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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!

My how I love these Jellyfish Eyes (movie poster + trailer)

Posted on April 26, 2014April 26, 2014 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT Jellyfish Eyes tells the story of Masashi, a young boy who moves to a sleepy town in the Japanese countryside with his mother in the wake of a natural disaster. After returning home from his new elementary school one day, Masashi discovers a flying jellyfish-like creature whom he Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Movie review: Any Day Now

Posted on April 26, 2014April 24, 2014 by aussiemoose

  As a concept, morality would seem to fall, without equivocation, into the realm of the blindingly obvious. Do the good, the decent, the upright thing and you are behaving in a moral fashion; indulge in behaviour that is demonstrably hurtful, cruel, malicious and you are being, quite clearly, immoral. Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

My 5 favourite TV show opening themes of the moment: Orphan Black, Helix, Sleepy Hollow, Portlandia, Parks and Recreation

Posted on April 25, 2014April 24, 2014 by aussiemoose

  A TV show’s opening theme music is something you either notice or you don’t, love or you loathe but either way, it can vitally important in both giving you an idea of the show to come and establishing a mood or sense of time and place. And while they Continue Reading

Posted In TV

The importance of Decoding Annie Parker (poster + trailer)

Posted on April 25, 2014April 25, 2014 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT Based on true events, this touching film follows a 15-year war against a cruel illness, waged on both scientific and emotional fronts by a pair of women demonstrating extreme bravery under pressure. Annie Parker (Samantha Morton) is on intimate terms with breast cancer, having watched both her mother Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Orphan Black: “Nature Under Constraint and Vexed” (S2, E1 review)

Posted on April 23, 2014April 24, 2014 by aussiemoose

  Whoosh! And just like that, and understandably so given her daughter Kira (Skyler Wexla) and foster mother of dubious intent Mrs S. (Maria Doyle Kennedy) have just been kidnapped, Sarah Manning (Tatiana Maslany) is once again off and running, frantic to save the only family she really knows. A Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Road to Eurovision 2014: Week 5 – Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, San Marino, Slovenia

Posted on April 23, 2014May 3, 2014 by aussiemoose

  WHAT IS THE EUROVISION SONG CONTEST? Started way back in 1956 as a way to draw a fractured Europe back together with the healing power of music, the Eurovision Song Contest, or Concours Eurovision de la Chanson – the contest is telecast in both English and French – is open Continue Reading

Posted In MusicTagged In Eurovision, Eurovision 2014

Marvellous massing of movie trailers: Chef, Sex Tape, Lucky Them, Blue Ruin, Lucy

Posted on April 22, 2014April 22, 2014 by aussiemoose

  From indie to mainstream, and somewhere pleasingly in-between, this mixed bag of trailers offers pretty something for everyone. While I am, as always, partial to festival-friendly movies, I am willing to also believe that Jason Segel and Cameron Diaz can be funny, and that Luc Besson’s movie will make Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Book review: The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion

Posted on April 22, 2014April 21, 2014 by aussiemoose

  At first appearance, Don Tillman, the handsome 39 year old geneticist with undiagnosed Asperger’s Syndrome (and a love of lobster every Tuesday night without exception) who anchors Graeme Simsion’s delightful debut novel with his quest for a wife via questionnaires, and Shakespeare may not look to have a great Continue Reading

Posted In Uncategorized

FUNx3: Welcome to Sweden, Everything Wrong with The Matrix and When the Easter Bunny attacks!

Posted on April 20, 2014April 17, 2014 by aussiemoose

  Welcome to Sweden! Moving to a whole other country is never the easiest of undertakings, something that accountant to the stars, Bruce Evans (Greg Poehler, brother to Amy Poehler who produced the series) discovers when he heads to Sweden to live with his girlfriend Emma (Josephine Bornebusch). Telling a Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Can’t wait to see: Shaun the Sheep

Posted on April 20, 2014December 12, 2018 by aussiemoose

SNAPSHOT From Aardman, the creators of Wallace & Gromit and Chicken Run, comes the highly anticipated big screen debut of Shaun the Sheep. When Shaun decides to take the day off and have some fun, he gets a little more action than he baa-rgained for! Shaun’s mischief accidentally causes the Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

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Recent Posts

  • Movie trailer double: Captain Tsunami and Remarkably Bright Creatures
  • 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

Recent Comments

  • aussiemoose on Book review: The Second Sight of Zachary Cloudesley by Sean Lusk
  • Sean Lusk on Book review: The Second Sight of Zachary Cloudesley by Sean Lusk
  • aussiemoose on Movie review: Thor – Love and Thunder
  • Carla Krae on Movie review: Thor – Love and Thunder
  • Daryl Devore on On a scale of one to ten, how would you rate your pain? Thoughts on Baymax!

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Movie trailer double: Captain Tsunami and Remarkably Bright Creatures
    Ah, movies I love you. Being able to sit back in the dark of a cinema, and yes, while I appreciate the convenience of streaming as a catch-up device, my heart still very much sits with going and joining fellow moviegoers in a public space. These two films looks delightful Continue Reading
  • Fantasy April book review: The Impossible Garden of Clara Thorne by Summer N. England
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) Hiding away from the world, even if it’s in plain sight, is something that anyone who has undergone trauma is very adept at doing. You may long for happy-ever-afters and a community to call your own and a life that’s buoyant and free but the truth of Continue Reading
  • How does the audition of a lifetime go? Thoughts on Bait
    (courtesy IMP Awards) If you have so much as stepped out of your house at any point in your life, and the odds are good you have, you will have definitely come into contact with the socially toxic tendrils of a narcissist. You know the type – people who overwhelm Continue Reading
  • 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
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