Archive
The Croods 3D
Posted 5:13pm Sunday 21st April 2013 by Sam McChesney
I’m at least 15 years older than this movie’s target audience. That’s fine though, because as innumerable sanctimonious reviewers love to point out, a good kids’ film should also appeal to adults. Maybe it’s because kids are stupid, so their opinions don’t really signify much. Maybe it’s because a Read more...
Barbara
Posted 5:13pm Sunday 21st April 2013 by Kathleen Hanna
Pre-film trailers are typically selected to appeal to the same audience as the film itself. When I arrived at the cinema to see Barbara, knowing nothing about it, the first trailer I was shown was about an old person being chosen to cook for the President of France. The trailer was very long, and Read more...
The Knife - Shaking The Habitual
Posted 5:13pm Sunday 21st April 2013 by Basti Menkes
For the uninitiated, The Knife are a Swedish electronic duo consisting of Karin “Fever Ray” Andersson and her younger brother Olof. The siblings splice together an eclectic array of genres including synthpop, industrial, world music, and ambient to create a technicolour sound that defies mimicry or Read more...
Astro Children
Posted 5:13pm Sunday 21st April 2013 by Basti Menkes
Astro Children are a Dunedin shoeglaze/spacepop band comprised of childhood friends Millie Lovelock and Isaac Hickey. Recently they have been enjoying huge local success, with latest single “Jamie Knows” topping Radio One’s song chart for seven weeks running. Critic caught up with the duo recently Read more...
The Sun Also Rises
Posted 5:13pm Sunday 21st April 2013 by Madeline Sherwood King
Not much happens in The Sun Also Rises. It’s the 1920s. Four men and one woman visit Spain to see the bulls, and then they go home again. During their stay in Spain, it becomes apparent that all four men love the woman, but she falls in love with a guy who loves bulls. One particularly brutish man Read more...
Defiance (PC, PS3, Xbox360)
Posted 5:13pm Sunday 21st April 2013 by Baz Macdonald
Massively Multiplayer Role Playing Games (or MMORPG, games that are played entirely online with people from all over the world) are a tricky business. They require significantly more money to develop than a standard video game instalment due to the large scope of content as well as the ongoing costs Read more...
Crispy Chicken with Salty Satay and Ginger Bok Choy
Posted 5:13pm Sunday 21st April 2013 by Ines Shennan
This dish satiates the tastebuds on every level: it’s sweet, salty, and ginger-laden, with crispy chicken ready to soak up all the fun. Rice bran oil is a great choice to use for high-temperature cooking, and is also neutral in flavour, allowing your other ingredients to shine. Frying chicken over a Read more...
Filthy Fudge Brownies
Posted 5:13pm Sunday 21st April 2013 by Ines Shennan
This brownie is immoral and fiendish. Unlike the consistently firm, cake-like brownies often found sitting pretty in cafe cabinets, this is far more brutish and unforgiving. On the Chocolate Baked Goods Spectrum, it sits far closer to a decadent slice of fudge than a cake. Luckily, it has a more Read more...
Sweet, Salty, Saturday: Indulgent Food
Posted 5:13pm Sunday 21st April 2013 by Ines Shennan
This week Ines Shennan spins a few stories about her Farmers Market exploits, and delivers recipes for decadent, salty, sweet, soft, crunchy, spicy, and generally delicious mouthfuls of bliss. The kind of rich, heartwarming, beaming-smile-across-your-face kind of food that you can’t wait to share Read more...
Lego City Undercover (WiiU)
Posted 5:49pm Sunday 14th April 2013 by Baz Macdonald
The Wii U was launched a year earlier than it should have been. Nintendo denies it, but the truth is that they sold their consoles with promises of games, promises that have now been revealed as lies. When the Wii U was announced at E3 2012 it had a wide variety of launch titles, including Pikmin 3, Read more...
Mefisto by John Banville
Posted 5:49pm Sunday 14th April 2013 by Lucy Hunter
What would you sacrifice to have everything you ever wanted? What happens if you sell your soul, but there is no afterlife to suffer in? John Banville recreates Goethe’s Mephistopheles in twentieth-century Ireland, bringing the old religious parable into a modern, secular setting, where God and the Read more...
Rust and Bone
Posted 5:49pm Sunday 14th April 2013 by Sam McChesney
Ali (Matthias Schoenaerts), an unemployed man in his mid-twenties, hitches into town with his five-year-old son. He crashes at his sister’s squalid abode, and finds work as a nightclub bouncer. One night he breaks up a fight – a girl, Stéphanie (Marion Cotillard), is bleeding, so he gives her a ride Read more...
