It’s cinema, Jim, but not as we know it … COVID-19 has upended everything when it comes to films and cinema-going – cinemas are either shut or they’re open but barely or they’re showing retro retreads and precious few new films and all the old certainties have well and truly Continue Reading
Movie review: Bill & Ted Face the Music
MINOR SPOILERS LIE AHEAD … Twenty nine years is a long time between films for any franchise, and it’s fair to wonder if after waiting all that time, whether Bill & Ted Face the Music may have lost the zest and sweet, sincere hilarity of the first two instalments Bill Continue Reading
Godzilla vs. Aquaman: Fantastically imaginative pop culture mash-ups
They’re called action figures but let’s be honest – most of the time, OK all of the time, unless you’re an imaginative five-year-old (probably not), they don’t do much more than just sit on your display shelves, giving you warm and fuzzy pop culture vibes. But Instagrammer, Jax Navarro aka Continue Reading
Book review: The Mother Fault by Kate Mildenhall
One of the more noticeable aspects of any authoritarian regime, propaganda extolling its innate, inspiring virtue notwithstanding, is the starkly evident, almost palpable lack of humanity. There is power and control in abundance, toxic micro-managing and surveillance in abundance and a foreboding sense of loss any kind of freedom or Continue Reading
Grab the remote! A terrific trio of sci-fi TV(ish) trailers: The Mandalorian (S2), Time Lord Victorious-Daleks!, Moonbase 8
Staying home isn’t all bad, is it? Well, you could be forgiven for wondering what more than once this year as COVID-19 forced time and again to find shelter in our homes away from a virulent virus, from harm and threat, and sadly, all too often from other people. Even Continue Reading
Movie review: #Alive
If there’s one thing that defines us as a species, it’s a desperate, driving, impelling desire to live … and to do whatever it takes to remain in the land of living when life itself is threatened. It’s a core driver in all kinds of stories but especially in apocalyptic Continue Reading
Pardon her French: The awkwardly funny romance of Emily in Paris
SNAPSHOTCreated, written and executive produced by Star, Emily In Paris centers on Emily (Collins), a driven twenty-something American woman from the Midwest, who moves to Paris for an unexpected job opportunity, tasked with bringing an American point of view to a venerable French marketing firm. Cultures clash as she adjusts Continue Reading
Retro movie review: Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey
It is well nigh impossible not to love a movie that features Death aka the Grim Reaper in a dress, Martians that resemble the love children of Ewoks and Cling and Clang from H. R. Pufnstuf and good and bad stoner dude robots of various levels of technological sophistication. Which Continue Reading
Book review: Monstrous Heart by Claire McKenna
Love in our modern age has been reduced in many ways to an almosy infantile, fey semblance of its former vigorous self. Where once love compelled great Shakespearian sonnets or set in motions the events that led to the Trojan War, it is now imprisoned in cutesy greeting card rhyming Continue Reading
Heroes comes in all sizes: Tiny Earth (narrated by Paul Rudd) comes to Apple TV+
SNAPSHOTMeet nature’s littlest heroes and see the extraordinary things they do to survive in the new Apple Original docuseries, narrated by Paul Rudd. (synopsis (c) Apple TV+ via Laughing Squid) We live in a world that is obsessed with the bigness of things. We equate being noticeable with being important, Continue Reading