Archive
10 cloverfield lane
Posted 1:44pm Sunday 3rd April 2016 by Jessica Thompson
Rating: A- In the film world, 10 Cloverfield Lane is essentially ‘The House at the End of the Street meets War of the Worlds’. And really, you know a film is doing its job when you forget to eat your Kit-Kat... or alternatively feel too sick to eat your Kit-Kat. Directed Read more...
Herb Nerd
Posted 1:30pm Sunday 3rd April 2016 by Kirsten Garcia
Welcome to Herbs101, I thought it might be helpful for those new to cooking or just not familiar with this uplifting ingredient to have a basic guide for what to do with them. Here are a few of my faves. Basil This is the herb that sparked my curiosity for all herbs, the little leaves that Read more...
Remuera Exhibit –White Night
Posted 1:24pm Sunday 3rd April 2016 by Susan Nunn
Three recent graduates from the Dunedin School of Art were invited to exhibit at the Auckland Art Festival as part of the White Night Remuera Exhibit, on Saturday 12th March 2016. Daniel Bloxham’s Commodity, Slaughter, Keystone, Extinction, Decimation (2015) is a large scale series of Read more...
Superhot
Posted 1:18pm Sunday 3rd April 2016 by Campbell Calverley
Rating: B Superhot has got style. If you were to take the minimalistic washed-out aesthetic of Mirror’s Edge, turn all of the enemies into red glass, and add a pinch of the time manipulation from Braid, then you would get something resembling Superhot. It is less than three hours long, but Read more...
Why Do We Need...drones?
Posted 1:15pm Sunday 3rd April 2016 by Anthony Marris
Circling 30,000 feet above a desolate village in Afghanistan (or Yemen, Somalia or Pakistan) is the latest chariot of fire, harbinger of death and destruction ready to launch Hellfire upon the plain. With politically disarming names like Shadow, Global Hawk and Rainbow, they can lurk for at least 30 Read more...
All The Light We Cannot See
Posted 1:11pm Sunday 3rd April 2016 by Hayleigh Clarkson
Rating: A+ Anthony Doerr’s All The Light We Cannot See is the most stunning novel I have ever read. It is a beautiful tale of Marie-Laure, a young blind girl living in Paris, and Werner, a young orphan boy living in Germany on the cusp of the Second World War. Doerr intricately weaves the Read more...
Made in the A.M. – One Direction
Posted 1:06pm Sunday 3rd April 2016 by Millicent Lovelock
In 2015, in the aftermath of loss, scandal and uncertainty, British boybanders One Direction came out with their fifth studio album, Made in the A.M. The start of 2015 saw Zayn Malik leave the group, claiming creative differences, and the announcement of an indefinite hiatus for the remaining four Read more...
New Track: “Your Best American Girl” - Mitski
Posted 2:23pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Millicent Lovelock
I’ve come to know Mitski as the princess of propulsive sadness, and her new track, “Your Best American Girl” doesn’t disappoint. Like most of her songs, it’s a slow burn running into a scorching, explosive chorus. Mitski slips us into the body of the song with a soft, Read more...
A Sit Down with Raiza Biza
Posted 2:20pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Sam Fraser-Baxter
The illustrious Raiza Biza is a rapper spearheading a promising renaissance of hip hop music in our country. Following a prolific string of releases since 2012 and the success of his last album ‘The Imperfectionist’, Raiza has slowly risen from the underground and become a Read more...
Charlotte Parallel - Ecologies Of Transduction
Posted 2:16pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Ted Whitaker
A low rumble of a freight train or the colliding of steel on a container ship occurs in a layered reality at The Anteroom, an artist-run space in Port Chalmers. Three recent works by Charlotte Parallel make up Ecologies of Transduction that aptly culminate a careful trajectory of geo-specific sound Read more...
What to do with beetroot and rainbow chard
Posted 2:08pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Kirsten Garcia
Welcome to autumn everyone! In honour of this cold and colourful time of the year let’s make something warm and vibrant with some veggies from our local farmer’s market. I confess I haven’t really cooked with either of these ingredients fresh before. I think of rainbow chard as Read more...
Firewatch
Posted 1:55pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by James Tregonning
Here’s a quick history of popular video games. It starts with the arcade, with players putting quarters into machines over and over, beating high scores and paying for the privilege. These arcade games developed out into what is now arguably the largest entertainment industry in the world. For Read more...
Why do we need..MOOC?
Posted 1:52pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Anthony Marris
Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are free online university based courses that allow anybody with a decent internet connection and an interest in knowledge to learn about something new. The courses are structured and typically range from 4 weeks to 3 months, some with fixed start dates and others Read more...
Hail Caesar
Posted 1:47pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Nita Sullivan
Rating: A- The latest goofy flick by the Coen Brothers provides multitudes of spazzy plotlines, weird humour and wtf moments. Following a day in the life of ‘Hollywood fixer’ Eddie Mannix (played superbly by Josh Brolin), Hail Caesar’s ramshackle plot serves up random portions Read more...
Mahana
Posted 1:45pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Lisa Blakie
Rating: C+ Mahana is the New Zealand film adapted from Witi Ihimaera’s novel Bulibasha: King of the Gypsies. Successful New Zealand actor Temuera Morrison plays Tamihana aka. the World’s Grumpiest Grandpa, who is the patriarch controlling literally every aspect of the Mahana Read more...
Peggy Guggenheim: Art Addict
Posted 1:43pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Andrew Kwiatkowski
Rating: A I’ll be up front - I loathed the character that is the subject of this documentary. However, it must be said that the film itself is very, very well made. If, like me you had never heard of Peggy Guggenheim, the short version is that she was the real-deal rock’n’roll Read more...
The Lady In The Van
Posted 1:39pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Lucy Hunter
Rating: A When Lady in the Van opened with Maggie Smith driving a van in the ‘70s in England, I was clawing at my seat with the claggy white smugness of it. It seems like every year Maggie Smith does a twee, baby-boomer-bait comedy piece to drag a group of people to the cinema who will only Read more...
The Chimes
Posted 1:34pm Sunday 20th March 2016 by Hayleigh Clarkson
I had high hopes for this novel. Anna Smaill’s The Chimes was long listed for the Man Booker Prize in 2015 and the New Zealand media went crazy for it, touting Anna as the next Eleanor Catton. Despite everyone else loving this novel, I found it to be dull and tedious with a shallow Read more...
Eggplant Pizza
Posted 3:28pm Sunday 13th March 2016 by Kirsten Garcia
Tis the season for all of my favourite veggies - I was thoroughly impressed by the size of the eggplants I got for this recipe I got two for $6 and I remember in winter last year that one small eggplant would cost the same price. Get in on this, guys. I’m sure we can all agree that Read more...
Why Do We Need...tinder?
Posted 3:23pm Sunday 13th March 2016 by Anthony Marris
Tinder is a matching (dating) service which utilises geolocating software and your Facebook profile to help make lasting connections. And by lasting connections, I mean as long as they “last”. Public opinion on Tinder is varied. A straw poll I conducted had mixed results. Some Read more...

