Archive
Gilead
Posted 1:30pm Sunday 23rd July 2017 by Jessica Thompson
It took longer than I’d expected for me to get into this book. Marilynne Robinson has proven herself a talented, tender and transportive writer in her other novels, and over the years she has received a veritable feast of awards. Published in 2004, Gilead was the winner of the 2005 Read more...
Finger Paintings
Posted 1:27pm Sunday 23rd July 2017 by Waveney Russ
Envision cruising in through the Octagon and walking straight up to ‘La Débâcle’ by Claude Monet (if you know where to find it that is, thanks Dunedin Public Art Gallery), then shoving your hands onto the oil painting’s exterior; your Fatty-Lane-grease-infused digits Read more...
As Good as Real Coconut Yoghurt, But Made a la StudyLink
Posted 1:22pm Sunday 23rd July 2017 by Liani Baylis
The ‘health’ industry appears to be a rich kids’ game. Forgive me that StudyLink is all a girl’s got going right now – amirite? I’m determined to eat well (booze aside), but every time I step into the supermarket I reconsider the nutritional value of the dust Read more...
Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017)
Posted 1:16pm Sunday 23rd July 2017 by Todd Johnstone
Rating: 3/5 We witnessed Peter Parker’s long-awaited entrance into the Marvel Cinematic Universe in last year’s Captain America: Civil War. Homecoming sees Tom Holland return as the third leading man to don the Spidey-suit, and lead what is essentially a teen high-school movie set Read more...
My Cousin Rachel (2017)
Posted 1:14pm Sunday 23rd July 2017 by Rossana Boni
Rating: 2/5 Channelling (poorly) his inner Guillermo del Toro with a disproportionate amount of candles, chiaroscuro and murder-mystery piano motifs, South African Director Roger Michell (Notting Hill, The Mother) gives us a new version of Daphne du Maurier’s twisty novel. The story that Read more...
This Boring Man
Posted 1:08pm Sunday 23rd July 2017 by Grimm Selfie
Back in November 2016, Johnny Marr, guitarist and cofounder of The Smiths, released his autobiography ‘Set the Boy Free’. It’s a book that spans his entire life, but of course focuses on how he came to knock on Morrissey’s door, and together change indie Read more...
Little Nightmares: Reviewed By A Pro and a Friend of a Pro
Posted 1:04pm Sunday 23rd July 2017 by Lisa Blakie
I played this game with a group of friends and it was terrifying and fantastic fun! There was a lot of screaming and cooperation from everyone in the room, and I even needed emotional support near the end when I was too afraid to face the final spook creature (I don’t want to be too specific Read more...
Sunroom – Trudy Lane (16 June – 1 July)
Posted 2:00pm Sunday 16th July 2017 by Waveney Russ
Staring at the sun as a child seemed a formidable challenge, akin to holding your breath at the bottom of a pool, only with a greater chance of permanently damaged corneas. Enter digital artist Trudy Lane. Like switching from a BSc to a BA, Lane endeavours to transport us to that sun gazing end goal Read more...
The Panopticon
Posted 1:55pm Sunday 16th July 2017 by Jessica Thompson
I studied this book for an English paper last semester and thought it was worth a review. Set in Scotland and with Edinburgh vernacular to match, the Panopticon is a sharp novel that examines the lives of the down and outs, the uncontrollable criminal youths and the doomed-to-fail losers of the Read more...
Aquawhatta?
Posted 1:51pm Sunday 16th July 2017 by Liani Baylis
If, unlike me, you’re not up with the vegan or frugal kids, you’re in for the biggest PSA of your young life, so stay seated and prepare to be mind-blown. I kept hearing about this thing called “aquafaba” and I was like TF is that? Turns out, it’s a magical liquid Read more...
Wonder Woman (2017)
Posted 1:48pm Sunday 16th July 2017 by Maisie Thursfield
Rating: 4/5 She’s powerful, she’s intelligent, she’s strong, she’s the daughter of Zeus, she’s Wonder Woman. Most importantly, she does not disappoint. We follow Diana’s childhood on the island of the Amazon women, surrounded by her mother Queen Hippolyta, Read more...
Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction (1997-2002)
Posted 1:43pm Sunday 16th July 2017 by Alex Campbell-Hunt
Rating: 3/5 “We live in a world where the real and the unreal live side by side. Break through the web of your experience, and open your mind to things... Beyond Belief.” You may or may not remember this spooky anthology series, which ran for four seasons from 1997 to 2002. A bit Read more...
Cars 3 (2017)
Posted 1:38pm Sunday 16th July 2017 by Callum Post
Rating: 3/5 The most repeated question I’ve heard regarding Pixar’s latest work is “what’s left to tell?” However, following its largely disliked predecessor, this final chapter in the Cars series manages to tell a story I’m convinced is necessary and Read more...
Album Review: Music To Get Puppies To Sleep
Posted 1:31pm Sunday 16th July 2017 by Anonymous
My job is awful, But this album is worse. I pass him on the stairs. Gazing into the bloodshot eyes of a man whose bowel has erupted in brown rage not once but three times in one day. He doesn’t know that I know. It was like picking up mud in the pouring rain. My job is awful, But Read more...
Highlights from E3 2017
Posted 1:22pm Sunday 16th July 2017 by Lisa Blakie
E3 is a giant nerd festival where all the big name game companies like Sony, Ubisoft and Microsoft come together to hang out and try to be all serious and have a competition to see whose press conference will be the best (which doesn’t really even matter because Nintendo always wins). Most of Read more...
Jack and Jill (2011)
Posted 1:35pm Sunday 9th July 2017 by Jack Schitt
Rating: 5 out 5 Al Pacinos What an honour it is to review Jack and Jill, the film that defined 2011 as one of the greatest years of cinema on record. This film defied expectations and revolutionised Adam Sandler’s career, finally showing him as the comic genius we all knew he could Read more...
The Godfather (1972)
Posted 1:32pm Sunday 9th July 2017 by Jac Aske
Rating: 1/5 Al Pacinos I thought people said this was a good film? Clearly people are liars with bad taste because this soggy pile of crap completely ruined my day. First off, I had no idea who anyone was because they cast a bunch of white men with the same haircut and then decided to confuse me Read more...
The Essex Serpent – Sarah Perry
Posted 1:23pm Sunday 9th July 2017 by James Bell
Sarah Perry’s second novel, The Essex Serpent, is an enticing Victorian gothic thriller. It was the winner of the British Book Awards Book of the Year, Waterstones Book of the Year and was shortlisted for the 2016 Costa Novel Award. Perry has created an extraordinarily wide-reaching and Read more...
Call Sick
Posted 1:19pm Sunday 9th July 2017 by Grace Ryder
Showing 17 June – 1 Oct at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery, FREE Campbell Patterson is really good at climbing out of windows, particularly for someone wearing bizarre and little garb. There are few slips and falls, mostly carefully managed limbs making their way out of windows, Read more...
Big-Ass Pies
Posted 1:12pm Sunday 9th July 2017 by Liani Baylis
Kia ora, kids. I’ve been busy over the break encasing anything and everything in pastry; proof that the fresher five is not exclusive to those in first year. I don’t know about yours, but my break consisted of nothing more than Netflix documentaries. Now I’ve sworn off meat Read more...