Trance
Posted 5:49pm Sunday 14th April 2013 by Lyle Skipsey
Danny Boyle’s latest movie is a mind-bender. Starring James McAvoy, Rosario Dawson, and Vincent Cassel, the movie follows an art heist gone wrong. Simon (McAvoy) is an auctioneer of fine art. He is charged with selling the rarest of paintings to the world’s wealthiest people. When an attempt Read more...
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
Posted 5:49pm Sunday 14th April 2013 by Ella Booray
Perks is a coming-of-age story with a surprising absence of acne and angst. Charlie (Logan Lerman) is a misfit lost in the labyrinth of high school. Enter Patrick (Ezra Miller) and Sam (Emma Watson), who envelop him into their warm bosom of friendship. The film follows the group as they grow up, Read more...
Justin Timberlake - The 20/20 Experience
Posted 5:49pm Sunday 14th April 2013 by Basti Menkes
Though never previously a fan of Justin Timberlake and his music, I always considered him to have a lot of potential. Admiring his vocal talent and the reverence with which he channels his influences (namely Michael Jackson and Prince), I hoped that one day the planets would align and he would come Read more...
Badd Energy - Underwater Pyramids
Posted 5:49pm Sunday 14th April 2013 by Charlotte Doyle
When writing a review, it can be extremely difficult to take an objective, non-partisan perspective and put my own personal taste to one side. Especially with the album Underwater Pyramids by Badd Energy, as it is a style of music that sits at the lower end of my music-enjoyment spectrum. Initially Read more...
Autechre - Exai
Posted 5:49pm Sunday 14th April 2013 by Basti Menkes
Anybody familiar with Mancunian duo Autechre will know they make some of the most complex, unconventional, inaccessible electronic music in the world. Their trademark sound is of stranded synth melodies, eerie digital drones, and pieces of electronic shrapnel ricocheting off one another to form Read more...
The Strokes - Comedown Machine
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Basti Menkes
At this point in their career, The Strokes really don’t have much to lose. After releasing two near-perfect, critically-acclaimed albums in quick succession, the New York quintet stumbled on their overlong third LP First Impressions Of Earth, and have since failed to reignite the music world’s faith Read more...
David Bowie - The Next Day
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Basti Menkes
Upon learning that David Bowie was to release his twenty-fourth studio album this year, my expectations weren’t altogether very high. With Bowie recently entering his sixty-sixth year on this planet, my mind instantly feared a lifeless and desperate-sounding record, the sound of an old man trying in Read more...
Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! (1965)
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Kathleen Hanna
Russ Meyer really liked boobs. His favourite Hollywood actress was Dolly Parton, he described 39DD-toting Anita Ekberg as “the most beautiful woman I ever photographed,” he had a penchant for casting women in their first trimester of pregnancy (gross), and his two favourite expressions were Read more...
The Host
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Fionnuala Bulman
Considering the Twilight saga brought over 10 hours of sparkly humans and pained expressions to our cinema screens, it’s fair to say I didn’t have huge hopes for The Host, the film adaptation of the sci-fi/romance novel written by Stephanie Meyer in 2008. It didn’t help that it was a Sunday morning, Read more...
No
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Gerard Barbalich
Those movies nominated for the illustrious Oscars are a typical bunch of tales (many think there are only seven tales) that take us on similar journeys, all similar but slightly different, and return us safely at the end. And for No, which was nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar, it Read more...
Jack the Giant Slayer
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Rosie Howells
Don’t we bloody love our expensive fairytale re-boots? Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters, Mirror Mirror, Snow White and the Huntsman – all released within 18 months. And I think it’s fair to say they’ve hardly been instant classics, despite the obnoxious lineup of stars that sign on (I would assume Read more...
Bioshock Infinite
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Baz Macdonald
I could have written this review in five words: fucking awesome, go play it! However, it’s probably my responsibility to explain what exactly about Ken Levine’s new masterpiece Bioshock Infinite elicits this response. Despite the massive steps the video game industry has taken in the past 20 Read more...
If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Thomas Thomson
“You are about to begin reading Italo Calvino’s latest novel. Relax. Concentrate … Let the world around you fade.” So begins Italo Calvino’s masterful, polyphonic novel If on a winter’s night a traveller. Published in 1979, self-referential and perfectly postmodern, this book is an examination Read more...
