Archive
Play
Posted 4:23am Tuesday 18th May 2010 by Jen Aitken
Written by Samuel Beckett Directed by Benjamin Blakely Allen Hall Lunchtime Theatre March 4 and 5, 1pm A man, a wife, and his mistress individually reflect on their love triangle from the confines of three urns. They are interrogated in a never-ending cycle until they are shadows of Read more...
My Name is Rachel Corrie.
Posted 4:22am Tuesday 18th May 2010 by Jen Aitken
Directed by Stuart Young Starring Nadya Shaw Bennett Allen Hall Theatre March 3 – 6 at 7.30pm, Sunday March 7 at 4pm Taken from the writings of Rachel Corrie and edited by Alan Rickman and Katharine Viner, this piece of documentary theatre, directed by the head of the Theatre Studies Read more...
HOMEGROWN - February 20, 2010 Wellington
Posted 3:21am Tuesday 18th May 2010 by Tim Suggate
4/5 Glazed eyes, smiles, and high-fives all round. Midway through their bone-jarring set, Laughtan Kora stops and asks the Homegrown crowd, “How good it is to live in this beautiful country called Aotearoa?” And he’s right, our little nation in the middle of the South Read more...
Sacha Vee EP (Independent)
Posted 3:20am Tuesday 18th May 2010 by Dave Eley
4/5 Dutch/West Indian neo-soul artist Sacha Vee is a distinctive vocalist who is making waves in the New Zealand music scene. Alongside soulful collaborations with Pacific Heights, Oval Office, and P-Bass Expressway, she has been focusing on her own original sound. 2009 saw the release of her Read more...
The Brian Jonestown Massacre Who killed Sgt Pepper?( A Records)
Posted 3:19am Tuesday 18th May 2010 by James Barlien
4/5 Who killed Sgt. Pepper? by The Brian Jonestown Massacre is a breathtaking album, and despite what may have been said of Anton Newcombe in the past, he has undeniable talent. The album is a step forward from their previous work, as shown by the opening track ‘Tempo Read more...
Various Artists Womad New Zealand: Sounds Of the Planet 2010 (Shock Records)
Posted 3:17am Tuesday 18th May 2010 by Phoebe Harrop
3/5 If WOMAD were a person, it would probably be a pot-smoking, prayer-chanting, bongo-playing hermaphrodite with knee-length dreads and no shoes. It’s no surprise, then, that this year’s WOMAD compilation is about as eclectic as it’s possible to be, encompassing all reaches Read more...
The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks
Posted 2:59am Tuesday 18th May 2010 by Henry Feltham
Publisher: Abacus Rating: 4.1/5 The Wasp Factory is the kind of book that publishers love. It's weird enough to be lumped into that bracket of ‘Modern Classics’, along with books like The Crying of Lot 49, Miss Smilla's Feeling for Snow, and other oblique, semi-mysterious titles Read more...
The Death of a Mafia Don by Michele Giuttari (Translator: Howard Curtis)
Posted 2:55am Tuesday 18th May 2010 by Tien-Yi Toh
Publisher: Abacus Rating: 2/5 The Death of a Mafia Don centres on the investigation of a series of attacks and murders for which the Mafia appear to be responsible. As the investigation unravels, with every new lead or suspect, a corresponding Mafioso corpse is found. Despite the Read more...
An American Index of the Hidden and Unfamiliar - Taryn Simon
Posted 2:52am Tuesday 18th May 2010 by Critic
American photographer Taryn Simon aims to reveal the guarded secrets that lie beneath the surface of American identity and the daily functioning of American life. This exhibition showcases a selection of photographs from Simon’s four-year project in which she plays detective, gaining access Read more...
Clash of the Titans - Directed by Louis Leterrier
Posted 3:02am Monday 10th May 2010 by Aleks Vuckovic

(1.5/5) In the spirit of the current Hollywood trend to only regurgitate remakes and superhero movies, we finally get a re-hash of the 1981 film Clash of the Titans. This version for the new decade fails to be anything more but a clichéd, unoriginal, and boringly predictable action Read more...
Cop Out - Directed by Kevin Smith
Posted 2:26am Monday 10th May 2010 by Elona Buckingham

(4/5) Finally, a Kevin Smith film that’s not a tedious rom-com! Cop Out is an ‘80s-style buddy/cop film and succeeds at being an awesome one. It’s also his first film for which Smith has not written the script; I found this out post screening and am shocked that he Read more...
The Theory of Light and Matter - Andrew Porter
Posted 2:20am Monday 10th May 2010 by Anne Ford
Publisher: The Text Publishing Company (3.5/5) Andrew Porter’s debut collection of short stories won the 2007 Flannery O’Connor Award for Short Fiction in the United States. Written from different perspectives, including male and female, young and old, rural and urban, Read more...
The Group - Mary McCarthy
Posted 2:16am Monday 10th May 2010 by Kathy Young
Publisher: Hachette (4.5/5) I’ve got to admit, first of all, to being a big Sex in the City fan. So, I was pleased to see Candace Bushnell’s introduction of this newly re-released version of a classic, dare I say, feminist novel first published in 1964. It spent two Read more...
Strangers in Death - J. D. Robb
Posted 2:15am Monday 10th May 2010 by Sue Hui Ong
Publisher: Piatkus (5/5) Strangers in Death is the first book in a long time that has hooked me into reading it nonstop, compelling me to avoid other tasks just to satisfy my curiosity. I was intrigued to read my first futuristic crime novel (being an avid Poirot fan) and I was not Read more...
Science vs. Religion? Intelligent Design and the Problem of Evolution - Steve Fuller
Posted 2:06am Monday 10th May 2010 by Caitlyn O’Fallon
(1/5) In light of Richard Dawkins and Lawrence Krauss’ visits here, it seemed appropriate to critically evaluate some putatively rigorous work by dissenting voices. In Science vs. Religion? Fuller argues for “the centrality of intelligent design in motivating the scientific Read more...
Wayne Barrar - An Expanding Subterra
Posted 1:50am Monday 10th May 2010 by April Dell

Dunedin Public Art Gallery Until Sunday June 27 An Expanding Subterra is a photographic investigation into the private spaces of artificial underground worlds. This collection of works from Barrar’s seven-year international project presents a bizarre and unsettling subterranean existence Read more...

