Archive
Lemon & Yoghurt Cake
Posted 12:53pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Kirsten Garcia
In high school we had cake Fridays and we would eat cake during the last spell of the week. I think we should make that a thing at Uni. This modest recipe has a beautiful pairing of ingredients with a sweet lemon syrup soaked through the sponge of the cake. It’s the kind of slice that’s Read more...
Discordia, Hair, & Bondage
Posted 12:48pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Lucy Hunter
Spartan, fit-for-purpose separates, uncanny fetishism, and bondage elements make for a bold first step into the industry for this emerging designer. Julia Palm graduated in the top of her class at Otago Polytechnic School of Fashion. Julia is heading to New Zealand Fashion Week in August to take Read more...
Five time sink mobile game apps
Posted 12:43pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Anonymous Bird
Neko Atsume Rating: A- Neko Atsume is an adorable cat collection game. You start off with a small yard, and you are given some fish. You use this to buy goodies, to deck out your garden with cat food and toys. Leave the app open in the background and do something else. Slowly but surely, cats Read more...
The Bloody Chamber
Posted 12:37pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Monique Hodgkinson
Take the classic fairy tales you know and love, add a splash of violence, a sprinkling of sex, a healthy dose of feminism, and you’ve got Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber. This collection of stories provides a shadowy and provocative exploration of tales such as Snow White and the Read more...
To Rise Again at a Decent Hour
Posted 12:34pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Hayleigh Clarkson
To Rise Again at a Decent Hour is the ultimate page turner. Winner of the Dylan Thomas Prize as well as being shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, Joshua Ferris writes with fluidity, clarity and with a unique voice unlike any I’ve read before. The novel settles around Paul Read more...
Skyfall
Posted 12:30pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Andrew Kwiatkowski
Rating: A+ Skyfall is like one of those optical illusions - do you see a duck or rabbit? In Skyfall, people see what they want to see. Fans of the old school see only betrayal of the core Bond formula, with no gadgets in this film other than “a gun and a radio.” But many, like me, Read more...
The Birds
Posted 12:25pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Andrew Kwiatkowski
Rating: B+ Ka-KAW!! Hitchcock created this enduring 1963 classic that is still quite scary by today’s standards. The action centres on the Californian town of Bodega Bay, whose residents find themselves being attacked by (spoiler alert) birds. It starts with people only being pecked by a Read more...
The Conjuring 2
Posted 12:23pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Alex Campbell-Hunt
Rating: B+ The Conjuring 2 is by the same director who made the Insidious movies, so as you’d expect, it scores very high on the shit-my-pants-o-meter. The trailer alone made me lose some sleep, and apparently someone actually died of a heart attack while watching the movie. If you like Read more...
Bad Neighbors 2 — Sorority Rising
Posted 12:19pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Jessica Thompson
Rating: B+ Let’s call this a progressive comedy for a modern age. Neighbors 2, In the spirit of the first film, opens with tubby wubby Mac (Seth Rogen) and his wife Kelly (Rose Byrne) attempting sex as exhausted parents. The film begins gross, gets grosser, and ends kinda Read more...
Why do we need…Robotic pets
Posted 12:14pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Anthony Marris
Humans have always had a relationship with animals. From practical uses, like seeing-eye “dogs,” to the gimmicky, like courier “pigeons”, this constantly developing sector will alter the course of humanity. Robotic pets are, exactly as the name implies, manmade animals (or Read more...
Lawrence Arabia — Absolute Truth Tour
Posted 12:03pm Sunday 10th July 2016 by Lucy Hunter
One of New Zealand’s finest songwriters is coming to Dunedin to play for us at the Maori Hill Coronation Hall on Friday. Lawrence Arabia has won two of New Zealand’s most prestigious music awards: the Taite Music Prize and an APRA Silver Scroll. His fourth album “Absolute Read more...
Gumbo
Posted 12:56pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Kirsten Garcia
This lil ol’ recipe originates from Louisiana, USA. You may have noticed it in Disney’s Princess and the Frog. It revolves around Tiana’s Dad’s gumbo and I was always curious keen to try it. My first taste of it was actually from Nova. It was hearty and delicious. This cold Read more...
