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SparklyPrettyBriiiight

Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

aussiemoose

I am an extrovert gay man living in Sydney who loves Indian food, current affairs, music, film and reading, caramel anything, and a beautiful guy called Steve who makes every day a delight. I am trying to get two novels in a trilogy ready for e-publication, love my iPhone & iPod, and am secretly Canadian in my soul. Life is fun, exciting and joyful and I aim to make the absolute most of it!

WandaVision: “Breaking the Fourth Wall” (S1, E7 review)

Posted on February 23, 2021February 23, 2021 by aussiemoose

SPOILERS AHEAD … AND ALL KINDS OF VERY COOL REVEALS (THE FULL IMPORT OF WHICH DEPENDS ON AN ENCYCLOPAEDIC KNOWLEDGE OF MARVEL COMIC BOOK LORE) … Holy hiding in plain sight, WandaVision! Yes, that is an unholy melding of DC and Marvel for which this reviewer will likely suffer death Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Docowatch: Secrets of the Saqarra Tomb

Posted on February 21, 2021February 25, 2021 by aussiemoose

A well-made documentary about a compelling subject is always going to be a riveting thing to watch; even more so, when it takes the time to fully investigate the topic at hand and give it time to breathe and tell its story as fully and completely as it deserves. Secrets Continue Reading

Posted In Documentaries

Book review: Who’s Still Afraid? by Maria Lewis

Posted on February 21, 2021February 19, 2021 by aussiemoose

If there is one thing you need when you are devotedly reading a long-running series, it’s a likeable and eminently capable protagonist who has got more going on than simply existing as a prop for the narrative. Someone like Tommi Grayson, the Scottish/New Zealander rogue werewolf who has proved many Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Movie review: Space Sweepers (승리호)

Posted on February 20, 2021February 20, 2021 by aussiemoose

Where did all that childlike wonderment and excitement about an idealised future go? Once upon, in our ’50s-inspired, retro fevered dreams about what might lie down the road, we pictured flying cars, clean cities full of gleaming skyscrapers and rooftop gardens and people in luminously white smocks walking through parks Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

The short and the short of it: Have Heart and the existential crisis of an animated looping GIF

Posted on February 20, 2021February 19, 2021 by aussiemoose

SNAPSHOTWill Anderson’s latest Have Heart, a humorous and relatable tale of a looping animated GIF in the midst of an existential crisis, has already charmed live audiences worldwide and is now looking to blow a few minds online. With a healthy festival run throughout 2017 and early 2018, Have Heart Continue Reading

Posted In Animation

Book review: Billie by Anna Gavalda

Posted on February 19, 2021February 17, 2021 by aussiemoose

Billie is one of those gleefully seditious and mischievous that subverts all your expectations by packing an emotional wallop the size of the Cévennes mountains in France. That geographic reference is quite apropos to proceedings because it is where lifelong friends Billie and Franck are trapped after falling off a Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Songs, songs and more songs #43: FLAVIA, KRANE, San Holo, Porter Robinson, Harry Nathan

Posted on February 19, 2021February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

Love, so its formidable PR machine goes, is all wonderful, all the time, right? Well, no, not really; for all the people caught up in the rapture and ecstasy of the start of love’s sweet romantic journey, there are plenty of others sliding off the cliff of despair (not a Continue Reading

Posted In Music

Movie review: The Dig

Posted on February 17, 2021February 16, 2021 by aussiemoose

Archaeological are by their very nature spectacularly impressive things. Whether it is the discovery of First Nations art in the Kimberleys that is tens of thousands of years old or, for the purpose of this review, an Anglo Saxon ship and gold artifacts in Suffolk, we can’t help but be Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Book review: Low Expectations by Stuart Everly-Wilson

Posted on February 17, 2021February 15, 2021 by aussiemoose

Watch a Disney film or traipse into a bookstore or even just watch an ad or two and you’ll work out pretty quickly that we are supposed to be able to do anything. All it takes is grit and gumption, a tenacious vision and some vibrant creativity and the world, Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Graphic novel review: King of Nowhere by W. Maxwell Prince / Tyler Jenkins / Hilary Jenkins

