Based on the Barry Crump novel Wild Pork and Watercress, New Zealand film Hunt for the Wilderpeople introduces us to […]
Review
We had a brilliant week in the Holden Trax Turbo SUV!
The Art, and Crystal Cities new singles reviewed.
As a whole the nine song album, Burying The Masters, is very much a tribute to the 80s pioneers of thrash.
It was clear the performers were all totally immersed in the pleasure of Flamenco, and the audience were equally entranced.
Each singer had a genuine presence and by the end of the production, had found a way to make the audience completely warm to them.
Saving the world takes a little Hart and a big Johnson.
The narrative links between, and at times during, the songs were never indulgent and were interesting and insightful, placing the songs into the context of the songwriter’s life.
The film gets straight into the journey and seems to lack the magical set up of the original. The slow build and less drastic situation doesn’t match the emotional investment.
De Ness tries to be a provocative vampish femme fatale but, often, this merely comes across as contrived and unconvincing.
