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Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

Book review: Mrs Quinn’s Rise to Fame by Olivia Ford

Posted on January 21, 2025December 12, 2025 by aussiemoose

This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2025. We live in an age where endless self-empowerment and improvement have become dogma, the endless mantras of a world where you don’t stand still, you don’t stop and you don’t simply make do. It’s an endless Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Sometimes adventure isn’t all it’s cracked up to be … thoughts on Star Wars: Skeleton Crew S2 (E3-8)

Posted on January 17, 2025January 16, 2025 by aussiemoose

(courtesy IMP Awards) One of the things that has always about Star Wars, from the moment this reviewer saw A New Hope (or just Star Wars as it was then) in a cinema in 1977 right up until now is its capacity for no holds barred adventuring. As Luke Skywalker Continue Reading

Posted In Streaming

Movie review: Paddington in Peru (#3)

Posted on January 17, 2025January 15, 2025 by aussiemoose

(courtesy IMP Awards) Any time you’re around Paddington Bear is a good, warmhearted and wonderful time. In the case of this reviewer, it began some decades ago with the books of Michael Bond, the man who gifted us this remarkably lovely and thoughtful character, beginning in 1958 with A Bear Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Book review: Echo of Worlds (The Pandominion Book 2) by M. R. Carey

Posted on January 15, 2025January 12, 2025 by aussiemoose

This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2025. Every novel you read should, in some way or another, take you to a place far away from your own. Good or bad, this world should provide an escape from the everyday sameness of the life Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Can you move on eventually? Shrinking S2 wrap-up review

Posted on January 15, 2025January 13, 2025 by aussiemoose

By the time many of us reach the confusingly contradictory, dark and difficult, joyful and not messy wilds of unpredictable adulthood, we have been well and truly disabused of the notion that life is always going to be a smooth and easy ride. With that warm and cosy slice of Continue Reading

Posted In Streaming, TV

Movie review: Wallace & Gromit Vengeance Most Fowl

Posted on January 14, 2025January 13, 2025 by aussiemoose

(courtesy IMP Awards) It’s a rare thing in this hyperconnected, digitally frenzied age where something is demanded of you almost every second of every day to just sit back, switch off and spend some time with old friends. And when that happens, when the gods smile upon you with an Continue Reading

Posted In Animation, Movies

Book review: The Bogan Book Club by John Larkin

Posted on January 14, 2025January 12, 2025 by aussiemoose

This book was read at Kalimna, Yeranda cottages, near Dungog in early January 2025. A sense of belonging, identity and purpose is what defines us but what happens when it’s rent asunder and all we have are the vestigial rags of who we once were? That’s the great dilemma facing Continue Reading

Posted In Books

Movie review: Grey Matter

Posted on January 11, 2025January 2, 2025 by aussiemoose

(courtesy IMDb) What is it like to lose someone before you actually lose them? Ask anyone who has walked with a loved one through the long dimming road of dementia, and you will hear harrowing tales of what it is like to see that person disappear task by task, memory Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

What does it feel like to be alive? Love Me asks some big and deeply moving questions

Posted on January 10, 2025January 2, 2025 by aussiemoose

SNAPSHOTLong after humanity’s extinction, a buoy and a satellite meet online and fall in love. As filmmakers Sam & Andy demonstrate in their wildly imaginative debut feature, telling the love story of a smart buoy and an orbiting satellite that spans a billion years and probes the mysteries of being Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Goodbye Star Trek – Lower Decks: Review of S5, E4-10) + thoughts on the series

Posted on January 8, 2025January 3, 2025 by aussiemoose

(courtesy IMP Awards) Saying goodbye to any series you love is always a desperately sad affair. Sure, you could argue, if you’re head was made of Romulan stone, that the end of any series is hardly the end of the world, and yes, in the grand scheme of things, that’s Continue Reading

Posted In Streaming, TV

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Recent Posts

  • Review of the rest : Shrinking S3, E7-11
  • Movie review: Cycle of Time (C’était mieux demain) #AFFF26
  • Fantasy April book review: Fathomfolk (The Drowned World Duology, Book 1) by Eliza Chan
  • Movie trailer double: Captain Tsunami and Remarkably Bright Creatures
  • Fantasy April book review: The Impossible Garden of Clara Thorne by Summer N. England

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Review of the rest : Shrinking S3, E7-11
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Streaming riddle me this: when is a series finale not a series finale? When it’s the final episode of the third season of Shrinking which was originally scoped out for three seasons until Apple came a-calling again, says the show’s creator creator, and asked whether there might Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Cycle of Time (C’était mieux demain) #AFFF26
    (courtesy IMDb) In every way that matters to the social mores of 1958, Hélène and Michel Dupuis (Elsa Zylberstein and Didier Bourdon respectively) are a typical, happy married couple, each operating within their narrow, heavily-proscribed lanes. Hélène, immaculately displayed in tightly fashionable, figure hugging dresses and with a not a Continue Reading
  • Fantasy April book review: Fathomfolk (The Drowned World Duology, Book 1) by Eliza Chan
    (courtesy Hachette Australia) Imagination is the power source behind any great fantasy novel but as anyone who has read many books in the genre will attest, not all imaginative minds are created equal. Having just finished the gloriously clever storytelling that is Fathomfolk by Eliza Chan, it is well and Continue Reading
  • 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
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