only ever paid passing attention to this blog, and seriously, why would you not dive into its wonderfully eclectic depths (a conversation for another time perhaps?), you will realise that I LOVE Christmas. LOVE. IT. The apartments gets decorated within an inch of its life. Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Tron: Ares
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Movie trilogies are often, though not always, governed by the wholly unforgiving law of diminishing returns. What was vital and fresh in the first film becomes diluted though often still appealing in the second film all of which means that by the third instalment, there is a Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Maskeys by Stuart Everly-Wilson
    (courtesy Transit Lounge Publishing) Despite this book’s title, The Maskeys, and no, this does not require a spoiler alert, are not the centrepiece of the novel which bears their rather blighted name. Penned by Stuart Everly-Wilson, who brought us the superlatively good Low Expectations, The Maskeys revolves instead around Rodney, Continue Reading
  • Step into your future with the first official trailer for Star Trek: Starfleet Academy + sneak peek at Star Trek: Strange New Worlds S4
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTThis thrilling new chapter follows a fresh class of cadets as they train under the watchful, demanding eyes of Starfleet’s finest. Together, they’ll face highs & lows of academy life: forging unbreakable friendships, clashing in explosive rivalries, experiencing first loves, & stepping into their destiny as the Continue Reading
  • Retro movie review: Tron: Legacy
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Long delayed movie sequels are pretty thick on the ground with Hollywood having taken up the rallying cry of “Leverage the IP!” with bottom-line scanning gusto. Like anything driven partly by a desire to expand a franchise rather than coming up with a startling new idea, some Continue Reading
  • Book review: Love Bites by Cynthia St. Aubin
    (courtesy Tor Publishing Group) The crime genre, early teenage voracious consumption of Agatha Christie’s entire output aside, has never really compelled this reviewer to sit down and read like, say science-fiction or slice-of-life quirky dramas. While most sections of my favourite bookshops see regular footfall from me, the crime section Continue Reading
  • Graphic novel review: Stitch Head by Guy Bass (writer) and Pete Williamson (artwork)
    (courtesy Larrikin Press) It’s a recurring theme in all kinds of creative expression – just who are the monsters really and might they be lurking where you least suspect? The answer, to the second question at least, is an emphatic “YES!!”, owing to the fact that humanity, despite millennia of Continue Reading
  • Retro movie review: Tron
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Jumping back in time, if not literally then at least cinematically, is always an interesting exercise. Nostalgia exerts a powerful pull on all of us, and watching how it fares when it comes to seeing the object of its hagiographying live and in person again is a Continue Reading
  • 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 + ABBA performimg “Mamma Mia” in 1975
    (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
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