Nine Photographs - Laurence Aberhart
Posted 12:50pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Robyn Maree Pickens
New Zealand soils are notoriously low in selenium, a mineral that photographer Laurence Aberhart uses (with gold) as a toner when developing his photographs, to create warmth in the shadows. Viewing his photographs in the flesh, one has a sense that these flickers of captured light have been made by Read more...
Uniform
Posted 12:47pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Jess Taylor
Rocking up fashionably late, as always, to the Blue Oyster Art Project Space on Dowling Street, I am pleased to see the front door flung open invitingly, with small groups of people milling around in the front room. I enter the space where this month’s exhibition opening is unfolding, eager to Read more...
Calling to the Universe - Hex
Posted 12:42pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Millicent Lovelock
Wellington based Hex are essentially my dream band. The trio recently released their album Calling to the Universe and from my first listen I found myself completely submerged by quicksand vocals and slippery guitars. Hex are Liz Mathews on drums, Kiki Van Newtown on bass, and GG Van Newtown on Read more...
Cradle
Posted 12:39pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Campbell Calverley
Rating: A- I have been waiting for Cradle to be released for a long time. It is an interesting narrative game that lived up to some of my expectations and fell short of others. It is proof that good writing, a dedicated art style, and a focus on atmosphere can be enough to make a game great. Less Read more...
Go Set A Watchman
Posted 12:37pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Jessica Thompson
There are some stories that hurt to read. They really can cut you up for a while. Go Set A Watchman is in my top ten on the heartbreak book list for a number of reasons. Written before the famous To Kill a Mockingbird but published as a sequel, it is accepted as being Mockingbird’s first Read more...
Notes to Eternity
Posted 12:33pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Andrew Kwiatkowski
Rating: A An intensely moving doco about the Palestinian struggle, but also much more than that. When the film begins by interviewing the most vocal members of a pro-Israel protest, you know it isn’t going to pull any punches. It tackles all the difficult issues head-first, with the Read more...
Dante’s Peak
Posted 12:30pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Alex Campbell-Hunt
Rating: B+ Was this anyone else’s favourite movie as a kid? For me it even overtook Jurassic Park at one point. (Though it just occurred to me that many of this year’s freshers weren’t born yet when it was released... holy christ). In my flat we bought a projector in lieu of a Read more...
Angry Birds Movie
Posted 12:28pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Lisa Blakie
Rating: C+ It’s pretty common knowledge that most movies adapted from video games are shit, (Tomb Raider, Mortal Kombat, any Sonic the Hedgehog film). Despite this, they are still being made; a fact that I am biased towards being happy about because I bloody love video games. Something that Read more...
The Great Maiden’s Blush
Posted 12:25pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Anonymous Bird
Rating: B+ This recent New Zealand film follows two women, Aila (Renee Lyons) and Bunny (Miriama McDowell), as they both embark upon single motherhood. Aila is an isolated older woman, lover of gardens and failed classical pianist. Her desperately wanted newborn daughter needs to have a risky Read more...
Why Do We Need...Transhumanism?
Posted 12:20pm Sunday 29th May 2016 by Anthony Marris
Transhumanism is both a philosophy and a movement which explores how technology can be used to enhance people, essentially to better mankind. These enhancements include surgically inputting processors on the brain to increase cognitive function, or replacing lost limbs with vastly improved bionic Read more...
Daddy Jong’s Jaeyuk bokkum
Posted 1:15pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Kirsten Garcia
I was a sous chef in a kitchen where I learned this recipe. This is courtesy of my Korean friend, known as Daddy Jong. I was a bit stuck on what to write for the Critic this week, and he offered to make this dish from his homeland. According to people who have lived with him in the past, Read more...
The Obliteration Room — Yayoi Kusama
Posted 1:10pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Monique Hodgkinson
Fresh and sparkling at the DPAG this week is Yayoi Kusama’s The Obliteration Room, or polka dot madness, as I prefer to think of it. This exhibition takes the form of a domestic interior - a house complete with living room, study, kitchen, and Kmart-worthy chic décor. The only Read more...
Mavis!
Posted 1:05pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Nita Sullivan
Rating: A A heart-warming documentary that spans the life of Soul, RnB, and Gospel singer Mavis Staples, Mavis! entertains and informs on many levels. You don’t have to be a history or music buff to appreciate and enjoy all that Mavis Staples has accomplished during her lengthy career Read more...
