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SparklyPrettyBriiiight

Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

The hunt has evolved … all-new killing-happy The Predator

Posted on June 29, 2018June 28, 2018 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT From the outer reaches of space to the small-town streets of suburbia, the hunt comes home. The universe’s most lethal hunters are stronger, smarter and deadlier than ever before, having genetically upgraded themselves with DNA from other species. When a boy accidentally triggers their return to Earth, only Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Movie review: Incredibles 2

Posted on June 27, 2018November 26, 2018 by aussiemoose

  Sequels occupy an odd place in the pantheon of Hollywood films, often eagerly-anticipated and existentially-dreaded in equal measure. They are usually, though not always, a response to a film making a cratering impact on the pop culture firmament, and while the studios make them because cash registers will likely Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

It’s a Jurassic World … or is it?! A professor weighs on the accuracy of TV and movie dinosaurs

Posted on June 27, 2018June 25, 2018 by aussiemoose

  Like many other people, I have long held a fascination for dinosaurs of all shapes and stripes. Doesn’t matter if its Stegosaurus or T-Rex, Velociraptor or a plesiosaur, dinosaurs captured my imagination very early on, and to my very adult joy, haven’t loosened their hold at all in the Continue Reading

Posted In Music, TV

Colony: “Lazarus” (S3, E8 review)

Posted on June 26, 2018June 26, 2018 by aussiemoose

  SPOILERS AHEAD … AS WELL AS DUPLICITY, ARROGANCE AND SOME UNNERVINGLY OPAQUE AGENDAS So how’s that whole Seattle as the promised land of post-grief/current-grief/no one is talking about the grief living going there Bowmans? I mean Daltons? Ah whatever the hell you’re calling yourself today. Not so great, I’d Continue Reading

Posted In TV

HBO is hoping you won’t avoid these Sharp Objects

Posted on June 26, 2018June 24, 2018 by aussiemoose

  SNAPSHOT The limited series’ chilling new trailer follows journalist Camille Preaker (Adams) as she returns to her hometown to cover the story of two murdered young girls. (synopsis (c) Paste Magazine) You know how small towns are supposed to be warm, cosy bastions of love, acceptance and a surfeit Continue Reading

Posted In TV

Retro movie review: The Incredibles

Posted on June 23, 2018June 22, 2018 by aussiemoose

  Being a superhero is, for the most part, a grimly singular endeavour. Sure, Marvel’s crop of cinematically-popular fighters of evil and catastrophe such as Thor, Black Widow, Iron Man and the like come together when needed as The Avengers, and even Batman, Superman and a cameo-like Wonder Woman have Continue Reading

Posted In MoviesTagged In Pixar

Weekend pop art: Reading books made quick and easy with abridged illustrations

Posted on June 23, 2018May 12, 2021 by aussiemoose

  I love reading books. Losing myself in books, long and short, big and small, has been a passion of time since I can remember but even I have to admit it’s well near impossible to read everything (not that I don’t give it a red hot go!). Riding to Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Book review: The Lonely Hearts Cinema Club by David M. Barnett

Posted on June 22, 2018June 15, 2019 by aussiemoose

  Jenny Ebert is not even remotely comfortable in her own skin. That much is apparent from the get-go in The Lonely Hearts Cinema Club, the latest book from David M. Barnett (Calling Major Tom) in which the film nerd who won’t accept she’s a film nerd – she loves Continue Reading

Posted In Books

It takes an arachnid to crush a village: Lucas the Spider in “Giant Spider”

Posted on June 22, 2018June 21, 2018 by aussiemoose

  Lucas the Spider is a sweetheart. True in the latest adventure from creator/animator Joshua Slice, Lucas, who is voiced by Slice’s nephew, he upends the lives of some fair wooden folk who he charmingly calls in on in the kind of sing-songy way people in musicals are wont to Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Book review: LIFEL1K3 by Jay Kristoff

Posted on June 20, 2018July 14, 2019 by aussiemoose

  When the cover of a book proclaims it’s Romeo & Juliet meets Mad Max meets X-Men with a little bit of Blade Runner cheering from the headlines” it’s either got a healthy sense of what makes it work so well or its hopelessly derivative and is hoping that bringing Continue Reading

Posted In Books

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Recent Posts

  • Easter has a soundtrack just like Christmas, so why do we never hear it? (curated article)
  • Easter book review: Easter Bunny Murder by Leslie Meier
  • Rabbits and chicks and glittery carrots oh my! I decorated my Easter tree with 5 pop culture ornaments
  • Songs, songs and more songs #135: girli, Em Beihold, Alex Warren, TOMORA + Jessie Ware … extra! RAYE live at Abbey Road
  • Movie review: The Magic Faraway Tree

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • 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
  • 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
  • Book review: That Island Feeling by Karina May
    (courtesy Pan Macmillan Australia) Heading off on holidays, all we really want is to get away from the insistent stresses and strains of everyday life. Hand us a cocktail, sit us by the pool or in a bush cabin somewhere, banish the internet to a simpler, more analogue time and Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Project Hail Mary
    (courtesy IMP Awards) At the heart of every great and enduring sci-fi story, sits an impressive amount of evocative humanity. It’s easy just to see the spaceships and the planetary expanses and aliens and wars and epic space opera sprawling across millennia and impossibly far light years of stars and Continue Reading
  • “Oh my God, run!!” The End of Oak Street releases a prehistorically intriguing trailer
    (courtesy IMP Awards) SNAPSHOT“Our house, our neighborhood, our whole street has moved.” Filmed for IMAX. After a mysterious cosmic event rips Oak Street from suburbia and transports their neighborhood to someplace unknown, the Platt family soon discovers that their very survival depends on them sticking together as they navigate their Continue Reading
  • Book review: The Last Poem by Courtney Peppernell
    (courtesy Simon & Schuster Australia) When my parents died less than four years apart in the mid-to-late 2010s, I was plunged into the kind of grief I had never really known before. And honestly, I wasn’t sure what to do with it; I expected it to be intense then ebb Continue Reading
  • Meaning and mutual understanding: A Gorilla Story: Told by David Attenborough
    (courtesy First Showing) SNAPSHOTThis intimate documentary blends the remarkable story of David Attenborough’s first encounter with the baby gorilla Pablo with a deep dive into how Pablo’s direct descendants are doing today in the mountains of Rwanda. Weaving together contemporary and archival footage of the gorilla group and narrated by Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Hoppers
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Really believing in something, in its purest and least judgmental form, is among life’s greatest joys. There’s nothing like the passion that courses through your veins, the sparkle of idea fizzing with excitable urgency around your brain and your heart being fully engaged in something that really Continue Reading
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