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SparklyPrettyBriiiight

Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

Weekend pop art: Famous movie clothing in itsy-bitsy window displays

Posted on October 8, 2017September 29, 2017 by aussiemoose

  It has long been said, in one form or another, that “clothes maketh the man (or woman)”. What is not as commonly remarked, but is no less true, is that clothes, or in this case, costumes, maketh the movie. One person who recognises that to the very core of Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Rip’d from the pages of my childhood: The Rescuers by Margery Sharp

Posted on October 7, 2017May 12, 2021 by aussiemoose

  There are a great many books I remember fondly from my childhood – the rest of the Rip’d from the Pages of My Childhood series is testament to that – but there is one series in particular that I adore to this day because I fell in love with Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Pretty as a deer: Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (poster + trailer)

Posted on October 7, 2017September 29, 2017 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri is a darkly comic drama from Academy Award winner Martin McDonagh. After months have passed without a culprit in her daughter’s murder case, Mildred Hayes (Academy Award winner Frances McDormand) makes a bold move, painting three signs leading into her town with a Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Book review: The Shock of the Fall by Nathan Filer

Posted on October 7, 2017June 24, 2019 by aussiemoose

    Life is a complicated thing. Anyone who has reached adulthood with life, limbs and psyche relatively intact will attest to the fact that for all its capacity for magical delight and soul-consuming wonder, life also comes with some fairly onerous demands. It’s a hard enough ask for anyone Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Now this is music: 5 memory-rich songs

Posted on October 6, 2017September 29, 2017 by aussiemoose

  Songs, like smells, have the ability to instantly take us to places and times that played a formative, or in some cases, memorably incidental, role in our lives. It can take only a bar or two and suddenly the memories are flooding back, immersing us once again in that Continue Reading

Posted In Music

Getting adorable in a galaxy far, far away: New-ish Star Wars Blips

Posted on October 6, 2017September 29, 2017 by aussiemoose

  There is no such thing as too much Star Wars – unless you’re a diehard Star Trek fan in which case maybe but still c’mon you can love both can’t you? – and so I bequeath these three new-ish Star Wars Blips videos which were released last month. Given Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Finally watched … Blade Runner (movie review)

Posted on October 4, 2017September 29, 2017 by aussiemoose

  For reasons known only to the cinema gods, I managed to miss watching Blade Runner when it premiered in 1982 and in every year since. Until, of course, its much-anticipated sequel Blade Runner 2049 came on the horizon, a very close horizon at this point in time, and I decided Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Aliens in the backyard: Juvenile Mulder and Scully search for truth in new X-Files picture book

Posted on October 4, 2017September 29, 2017 by aussiemoose

  Throughout its extensive run (1993-2002; 2016-) the evocative rallying cry for The X-Files has been “The Truth is Out There”. It hinted at mysteries untold, vast, dark conspiracies and an endlessly unnerving sense that we are not being told the truth about the world around us. But where exactly Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Finally watched … The Good Place (S1, E 1-8)

Posted on October 3, 2017September 29, 2017 by aussiemoose

  It’s rare that you fall head over heels in love with a TV show … especially on a first viewing. Sure, you might flirt a little, watching an episode here or there. Or you might lightly date, sampling a few episodes one after the other, separated by a reasonably Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Anna of the Apocalypse: Not a creature was stirring … except the undead

Posted on October 3, 2017September 29, 2017 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT When a zombie apocalypse threatens the sleepy town of Little Haven, Anna and her high school pals must fight, sing and slash their way to survival. Teaming with her best friend John, Anna and her crew try to save family and faculty alike as they encounter zombified snowmen, Continue Reading

Posted In MoviesTagged In Christmas 2017

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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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