Cinnamon Buns
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Ines Shennan
I adapted a pizza dough recipe from blog The Londoner to create the buns. The result is a pile of fluffy, sweet cinnamon-laden goodness. Citrus peel adds welcome bitterness, but leave it out if it ain’t your thing. Throw in a handful of slivered almonds for crunch, if you wish. Most importantly, try Read more...
Pulled Pork (Round Two)
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Ines Shennan
This pulled pork with a naughty black pepper crust is so tender it should be illegal. Juniper berries, which are typically used to flavour gin, are lovingly bashed to release their fragrant pepperiness and are combined with tropical, flirty pineapple. Hours upon hours of cooking time gently allow Read more...
Leek, Chicken And Balsamic Pasta
Posted 4:40pm Sunday 7th April 2013 by Ines Shennan
Pasta is easy to prepare and always filling – cheers carbs. Chicken and leek paired together with a splash of cream makes for a comforting and indulgent meal, with balsamic vinegar offsetting the richness with a slight tang. It’s easy to adjust the quantity to feed a large group of people too, and Read more...
Six60 Interview
Posted 6:30pm Sunday 24th March 2013 by Basti Menkes
Six60 is everybody’s favourite New Zealand roots band. Born and bred right here in Dunedin, the whanau-loving, roots-remembering bunch of bros have recently been enjoying some international success, with audiences in the US and UK reportedly finding them “amazing,” “awesome,” and “incredible” Read more...
Broken City
Posted 6:30pm Sunday 24th March 2013 by Tim Lindsay
Having recently seen Russell Crowe’s sensitive side in Les Miserables, my inner Crowe-Bro yearned for the gladiatorial, UFO-spotting, phone-throwing Russell that we have all come to love over the last 10 years. Crowe teams up with Mark Wahlberg in a gritty political thriller that disappointingly Read more...
Liberal Arts
Posted 6:30pm Sunday 24th March 2013 by Jonny Mahon-Heap
Hollywood doesn’t tend to capture the “university experience” (for lack of a less cringeworthy term) with much accuracy or success. Mostly consisting of American Pie-esque comedies or 90s trash like The Skulls, the genre doesn’t quite work. Liberal Arts (the stateside term for a BA) succeeds where Read more...
Wuthering Heights
Posted 6:30pm Sunday 24th March 2013 by Ailis Oliver-Kerby
To physically represent the angst at the heart of the story, the opening of Wuthering Heights shows Heathcliff banging his head against a brick wall. This is precisely what I felt like doing for the first half of the movie. The characters are unlikable, the shaky camera technique made me nauseous, Read more...
God of War vs Gears of War
Posted 6:30pm Sunday 24th March 2013 by Baz Macdonald
Back in the days of Playstation vs. Nintendo N64, when choosing a console most people would pick the opposite console to what their friends had, so that you and your mates had access to all the games being released. Now, in the age of PS3 vs. Xbox 360, factors such as online gameplay have created a Read more...
On the Road
Posted 6:30pm Sunday 24th March 2013 by Josef Alton
In the autumn of 1957, Jack Kerouac picked up an early edition of the New York Times from an all-night newsstand in the Upper West Side, Manhattan and read Gilbert Millstein’s review of On the Road. Millstein declared the novel “the most beautifully executed, the clearest and the most important Read more...
Grilled Pepper, Squid and Sesame Salad
Posted 6:30pm Sunday 24th March 2013 by Ines Shennan
Squid is incredibly easy to incorporate into exciting dishes due to its tender texture and ability to be complemented by a range of flavours. You can pick up 500g of squid from the supermarket for $7 on special and when accompanied by the udon noodles, this meal will stretch out to feed three or Read more...
Slow and Spicy Chicken
Posted 6:30pm Sunday 24th March 2013 by Ines Shennan
A few weeks ago I bought a slow cooker and am now left wondering how I have survived four years of student life without one. The benefits are twofold. Firstly, slow cookers allow you to haphazardly throw a selection of ingredients together and leave them gently simmering for half a day or longer – Read more...
Frontier Ruckus - Eternity Dimming
Posted 5:43pm Sunday 17th March 2013 by Tom McCone
Over this now-fading summer I’ve discovered and fallen for a few bands, but the one that caught my heartstrings and plucked them the strongest was alt-folk-Americana-country-something quartet Frontier Ruckus. After listening to their 2008 effort Orion Town Songbook on repeat for days and sinking Read more...
How To Destroy Angels - Welcome Oblivion
Posted 5:43pm Sunday 17th March 2013 by Basti Menkes
For me, Trent Reznor’s music has never really surpassed guilty pleasure status. As much as I love and get a kick out of Nine Inch Nails classics like The Downward Spiral and The Fragile, the pubescent angst that permeates those records takes away from how thrilling they are musically; I always walk Read more...