Posted on February 16, 2021February 16, 2021 by aussiemoose

It may not be immediately obvious but at the heart of every fantastical tale, if its told well, of course, sits a vibrantly humanistic core. This is certainly the case in the King of Nowhere written by W. Maxwell Prince (Ice Cream Man) with artwork by Tyler Jenkins (Grass Kings, Continue Reading

Posted In Graphic novel

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Recent Posts

  • Fantasy April book review: The Impossible Garden of Clara Thorne by Summer N. England
  • How does the audition of a lifetime go? Thoughts on Bait
  • Graphic novel review: Haru (Book 3) – Fall by Joe Latham
  • Book review: Spring at Flora’s House by Freya North
  • Easter is fun! Mini-reviews of Banjo the Hot Cross Bun, Pink Easter + Never Touch a Grumpy Bunny

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Graphic novel review: Haru (Book 3) – Fall by Joe Latham
    (courtesy Simon & Schuster) It’s easy to think that war and hatred, bigotry and violence are far more powerful than love and peace, joy and community. After all, the former are emphatically bombastic and loud; they look powerful, they appear menacing, bristling muscular energy of the worst, most destructive kind Continue Reading
  • Book review: Spring at Flora’s House by Freya North
    (courtesy official Freya North site) Identity is a powerful driver for every person alive. Not all of us may acknowledge it outright, but whether we emphatically embrace the dogma of a religion, the fervency of fandom of a football team or we live and breathe artistic expression in all its Continue Reading
  • Easter is fun! Mini-reviews of Banjo the Hot Cross Bun, Pink Easter + Never Touch a Grumpy Bunny
    (via Shutterstock) I adore kids’ books. Sure they were once upon just books to read to my nieces and nephews, but they’ve grown past books like these now, and yet, in reading them to my favourite little people, it hit me that here are some fun stories worth reading just Continue Reading
  • Easter has a soundtrack just like Christmas, so why do we never hear it? (curated article)
    (via Shutterstock) This article by by Wendy Hargreaves, academic in the School of Education and Creative Arts, University of Southern Queensland, was first published in The Conversation Australia. You can’t visit the shops around Christmas time without hearing “Feliz Navidad”, “Silent Night”, or Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Continue Reading
  • Easter book review: Easter Bunny Murder by Leslie Meier
    (courtesy Penguin Random House) It would be tempting to take in the title to this book by Leslie Meier and assume that the much-loved iconic Easter Bunny has had a brain snap, a breakdown and a loss of inhibition all in one and got on an uncharacteristically bloody killing spree. Continue Reading
  • Rabbits and chicks and glittery carrots oh my! I decorated my Easter tree with 5 pop culture ornaments
    (via Shutterstock) Are Easter trees really a thing?! It’s a common reaction when I tell people I have one, and that I decorate it every year, and I have to explain that yes, they exist – mine was bought at Bed, Bath and Table at post-Easter sales many years ago Continue Reading
  • Book review: To the Moon and Back by Eliana Ramage
    (courtesy Penguin Books Australia) If you have ever met someone possessed of singular, unwavering ambition, you will be well acquainted with how consuming that kind of focus can be. Nothing else matters to that person beyond seeing their vision realised, their life goals realised and all of the hope and Continue Reading
  • Songs, songs and more songs #135: girli, Em Beihold, Alex Warren, TOMORA + Jessie Ware … extra! RAYE live at Abbey Road
    (via Shutterstock) We all need music. It soundtracks the good, the bad and the ugly – this reference makes way further down this pot – and it gives up hope and a sense of direction when all around us life feels like it’s sinking beneath the waves. These five featured Continue Reading
  • Movie review: The Magic Faraway Tree
    (courtesy IMP Awards) It’s a tale as old as, well, not time exactly, but certainly since the day movies arrived just over a century ago and began adapting books into films, setting in train a titanic battle between those who believe solely in the purity of the written word and Continue Reading
  • An unwelcome visitor … or the start of healing? Thoughts on Homebodies
    (courtesy Random Management Instagram) So much is left unsaid when you’re a queer person coming out to your parents. You may have rehearsed the conversations a thousand times in your head, imagined how the discussion might go, good or bad and hoped that everything you authentically are will be far Continue Reading
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