(via Shutterstock) Get up and dance people! Life may have stomped all over you or you might be so drained and stressed that it’s scarcely conceivable you could move anywhere, especially onto to a dancefloor but these five gloriously good tracks are here as your official Friday reminder that we Continue Reading
Retro movie review: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
(courtesy IMP Awards) While review aggregation sites like Rotten Tomatoes may give Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull a buoyantly healthy 77% rating, there seems to an anecdotal tendency to dismiss the film as the weakest of the four Indy films released before, of course, the just-released Continue Reading
Book review: The Celebrants by Steven Rowley
(courtesy stevenrowley.com) Knowing we are loved is a powerful thing. If we are fortunate enough to have emotionally expressive people in our life, we will know that, deeply and often; but, and all too often this is the case, either through benign neglect or lack of care (usually the former Continue Reading
“We’re back, baby!” Futurama returns with a new poster and trailer … and soon, new episodes!
(courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOT“After a brief ten-year hiatus, Futurama has crawled triumphantly from the cryogenic tube, its full original cast and satirical spirit intact. The 10 all-new episodes of season 11 have something for everyone. New viewers will be able to pick up the series from here, while long-time fans Continue Reading
Graphic novel review: We Live (Volume 1) by The Miranda Brothers
(courtesy Aftershock Comics) We live in age of apocalypse – not so much a literal one although the quickening march of climate change and increased geopolitical fractiousness may soon, alarmingly, change that – but a storytelling one with the hopefulness of the post-World War Two having long given up its Continue Reading
Sci-fi review double: Silo (S1, E9) and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (S2, E2)
Silo (S1, E9) BAM! That sound you hear, crashing down with clanging finality through the hundred-plus set of spiral stairs that link the many levels of the eponymous silo, is of an autocratic system finding itself falling apart, one defiant action after another. In the penultimate episode of the Silo‘s Continue Reading
Book review: Orbital by Samantha Harvey
(courtesy Grove Atlantic) Preview copy provided by NetGalley; Orbital releases 2 November 2023. You imagine that orbiting the earth must be something akin to watching the world’s greatest, most expansive documentary unfolding before you (narrated, of course, by Sir David Attenborough because who else would work in this, or any, Continue Reading
Weekend movie character poster art – Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning, Part One
Tom Cruise (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTIn Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One, Ethan Hunt (Cruise) and his IMF team embark on their most dangerous mission yet: To track down a terrifying new weapon that threatens all of humanity before it falls into the wrong hands. With control of the Continue Reading
Graphic novel review: Star Trek – Lower Decks #1 by Ryan North and Chris Fenoglio
(courtesy IDW Publishing) SNAPSHOTEnsign, report to the bridge! Board the U.S.S. Cerritos for a mission to the enigmatic Qvanti system as the hit Paramount+ animated series comes to comics! Captain Carol Freeman leads her crew on an expedition aimed to build bridges and advance Federation technology, but she and the Continue Reading
Book review: Ithaca by Claire North
Mythologies, no matter the culture, are wondrous things to dive into. They give you a rich insight into a people’s culture, what matters to them and the values that underpin their belief system and which shape/have shaped them and their society. But fascinating though the storytelling can be, they often Continue Reading