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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!

Some friendships are wild at heart: The enduring friendship of Animals

Posted on June 25, 2019June 24, 2019 by aussiemoose

SNAPSHOTWild, outrageous and utterly hilarious, Animals is the acclaimed new film from director Sophie Hyde based on the book of the same name by Emma Jane Unsworth, featuring stunning lead performances from Holliday Grainger and Alia Shawkat. (synopsis courtesy Jumpcut Online) At first glance, you may not think that Australian Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Book review: A Lifetime of Impossible Days by Tabitha Bird

Posted on June 23, 2019June 23, 2019 by aussiemoose

Delving into the past is a risky proposition at the best of times. We may think we remember what lurks there and how it might affect us when we take a metaphorical shovel to long-buried memories and feelings, but the truth is our minds have a funny way of distorting Continue Reading

Posted In Books

The short and the short of it: Existential lessons from The Talking Tree

Posted on June 23, 2019June 20, 2019 by aussiemoose

SNAPSHOTThe Talking Tree is an off-beat short comedy film written and directed by Stefan Hunt and produced by Matt Webb. It stars Eka Darville (Jessica Jones, Empire) who plays a man searching for purpose alongside John Ventimiglia (Blue Bloods, The Sopranos) an endearing claymation-faced tree who appears to have all Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Movie review: Toy Story 4

Posted on June 22, 2019June 24, 2019 by aussiemoose

Belonging is one of the most fundamental needs we have as a species. If you’ve been any attention at all to Pixar’s superlatively-good Toy Story series, you will have come to appreciate that it’s pretty fundamental to toys too. Time and again in Toy Story, Toy Story 2 and Toy Continue Reading

Posted In Animation, Movies

As heartfelt as it gets: Director of UP, Pete Doctor explains the creation of its poignant opening sequence

Posted on June 22, 2019June 17, 2019 by aussiemoose

The opening sequence of 2009’s UP, which is, if you do the maths, celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, is one of the most moving and beautiful pieces of cinema out there, absolutely and utterly, in any genre, hands down. That may be seem like an extravagantly hyperbolic claim but Continue Reading

Posted In Animation, Movies

Book review: Recursion by Blake Couch

Posted on June 21, 2019June 21, 2019 by aussiemoose

One of the truly exhilarating things about plunging into a book by Blake Crouch is that you know you are going to be treated to a wildly imaginative, enormously clever, fast-paced but emotionally-resonant take on a pivotal issue of the day. It takes a great deal of skill to hold Continue Reading

Posted In Books

The Bravest Knight: New Hulu animated series makes a beautiful case for love being love

Posted on June 21, 2019June 19, 2019 by aussiemoose

SNAPSHOTBased on wildly popular children’s book by Daniel Errico The Bravest Knight Who Ever Lived, the story chronicles a young pumpkin farmer’s adventure as he attempts to become the bravest knight who ever lived. The new series is breaking boundaries, featuring a household with two dads (Sir Cedric and Prince Continue Reading

Posted In Animation, TV

Retro movie review: Toy Story 3

Posted on June 19, 2019June 19, 2019 by aussiemoose

If there is one thing that the Toy Story franchise has done beautifully, and deeply movingly it should be added, it is depicting the way all of us have invested vibrant, authentic humanity into our beloved play things. When we’re kids and playing with our teddy bears, action figures and Continue Reading

Posted In Animation, Movies

Fear the Walking Dead: “Humbug’s Gulch” (S5, E3 review)

Posted on June 19, 2019August 19, 2020 by aussiemoose

SPOILERS AHEAD … AND ZOMBIE BOWELS WOOHOO! I MEAN, WHO DOESN’T LOVE ZOMBIE BOWELS? If there is one thing that The Walking Dead has always struggled with, it’s the humanity that should be sitting at the very heart of its storytelling. Sure, Dale (Jeffrey DeMunn) used to bleat on, reasonably Continue Reading