Lemonade — Beyonce
Posted 1:01pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Jessica Thompson
Beyoncé dropped Lemonade on the 23rd of April, 2016. It is her sixth album, first released on Tidal with an incredible hour long film. I think it’s safe to say I’m not the only person who signed up for the thirty day free trial just to hear Queen B’s sweet, sweet beats, Read more...
Stephen’s Sausage Roll
Posted 12:59pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Campbell Calverley
Rating: B+ Think of the most difficult puzzle game that you have ever played and multiply it by a thousand. Then take away all instructions, add a lot of frustration and headache-induced pain, and you will get a game that is still only half as infuriatingly difficult as Stephen’s Sausage Read more...
Paper Girls
Posted 12:53pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Anonymous Bird
Opening this graphic novel is an eerie, creepy dream sequence, depicting some kind of angel of death. The protagonist wakes up and we are introduced to Erin, a 12-year-old girl who has just started a job doing the paper round in her neighbourhood. In the early hours of the morning post-Halloween, Read more...
Why Do We Need...Automated vehicles?
Posted 12:48pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Anthony Marris
Automated vehicles, colloquially known as self-driving cars, are arguably the greatest technological innovation to date that will have the largest impact on the broadest range of people. Pop culture icons like KITT (Knightrider) have laid the groundwork for an easy transition, and those with Read more...
Florence Foster Jenkins
Posted 12:39pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Nita Sullivan
Rating: A In the middle of a very stressful week, and nearing the end of a pretty hectic semester, seeing a heart-warming film about a rich woman who couldn’t sing turned out to be exactly what I needed. Florence Foster Jenkins creatively depicts the life of Madam Florence (played Read more...
The Man Who Knew Infinity
Posted 12:35pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Tom Lord
Rating: B I can’t remember if I’d ever been the youngest person in the movie theatre until I went along to The Man Who Knew Infinity – and I don’t just mean by a few years, I mean that the next youngest person was probably in their mid-50s. When the lights came on at the Read more...
Repo! The Genetic Opera
Posted 12:32pm Sunday 22nd May 2016 by Anonymous Bird
Rating: A It’s the year 2056, and the future is super goth. An epidemic of organ failure has caused the deaths of many. A new company, GeneCo, offers organ transplants on a payment plan. Those who make their payments live on and live rich. However, those who miss their payments fall victim Read more...
Braided Bread
Posted 1:10pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Kirsten Garcia
My flat “Star Whores” had a potluck for May the Fourth, Star Wars day. As well as supplying Sangria and Pimms, I thought I would contribute some fresh made bread for starters. I totally froth over bread baskets. This dough recipe is so easy to make because it has very minimal Read more...
This Cloud Is Queering! Val Smith
Posted 1:06pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Robyn Maree Pickens
“What if you had the agency to take your attention anywhere?” val smith asks. We are in the small back-gallery space of Blue Oyster Gallery on Dowling Street. It is Saturday afternoon on the last day of April. By asking about agency, val is subtly directing our attention away from Read more...
Black Sabbath
Posted 12:59pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Anonymous Bird
I’m staring at myself in the mirror as I layer on black eyeshadow, heavy black eyeliner and black mascara. I choose the darkest red lipstick I own, and apply to my lips generously. Happy with my suitably dark aesthetic, I pull on my ripped jeans, black tee, torn up flannel and my docs. Do I Read more...
By the Book
Posted 12:57pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Hayleigh Clarkson
Edited & introduction by Pamela Paul, Foreword by Scott Turow Have you ever wondered what authors, actresses, scientists or professors read? If you have, then this book is for you. Pamela Paul, the editor of The New York Times Book Review, has put together a collection of interviews of 65 Read more...
Why Do We Need...Cryptocurrencies?
Posted 12:51pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Anthony Marris
Cryptocurrencies are a digital money system which promotes transactions between parties bypassing a central fixed point like a bank. Arguably cryptocurrencies are an updated version of the hawala system of money transferring, where money was passed along until it reached the intended recipient. The Read more...
Captain America: Civil War
Posted 12:49pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Anonymous Bird
Rating: A+ The UN is calling for the registration and employment of super powered people, making them accountable to something more than their own moral compass. Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) believes this is the right course of action, considering the lives lost due to the battles caused, Read more...
