Archive
Don’t Starve - Shipwrecked
Posted 12:58pm Sunday 24th April 2016 by James Tregonning
Rating: A- Don’t Starve was originally released for PC in 2013, and was pretty successful, getting a PS4 port the next year. It’s a survival game in which you, a scientist named Wilson, have meddled with powers beyond your ken and have been sucked into an unknown world, where you have Read more...
Mind of Mine - Zayn Malik
Posted 12:53pm Sunday 24th April 2016 by Millicent Lovelock
When Zayn started releasing singles post-One Direction I was worried that it was going to take him an album and a bit to get into the swing of things. I wasn’t overly impressed by ‘Pillowtalk’, although it is a catchy tune I don’t think it is all that cohesive, and Read more...
Interview with Lakes
Posted 12:51pm Sunday 24th April 2016 by Sam Fraser-Baxter
Lakes are an eclectic and constantly evolving act. In this digital age of music, finding a way to set yourselves apart can be a little difficult. Lakes have had no trouble finding their own musical niche. From the early days with the debut release Reflections of the Night Before, Lakes created an Read more...
Zootopia
Posted 12:45pm Sunday 24th April 2016 by Jess Alsop
Rating: A- I knew very little about Zootopia before I saw it, so I’ll admit I was expecting some kind of strange Madagascar knock-off. Luckily I was wrong. Instead, Zootopia is about a world run by animals that have evolved from their ‘savage’ days of being predators Read more...
Sherpa
Posted 12:41pm Sunday 24th April 2016 by Lisa Blakie
Rating: A If anyone you know doesn’t know what white privilege is, or is too ignorant to even try to understand, all they need to do is watch Sherpa and everything around the concept will become abundantly clear. If not, you need to disassociate yourself from them ASAP. Sherpa is a Read more...
The Man Behind the Pope
Posted 12:39pm Sunday 24th April 2016 by Andrew Kwiatkowski
Rating: 0/5 or anything less than zero, or the lowest letter grade possible Fresh from my Grandmother’s funeral mass and with great trepidation I marched into the theatre to watch a film about the head Catholic honcho, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, or as you know him, the incumbent Pope Francis. Read more...
Florence and the Uffizi Gallery
Posted 12:37pm Sunday 24th April 2016 by Jessica Thompson
Rating: B+ Florence and the Uffizi Gallery is my entire art history course for this semester. But try not to let that put you off. In a tiny cinema this simple documentary swept me out of my seat into another country, for a high quality tour of Italian Renaissance art. Directed by Luca Viotto Read more...
One-Cup Desserts in One Minute
Posted 1:14pm Sunday 17th April 2016 by Kirsten Garcia
As students, most of us are probably limited in time, resources or ingredients to whip up sweet stuff like you (or more likely, your Mum) might at home. But we are a creative and persistent bunch, and there are ways to make do with modest supplies and a microwave, all in the time of a study Read more...
Hākui: Women of Kāi Tahu
Posted 1:05pm Sunday 17th April 2016 by Monique Hodgkinson
Visiting the current exhibition Hākui: Women of Kāi Tahu was an insightful, valuable, special and rare experience. The Otago Museum, working closely with Whānau, rūnaka and iwi throughout New Zealand, have created a gallery space which tells the life stories of Kāi Tahu Read more...
How to be Both
Posted 12:58pm Sunday 17th April 2016 by Hayleigh Clarkson
This is an incredible novel full of wit, sarcasm, and characters that are a touch arrogant and temperamental. Ali Smith’s How To Be Both has won the 2014 Costa Novel of the Year award, the 2015 Women’s Prize for Fiction award and was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2014. It is a Read more...


