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SparklyPrettyBriiiight

Andrew's wonderful world of pop culture

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

Weekend pop art: What if Thor had an iPhone (and a love of selfies) instead of a hammer?

Posted on April 19, 2014April 19, 2014 by aussiemoose

  Selfies are certainly a big part of the zeitgeist these days. If they’re not being declared the Word of the Year for 2013 by the Oxford Dictionary, they’re being sung about in songs by the likes of The Chainsmokers and even playing a play in embroiling President Obama and Continue Reading

Posted In Movies

Everybody listen to the music, yeah: Review of Deluxe Edition of ABBA’s Waterloo album

Posted on April 19, 2014April 17, 2014 by aussiemoose

  It was 1975, and just a year after ABBA had won the Eurovision Song Contest on 6 April 1974 in spectacularly convincing fashion, opening the way for their now legendary international career as pop superstars, I had discovered the music of Björn & Benny, Agnetha and Anni-Frid as they were Continue Reading

Posted In Music

Now this is music #27: Figgy, TĀLĀ , Racing Glaciers, Bagheera, Bayou

Posted on April 18, 2014December 15, 2014 by aussiemoose

  So life huh? We expect it to be filled with premiere parties, champagne and organic entrees, mingling with stars and staying over for the weekend at Sandra Bullock’s place in Austin, Texas … … but instead we somehow end up, well, doing the ironing on a Saturday night while Continue Reading

Posted In Music

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Recent Posts

  • Merry Christmas in books and movies and on streaming platforms and in song … may all your pop culture festive dreams come true
  • Festive kids book review: Bah! Humbug! by Michael Rosen
  • Festive book review: The Christmas Market by Linda McEvoy
  • The short and the festive short of it: A little blue lightbulb learns the true meaning of Christmas
  • Festive book review: Ghosted at Christmas by Holly Whitmore

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RSS SparklyPrettyBriiiight

  • Merry Christmas in books and movies and on streaming platforms and in song … may all your pop culture festive dreams come true
    (courtesy Pinterest (c) Disney) In honour of Winnie the Pooh’s first appearance in a story by A. A. Milne and the 75th anniversary of Peanuts first cartoon, this year’s Christmas greeting centres on these two groups of characters. I have loved both of them ever since I was a child Continue Reading
  • Festive kids book review: Bah! Humbug! by Michael Rosen
    (courtesy Scholastic Children’s Books) It’s a big thing to say, given how thick on the ground A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, are on the ground, but Bah! Humbug! by Michael Rosen is quite simply one of the best retellings of the Christmas classic I have ever come a cross. Continue Reading
  • Festive book review: The Christmas Market by Linda McEvoy
    (courtesy Harper Collins Publishers Australia) One of the kinds of festive romcoms I love the most are where someone’s life falls apart – no, that’s not the movable; I’m not a sadist, thank you – and they flee back to their hometown in England or Ireland (this happens in U.S. Continue Reading
  • The short and the festive short of it: A little blue lightbulb learns the true meaning of Christmas
    (courtesy Pipeline Studios, Vimeo) SNAPSHOTLittle Blue, the Christmas bulb, will just do about anything to find his shine this holiday season. Find out what happens when Blue’s determination still needs a little helping hand. From all of us at Pipeline Studios, may your holidays be merry and bright. (courtesy Pipeline Continue Reading
  • Festive book review: Ghosted at Christmas by Holly Whitmore
    (courtesy Penguin Books Australia) On the top ten list of things that would wreck your Christmas, absolutely and completely and without a hint of celebratory salvation, surely having your ex turn up would be very high on the list? That’s certainly the way Mia Robinson feels when, after braving a Continue Reading
  • On 12th day of Christmas … I added another 10 new pop culture ornaments to my tree incl. Scooby-Doo, Peanuts’ Spike, Miffy + more
    (via Shutterstock) Forget decking the halls … at least for right now! With Christmas almost upon us, adding more pop culture ornaments to my tree is the order of the day, and yes, while I buy far too many new ones every year – is there such a thing? I Continue Reading
  • Festive novella review: The Austen Christmas Murders by Jessica Bull
    (courtesy Penguin Books Australia) With 2025 being the 250th birthday of one Jane Austen, it seems entirely fitting that this delightful The Austen Christmas Murders by Jessica Bull find pride of place in the festive reviews section of SparklyPrettyBriiiightmas. Now, as far as we know, and primary evidence is not Continue Reading
  • Movie review: Eternity
    (courtesy IMP Awards) Does love survive death? We all like to think so; the innately romantic part of ourselves, which might get trampled down by life but never really goes away, wants to hang onto the comforting idea that not even death can stand in the way of love, true Continue Reading
  • On 11th day of Christmas … I read Christmas People by Iva-Marie Palmer
    (courtesy St. Martin’s Griffin) This seems to be the Christmas for festive romcoms with cleverly out-there premises and one of the best so far has to be Christmas People by Iva-Marie Palmer. In this sparklingly fun but emotionally grounded novel, Jill Jacobs, a wannabe screenwriter based in L.A. who’s had Continue Reading
  • Festive graphic novel review: A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
    It has to be the famous story ever told about Christmas … apart from the obvious other one, of course, where the Son of God born in a manger kicks the whole idea of Christmas off. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, first published in London by Chapman & Hall Continue Reading
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