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Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

Movie review: Eighth Grade

Posted on January 19, 2019January 19, 2019 by aussiemoose

As adults, we all become familiar with something called “Impostor Syndrome”. It’s that unnerving feeling that no matter how experienced or intelligent we might be, that we are essentially living life under false pretenses, with the tissue-thin veneer of accomplishment about to ripped off us at any moment. For most Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Laurel and Hardy are getting comical all over again

Posted on January 19, 2019January 18, 2019 by aussiemoose

SNAPSHOT There are few names in the history of comedy which have stood the test of time. Acts who transcend age and bring laughter to generations like few have before or after them. They have been recognized as a template for modern humor and celebrated by today’s most popular funnymen Continue Reading

Posted In Comics

Songs, songs and more songs #1: Methyl Ethel, Touch Sensitive, Kinder, Ellie Goulding, Joji

Posted on January 18, 2019January 18, 2019 by aussiemoose

A new year and after five years of rapturously and emphatically-declaring “Now this is music” – meet me in person and you’ll understand why that is; I am an extrovert and prone to being fulsomely enthusiastic – I’ve decided it is high time for a musical change. So I present Continue Reading

Posted In Music

Come with me to A Place Called Slaughter Race!

Posted on January 18, 2019January 18, 2019 by aussiemoose

One of the great delights of Ralph Breaks the Internet, of which there are many, is a musical number that takes place after Vanellope, who finds herself beguiled rather than repulsed by the many life-changing possibilities of the Internet (Ralph, by way of contrast, just wants to go home), sings Continue Reading

Posted In Animation, Movies

It’s time to NOT put on make-up: The Muppet Show without the muppets

Posted on January 16, 2019January 16, 2019 by aussiemoose

SNAPSHOT A little bit of fun by the crew recorded at the end of the first series/season of The Muppet Show in 1976…The crew/cast includes Peter Harris, Richard Holloway, Jim O’Donnell, Brian Grant, Steve Springford, Jerry Hoare, Phil Hawkes, Gerry Elms, John Rook, Martin Baker, Sue Boyers, Francis Essex, Dennis Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Dare to Dream with this Eurovision 2019 update: Logo + interval acts

Posted on January 16, 2019January 14, 2019 by aussiemoose

You may be asking yourself right now – “Did we not just witness Israel’s fabulously-funky Netta win the 2018 Eurovision Song Contest? How we can be closer to 2019’s event than the one just gone?” Time, my friends, time and it’s already racing ahead to May this year when the Continue Reading

Posted In Music, TVTagged In Eurovision 2019

Movie review: Bird Box

Posted on January 15, 2019January 15, 2019 by aussiemoose

When you really stop to think about how utterly life-changing and disruptive to a fatal degree the apocalypse would be, the first thing that comes to mind is how utterly shock-inducing it would be. One minute, Western civilisation stands proud and strong, and with it, your small, comfortable sliver of Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Winter has well and truly come: Game of Thrones evocative S8 teaser trailer

Posted on January 15, 2019January 14, 2019 by aussiemoose

Winter has well and truly come in Game of Thrones in the gripping teaser trailer. In the evocative, and let’s be honest, creepy crypts beneath Winterfell, which will be one of the first places to feel the icy touch of the White Walkers and their leader, the Night King, we Continue Reading

Posted In TVTagged In Game of Thrones

Book review: The Best Version of Me by Guy Sigley

Posted on January 13, 2019January 14, 2019 by aussiemoose

Barney Conroy, a man who never met a confrontation-avoiding lie he didn’t like, who always chose complicated cover-ups over the simplest and easiest of responses to any given situation and who yet somehow ended up with the love of his life, Gloria, and a delightfully-sweet daughter Emily, is back as Continue Reading

Posted In Books

The short and the short of it: Down beneath the waves with Jonas and the Sea

Posted on January 13, 2019January 11, 2019 by aussiemoose

SNAPSHOT Jonas has dreamed of living in the sea all his life. But it’s not possible. Or is it? (synopsis via Vimeo) There is such delight and whimsicality in this breathtakingly-beautiful piece of animation that you scarcely know where to begin. In Jonas and the Sea, directed and animated by Marlies Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

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  • Book review: Meet the Newmans by Jennifer Niven
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  • Book review: The Dogs of Venice by Steven Rowley
  • Playtime has a new look as Toy Story 5 drops its first technologically menacing trailer
  • Book review: Engaged, Apparently by Amy Andrews

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Book review: Meet the Newmans by Jennifer Niven
    (courtesy Pan Macmillan Australia) As ideals go, perfection has to be one of the most laughably impossible. Granted all ideals dance somewhere in the land of blue sky implausibility, cosily inspiring ideas that would be wondrously good if they made it from hope to actuality but which never quite manage Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Sketch
    (courtesy IMP Awards) One of the things that you never realise about grief, until you are mired irrevocably in its desperately sad and regretful depths, is how powerless it makes you feel. On one level, of course, you know, especially when someone you love dies, that you can’t bring them Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Dogs of Venice by Steven Rowley
    (courtesy Penguin Random House) Can you ever get away from yourself? Not really, but and this is crucial in the context of Steven Rowley’s delightful novella, The Dogs of Venice, you can get away from the place where you experienced trauma and that can make the world of difference, So, Continue Reading
  • 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
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