Eddie the Eagle
Posted 12:45pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Taoran Li
Rating: B ‘Eddie the Eagle’ was advertised as the “feel good movie of the year”, and you really have to give it to mainstream filmmakers, that’s exactly what their movies do; make you ‘feel good’. This good feeling then dissipates into thin air, much like Read more...
Mother’s Day
Posted 12:43pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Lisa Blakie
Rating: D (can I give this an F? is that a thing?) What is it with holiday specific movies always being so terrible? I’m not meaning Christmas movies (although there a lot of disappointments there) I’m meaning films like Valentine’s Day, The Holiday, New Year’s Eve and now Read more...
Niu Sila
Posted 12:40pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Gini Jory
Rating: A+ Niu Sila tells the story of two boys, Ioane Tafioka and Peter Baker, growing up in the same street in 1970s suburban Auckland. One fresh from the Islands, the other as white as they come, this story spans 40 years of friendship, cultural differences, and takes a closer look at the Read more...
The Witness
Posted 12:38pm Sunday 15th May 2016 by Campbell Calverley
Rating: A It is hard to make a player feel completely alone in a game and still keep them engaged. It is even harder to make a puzzle game that treats the player intelligently while forcing them to learn new problem-solving skills. The Witness is the latest puzzle game from game designer Jonathan Read more...
Chicken Adobo
Posted 1:36pm Sunday 8th May 2016 by Kirsten Garcia
My whole family is actually visiting our homeland Philippines as this issue is being printed. They’re going to island resorts where they’ll be swimming in the reefs and I couldn’t go because of uni (sobs). So when Critic emailed saying they were doing a travel issue, I thought Read more...
Light Switch and Conduit: The Jim Barr & Mary Barr Collection
Posted 1:32pm Sunday 8th May 2016 by Monique Hodgkinson
Some art exhibitions simply make sense. The flow from one artwork to another is smooth, logical, creating a gradual sense of understanding and enlightenment in the viewer. They make you go “Oh cool, yeah, nice, wow, I get that.” Light Switch and Conduit is not one of those Read more...
Going on tour
Posted 1:25pm Sunday 8th May 2016 by Millicent Lovelock
I had never felt so tired, so totally physically and emotionally spent, and yet I know that I will do it over and over again When I was thirteen and watching the My Chemical Romance documentary for the sixtieth time I thought that touring with your band looked like the nicest possible time. What Read more...
Chess
Posted 1:22pm Sunday 8th May 2016 by Campbell Calverley
Rating: F War is hell. This is a truism that has rung throughout the ages, with generation upon generation learning nothing from their predecessors. It is a morally and pragmatically complex business, with endless arguments about the necessity of some wars versus the abhorrence of others. Even in Read more...
Civil War
Posted 1:17pm Sunday 8th May 2016 by Anonymous Bird
There are hundreds, if not thousands of vigilantes, superheroes, and supervillains in the Marvel universe. They battle regularly. Cities burn, buildings fall, and there are always going to be human, civilian casualties. This is what Mark Millar’s Civil War is focused on. This Marvel event Read more...
Why Do We Need...Mars One
Posted 1:15pm Sunday 8th May 2016 by Anthony Marris
Mars One is a not-for-profit venture led by Bas Lansdorp, with the goal of sending people on a one way mission to Mars to establish a human colony by 2024…or 2027ish. The final dates are yet to be determined. A competition held in 2013 asked for volunteers to go on the one way Read more...
Noma
Posted 1:09pm Sunday 8th May 2016 by Lisa Blakie
Rating: B Noma: My Perfect Storm follows the rise, fall, and rise again of world class restaurant in Denmark, named Noma. Rene Redzepi, the founder and I guess we can say protagonist of the documentary, is a passionate, driven, creative, innovative, ingenious, charismatic chef who is driven by Read more...
Phoenix
Posted 1:07pm Sunday 8th May 2016 by Shaun Swain
Rating: A Dark, mysterious, and artistically crafted are some of the many ways one could describe Writer-Director Christian Petzold’s intriguing new mystery-historical film. A refreshing and intelligent sense of insight flows from each frame of Phoenix, a story that, in more ways than one, Read more...