Eraserhead
Posted 5:43pm Sunday 17th March 2013 by Callum Fredric
The Worst Film Ever Made I physically attacked my flatmate after he made me watch this film. Eraserhead is a cult film. But not cult in the good sense like Pulp Fiction or The Big Lebowski. Cult in the bad sense, like Destiny Church. As with Bishop Brian Tamaki, director David Lynch has Read more...
Great Expectations
Posted 5:43pm Sunday 17th March 2013 by Christine Edwards
A classic romance has graced the big screen this autumn. I would take caution when watching this film – it is sobby and may cause severe sweet tooth, but you will become emotionally invested in the character Pip. Just a heads up boys, if you take your girlfriend to this she may expect more romantic Read more...
The Master
Posted 5:43pm Sunday 17th March 2013 by Lyle Skipsey
I don’t know what possessed Joaquin Phoenix to take his weird break from acting/artistic endeavour but it’s great to have him back. His tortured performance as Freddie Quell, a sex-obsessed, alcoholic army vet returning to the real world in Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master is the best of an Read more...
Silver Linings Playbook
Posted 5:43pm Sunday 17th March 2013 by Rosie Howells
Silver Linings Playbook is a dark romantic comedy/drama that follows the blossoming relationship between two damaged individuals. Pat (Bradley Cooper) is a bipolar man recently released from a psychiatric hospital who bargains with his neighbour – the depressed and promiscuous widow Tiffany Read more...
Sim City 5 (2013)
Posted 5:43pm Sunday 17th March 2013 by Baz Macdonald
Last year publishing company Electronic Arts (EA) was named the “Worst Company in the World” by Consumer magazine. I am not a huge fan of EA, but I couldn’t help wondering how, in a collapsing global economy, with BP spilling oils into our seas, a video game publisher got voted the worst company? Read more...
Lives We Leave Behind
Posted 5:43pm Sunday 17th March 2013 by Feby Idrus
Lives We Leave Behind, the newest release from Dunedin author Maxine Alterio, begins with a quote from Catherine Black, a nurse who served during World War I. “You could not go through the things we went through,” Black writes, “see the things we saw, and remain the same. You went into it young and Read more...
Kronos Quartet (USA)
Posted 4:23pm Sunday 10th March 2013 by Basti Menkes
Legendary classical ensemble Kronos Quartet have been called many things in their lifetime – passionate, intense, experimental, exhilarating. With 40 years’ touring experience and almost as many albums under their belts, they are among the most prolific and influential classical musicians of the Read more...
Devendra Banhart - Mala
Posted 4:23pm Sunday 10th March 2013 by Basti Menkes
Devendra Banhart was at one time among the strongest, strangest voices in psychedelic folk. He was discovered around the turn of the millennium by Swans frontman and Young God Records owner Michael Gira, who took the then-homeless Banhart under his wing and released a trio of albums that are Read more...
The Guilt Trip
Posted 4:23pm Sunday 10th March 2013 by Josie Cochrane
Seth Rogen and Barbra Streisand are the producers and stars of this heart-warming, yet not-so-funny, comedy. The Guilt Trip follows a mother, Joyce (Streisand) and her son, Andy (Rogen) as they embark on a cross-country road trip, attempting to sell Andy’s cleaning product creation to major buyers. Read more...
Oz the Great and Powerful (3D)
Posted 4:23pm Sunday 10th March 2013 by Jonny Mahon-Heap
To say that the resurgence of fairytales within recent blockbusters has yielded mixed results would be an understatement. From the commercially successful but creatively bankrupt (Alice in Wonderland, Snow White and the Huntsman), to those bankrupt both commercially and creatively (Little Red Riding Read more...
I Give It A Year
Posted 4:23pm Sunday 10th March 2013 by Tim Lindsay
I Give it a Year is a pleasant deviation from your run of the mill rom-com. Dan Mazer, known for his production and writing roles in Ali G Indahouse, Borat, Brüno, and The Dictator superbly balances cringe-worthy humour with more subtle hilarity and raises serious questions about love, married life Read more...
Amour
Posted 4:23pm Sunday 10th March 2013 by Jonny Mahon-Heap
Director Michael Haneke is comfortable with depicting horror. Whether capturing a home invasion in Funny Games, or pre-World War 2 atrocities in The White Ribbon, his slowly built tension and pace creates very creepy, yet successful films – Amour won the Palme d’Or and the New York Times film of Read more...


