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SparklyPrettyBriiiight

Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

Up, up and away! Inflight safety video gets gloriously LEGO’d

Posted on August 25, 2018August 25, 2018 by aussiemoose

  I think we can all agree that the inclusion of LEGO in just about every endeavour in life makes them all better (and naturally, AWESOME), simply by the sheer presence of those joyfully-anarchic coloured bricks. That includes, and honestly this is a miracle given how odious airline travel can Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Book review: Days of Wonder by Keith Stuart

Posted on August 25, 2018May 22, 2019 by aussiemoose

  Days of Wonder, the second book from Keith Stuart (A Boy Made of Blocks), is an inestimable joy from start to finish. The story of Tom and Hannah, a father and daughter who make a magically theatrical life for themselves in a small English town after wife and mother Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Now this is music #111: Opia, Blair, Darwin Deez, Snow Patrol, Oliver Tree + Eurovision 2019 update

Posted on August 24, 2018August 24, 2018 by aussiemoose

  For songs to truly move you on all levels, they have to be the culmination of the perfect marriage of music and lyrics. Sure some songs get us dancing, and that’s wonderful, and others get us thinking about life, the universe and everything, but it’s the ones that combine Continue Reading

Posted In Music

Overwhelmed by the choices on Netflix? You’re not alone

Posted on August 24, 2018August 20, 2018 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT I’m gonna throw Netflix an easy one here Forrest Gump. You know what I know it was on there. I saw it on there I saw it with my own eyes and it’s gone. …speaking of TV shows that I’ve never seen because I’m not big on TV, Continue Reading

Posted In Movies, TV

Movie review: The Cured

Posted on August 22, 2018August 22, 2018 by aussiemoose

  Life is a messily indistinct business. While it would be lovely indeed if it divided itself neatly into clean cut before, during and afters, the unsettling reality is that one period often bleeds into the other, leaving us craving a neat fairytale transition but never really being delivered one. Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Mission: Impossible — Executing the Perfect Heist (video essay)

Posted on August 22, 2018August 20, 2018 by aussiemoose

  The Mission: Impossible films have captivated me from the moment the first movie in the now six-episode series debuted in 1996. Possessed of a larger-than-life action persona, an emotional resonance lacking in action movies on the whole, and a tight knit team that fought the bad guys in the Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Fear the Walking Dead: “Close Your Eyes” (S4, E10 review)

Posted on August 21, 2018August 21, 2018 by aussiemoose

  SPOILERS AHEAD … AS WELL AS SHISH KEBAB ZOMBIES, UNWANTED WINDOW GUESTS AND REGRET, LOTS OF REGRET When the world around you has gone to the undead dogs – frankly in a world where civilisation has fallen, the reanimated dead wander the earth and Lord of the Flies is Continue Reading

Posted In TVTagged In Fear the Walking Dead

I spy a brand new Star Wars animated series – Resistance

Posted on August 21, 2018August 21, 2018 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT The series, which revolves around the ace fighter pilots of Leia Organa’s burgeoning Resistance, follows a young pilot named Kazuda Xiono (voiced by Days of Our Lives’ Christopher Sean), recruited by the rebel group to conduct secretive spying missions on the growing reach of the villainous First Order. Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Movie review: Summer 1993 (Estiu 1993)

Posted on August 19, 2018August 19, 2018 by aussiemoose

  Childhood is supposed to be a safe, idyllic, untroubled place. Yet for a million different reasons that are as diverse as the various failings of the human race, it fails to be the fairytale dream it’s supposed to be, overwhelming young growing minds with the kinds of challenges and Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Avengers Infinity War: How should it have ended?

Posted on August 19, 2018August 16, 2018 by aussiemoose

  Avengers: Infinity War is grim, people, GRIM with the kind of ending that has you leaving the theatre with a desperate, impelling need to eat your body weight in junky comfort food (which as luck would have it, cinemas have in abundance; true, it will bankrupt you ten times Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

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Recent Posts

  • Book review: Love Bites by Cynthia St. Aubin
  • Graphic novel review: Stich Head by Guy Bass (writer) and Pete Williamson (artwork)
  • Retro movie review: Tron
  • 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 + ABBA performimg “Mamma Mia” in 1975

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Graphic novel review: Stich 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
  • 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
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