Archive
The Choir
Posted 3:56pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by Sarah Baillie
Directed Michael Davie (5/5) Filmed at one of South Africa’s most dangerous prisons, The Choir is a documentary that gives incredible insight into the lives of prisoners. The main subject of the film is 19-year-old Jabulani, who has been sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment Read more...
Up in the Air.
Posted 3:47pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by Sue Hui Ong
Author: Walter Kirn Publisher: John Murray Rating: 3/5 Up in the Air. Now a major motion picture. What a great way to get someone to read your book. From the trailers, I envisaged the book would be about some hot-shot sweet talker whose entire job consisted of travelling the vastness of Read more...
The Wives of Henry Oades.
Posted 3:46pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by Sue Hui Ong
Author: Johanna Moran Publisher: Harper Press (5/5) The Wives of Henry Oades is Johanna Moran’s debut novel, and not a bad one to kick off a writing career either. Set in the 1890s, it follows the tale of Henry Oades as he uproots his family from England to Wellington, New Read more...
King Lear.
Posted 3:45pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by Sarah Maessen
Author: Gareth Hinds Publisher: Candlewick Press (4/5) Gareth Hinds’ graphic novel adaptation of Shakespeare’s King Lear bridges the gap between prose and performance with seductive, original artwork. The famous tragedy follows King Lear’s descent into madness after his Read more...
Dead White Men & Other Important People: Sociology’s Big Ideas.
Posted 3:45pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by Jonathan Jong
uthors: Ralph Fevre and Angus Bancroft Publisher: Palgrave (3.5/5) Dead White Men is sociology’s answer to Jostein Gaardner’s Sophie’s World, but it’s not quite as good. As in Sophie’s World, Fevre and Bancroft attempt to introduce the big ideas of their Read more...
Beloved: Works from the Dunedin Public Art Gallery.
Posted 3:43pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by April Dell
DPAG Until October 30 2011 So Critic finally got around to seeing Beloved at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery, a large and diverse exhibition commemorating the gallery’s 125th anniversary. The show flaunts the gallery’s permanent collection and celebrates six centuries of art from Read more...
Review: The Capping Show 2010, Alice in Cappingland.
Posted 3:29pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by Erica Newlands
Directed by: Thom Adams, Alex Wilson, and Dianne Pulham (3/5) I am always in awe of the people who commit to a performance event of this scale in conjunction with full-time study. As a ‘Capping Show’ Alice in Cappingland ticked all the right boxes; however, I personally Read more...
LTT Review: Cicadas.
Posted 3:28pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by Jen Aitken
Written by Rick Han Performed by Simon O’Connor Co-directed by Clare Adams and Hilary Halba (5/5) As a reviewer, I feel responsible to respond to this show with the same poetic quality that Theatre Studies student Rick Han presents in his script. This, however, is an unattainable Read more...
Caribou - Swim
Posted 3:11pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by Simon Wallace
Merge 2010 (4/5) Diving headfirst into a wash of haze and colour, Caribou's new album Swim envelops the listener instantly. Dan Snaith seems more focused musically than he has since his debut as Manitoba at the turn of the century, as he steers the opening track Read more...
Supermodel
Posted 3:10pm Sunday 11th July 2010 by Ellis Bell May
“I'm definitely at one with myself when I'm singing,” says Mark Hanify, the lead singer of orthodox Wellington rock band Supermodel. “I'm in the moment, it's like when you're in deep meditation; it's the same kind of feeling. You're in that higher level of awareness, and because I'm Read more...


