Archive
The Material World: Sculpture at Dunedin School of Art 2002-2013
Posted 3:03pm Sunday 26th May 2013 by Charlotte Doyle

This week I’ve made a rather awkward mistake. Failing to think about the fact that exhibitions have a finishing point, I arrived at the Dunedin School of Art gallery on the morning of 17 May planning to write a phenomenal review of their contemporary sculpture exhibition. Then I realised it ends on Read more...
Caramel, Apple and Coconut Tart
Posted 3:03pm Sunday 26th May 2013 by Ines Shennan

This sweet thing is easy to whip up and looks more impressive than the effort required. Keep the peel on the apple for an extra pop of colour. I used Braeburn, though if you’re in the mood for something a little more tart, substitute these for Granny Smiths. Either way, there is something quite Read more...
Homestyle Chicken Pie
Posted 3:03pm Sunday 26th May 2013 by Ines Shennan

I have a soft spot for a good pie. Perhaps it all started when my Gran would make her steak and kidney pie, a homemade masterpiece that always had me going back for seconds. Nowadays, she tends to make a deconstructed version, whereby you are presented with a generous mound of the steaming filling Read more...
Gambit
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 19th May 2013 by Sam McChesney

Rating: 1/5 I had low expectations for this film. Just by looking at the poster, I could tell what kind of movie it would be (a bad one). I wasn’t disappointed. Starring Colin Firth, Alan Rickman, Cameron Diaz, and a variety of lazy national stereotypes, and with a screenplay by the Read more...
Edward Scissorhands
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 19th May 2013 by Rosie Howells

Edward (Johnny Depp) is an artificial creation who has croutons for hands. (Just kidding, they’re scissors!) He lives high on a hill with his father/inventor who intends to give Edward real hands in due time. But when his father dies unexpectedly, Edward is left alone and unfinished in the big scary Read more...
Rialto Channel 48HOURS
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 19th May 2013 by Sam McChesney

The 48HOURS film challenge is upon us again. Nominations closed last Friday, and production will begin 7pm this coming Friday. The 48HOURS film challenge has been running since 2003 and is now in its 11th year. Contestants are allocated a genre at random, and must produce a film between one Read more...
Battle of the Dead
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 19th May 2013 by Baz Macdonald

The video game has a long history of franchise adaptations. In fact, some of the most reputable developers in the industry started out this very way. Bethesda Game Studios, makers of the illustrious Elder Scrolls series, got their big break making video game adaptations of the Terminator films. Read more...
Bel Canto
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 19th May 2013 by Tess Ritchie

I missed my bus stop twice reading this book – which really is a fair indication of how hooked you get. Ann Patchett’s Bel Canto draws you in just as its heroine, soprano Roxanne Coss, captures her audience and the entire cast. Reading this novel, I was immediately reminded of E. L. Doctorow’s Read more...
Patrick Hartigan - The People Will Be Healed
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 19th May 2013 by Charlotte Doyle

Standing at one end of the art gallery, we were completely entranced by a large guy in a grey fur coat, with basketball sneakers along the bottom. His mannerisms and laugh, even from a distance, were like those of a stereotypical Jewish banker. Coming close enough to listen to him, he also had some Read more...
Phoenix - Bankrupt!
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 19th May 2013 by Basti Menkes

Rating: 3.5/5 Similar to the Ouroboric case of Gary Numan influencing Nine Inch Nails, who in turn went on to influence Gary Numan (see 2011’s Dead Son Rising), you simply can’t ignore how much The Strokes sound like their old imitators Phoenix these days. This year’s Comedown Machine saw The Read more...
Mali Mali
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 19th May 2013 by Basti Menkes

Mali Mali is a North Shore alternative trio fronted by singer-songwriter Ben Tolich. They have just released their debut album Gather ’round the Gooseclock (reviewed in the last issue of Critic), and are about to embark on a tour of the country. Critic caught up with Ben over the phone recently to Read more...
Nadia Reid and Ivy Rossiter (a.k.a. Luckless) Interview
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 19th May 2013 by Brittany Mann

Nadia Reid and Ivy Rossiter (a.k.a Luckless) recently performed at the iconic and allegedly haunted Chicks Hotel in Port Chalmers as part of their Ballads and Badlands national tour. Brittany Mann went along for the whiskey and good times. The girlsBallads and Badlands is Nadia Reid and Ivy Read more...
Mali Mali
Posted 2:26pm Sunday 12th May 2013 by Basti Menkes

Rating: 3.5/5 Despite a lack of diversity or adventure, Mali Mali has produced an impressive debut. Mali Mali is a North Shore trio fronted by singer-songwriter Ben Tolich. Drawing influence from artists such as The National, Sigur Rós and Bon Iver, Tolich writes acoustic, vaguely folky Read more...
Tahuna Breaks
Posted 2:26pm Sunday 12th May 2013 by Lisa Craw

Rating: 1.5/5 Tahuna Breaks have taken their time with this one. Their newest album, Shadow Light, has been five years in the making, and Tahuna Breaks seem to be mighty proud of it. They themselves describe it as being “bigger, darker and heavier” than their earlier releases – if you define Read more...
Maori Boy Genius
Posted 2:26pm Sunday 12th May 2013 by Jonny Mahon-Heap

Rating: 3/5 Documentaries often struggle to find the delicate balance between good storytelling and mere exploitation – a challenge made all the more difficult when the subject-matter revolves around children. Such is the difficulty faced by Maori Boy Genius, a competent, intelligent Read more...
Pietra Brettkelly
Posted 2:26pm Sunday 12th May 2013 by Jonny Mahon-Heap

Maori Boy Genius examines a year in the life of 16-year-old Maori boy wonder, Ngā Raūira Pumanawawhiti, an adolescent, Yale student and future Prime Minister. The film’s director, Pietra Brettkelly, discusses Ngā Raūira’s life pathway, the gamble of documentary filmmaking, and Read more...
The Company You Keep
Posted 2:26pm Sunday 12th May 2013 by Lyle Skipsey

Rating: 3/5 The Company You Keep, directed by Robert Redford, was based on a novel of the same name, and a novel it should have stayed. The story revolves around Jim Grant (Redford) a former Weather Underground militant, who becomes a wanted fugitive after his identity is exposed by a Read more...
American Psycho (2000)
Posted 2:26pm Sunday 12th May 2013 by Jonny Mahon-Heap

The story behind American Psycho’s adaptation from page to screen is almost as troubled and manic as the titular character. Based on Bret Easton Ellis’ seminal work on the moral and materialist woes of 1980s Wall Street America, the work was initially labelled “misogynistic garbage” and “snuff” by Read more...
Jurassic Park 3D
Posted 2:26pm Sunday 12th May 2013 by Basti Menkes

Rating: 5/5 As you may or may not have heard, Steven Spielberg’s seminal Jurassic Park was recently rereleased in theatres in 3D to celebrate the film’s 20th anniversary. Though many films that were shot in 2D and later converted into 3D look like shit (Clash Of The Titans being the classic Read more...
Star Trek Into Darkness
Posted 2:26pm Sunday 12th May 2013 by Sam McChesney

Rating: 2.5/5 I arrived at the midnight premier for Star Trek Into Darkness, two equally bewildered friends in tow, to encounter a menagerie of costumed oddities standing in the Rialto foyer. Trekkies have always been something of a mystery to me; I watched my first Star Trek film only last Read more...