Posted In TVTagged In Fear the Walking Dead

Lessons From the Screenplay: Minority Report and Dismantling Precrime

Posted on June 18, 2019June 18, 2019 by aussiemoose

Minority Report, from a story by the impressively-imaginative mind of legendary writer Phillip K. Dick, is a tremendously good film by any measure. And one ripe for a video essay from Lessons From a Screenplay which compares Dick’s 1957 short story, Jon Cohen’s 1997 report and the final script by Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

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Recent Posts

  • Playtime has a new look as Toy Story 5 drops its first technologically menacing trailer
  • Book review: Engaged, Apparently by Amy Andrews
  • Dark, dangerous and hilarious … Thoughts on How to Get to Heaven From Belfast
  • Book review: The Distinctly Competent District Councillor by Jonas Jonasson
  • Movie review: Pillion #MGFF26

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Playtime has a new look as Toy Story 5 drops its first technologically menacing trailer
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOTIn Toy Story 5, we’re introduced to a new character Lilypad, a high-tech frog-shaped smart tablet voiced by Greta Lee that makes Buzz, Woody, Jessie and the rest of the gang’s jobs exponentially harder when they have to go head to head with the all-new threat to Continue Reading
  • Book review: Engaged, Apparently by Amy Andrews
    (courtesy Harper Collins Publishers Australia) Is it possible, we muse wonderingly at the start of this review, to reinvent a trope? Or, at the very least, and trust us, it’s a very good “very least” indeed, to put a shiny new sheen on it and present it to an enraptured Continue Reading
  • Dark, dangerous and hilarious … Thoughts on How to Get to Heaven From Belfast
    (courtesy First Showing (c) Netflix) Think tightrope walkers have a challenge on their hands? Surely a greater feat is balancing comedy and drama in a show like How to Get to Heaven From Belfast – the title alone is redolent with quirky humour and melancholic longing, all in perfect unison Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Distinctly Competent District Councillor by Jonas Jonasson
    (courtesy Harpers Collins Publishers Australia) There is something so heartwarming about looking at life in a whimsical way. In an age when everything is so full on and so serious and unrelentingly intense – this can be both a good and a bad thing but either way, it exacts a Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Pillion #MGFF26
    (courtesy IMDb) How do you define romance? The odds, whether you are straight or gay, or some other gloriously diverse point outside of that binary, is that you will think of tender touches, of deep friendship and shared values, of physical love and whispered words of love; you know, the Continue Reading
  • Graphic novel review: Assorted Crisis Events Vol. 1 by Deniz Camp (writer) and Eric Zawadzki (artist)
    (courtesy Image Comics) God bless humanity – for a complicated, contrary and multifaceted species, we sure do like to keep things simple. A clear example of our preference for everything being deliciously binary or linear is the way we view time which, depending on who you ask is multiversal in Continue Reading
  • Book review: Here and Beyond by Hal LaCroix
    (courtesy Bloomsbury Publishing) We live in troubling times. Hardly a news flash there; one glance at the nightly news is enough to traumatise you with updates on the creeping annihilation of climate change, the democracy-decimating horrors of fascism and the possibilities of new pandemics, fresh wars and death and violence Continue Reading
  • The short and the short of it: Grief and letting go in the digital spotlight in Light Hearted
    (courtesy Little Black Book Online (c) Sye Allen) SNAPSHOTLight Hearted, a new short film from director Sye Allen, is a poignant look at what happens to life once it has been touched by grief. Joy, a widow, has her own routine in place. It’s a quiet life with the absence Continue Reading
  • Book review: Margo’s Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) Before her life gets massively and royally upended, Margo Millet’s life is not an easy one. Caught between a narcissistic mother who does love daughter but only on very conditional grounds and an absent ex-pro wrestler father who is loving but only in her life when he Continue Reading
  • Nature’s greatest empire … witness the rise and fall of The Dinosaurs
    (courtesy First Showing (c) Netflix) SNAPSHOTWelcome to The Dinosaurs – an epic journey into a lost world. From executive producer Steven Spielberg, Amblin Documentaries, and the award‑winning team behind Life on Our Planet, this groundbreaking doc series follows the rise and fall of the dinosaurs across hundreds of millions of Continue Reading
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