Interview – The Co-Op Coffee Shop
We interview the Co-Op Coffee Shop: for lovers of coffee, food and fair wage distribution.
We interview the Co-Op Coffee Shop: for lovers of coffee, food and fair wage distribution.
Sidestepping blasphemy, The Book of Everything is a playful dig in Lord Jesus’ ribs.
Some of their silliness is funny because the sketch concept itself is just a little bit brilliant, but mostly the hilarity comes from their absolute commitment to any idea that pops in their head.
Joseph (Brad Williams) and Karl (Matt Crook) are two lost souls at the edge of existence, scratching out a living in a dystopian wasteland and collecting weapons against the prisoner that they guard...
Catching Fire, the long-awaited sequel to Hunger Games, is a startling film to come out of Hollywood. It is both spectacular and exhilarating… but it is also just so relentlessly fucking bleak.
At its best, Ender’s Game has some gorgeous visuals that are well integrated into the story… outside of that, though, there’s not a lot to recommend this film as a cinematic experience.
This film unfolds like a literary procedural, and here I mean literary as opposed to being cinematic.
The format is simple: six solid comedians doing longer, stronger sets, a cheap schnitty, home and tucked in by ten-thirty.
The Adelaide Fringe Festival … is for the punter that celebrates the misfit, likes a bit of grit in their culture, and is eager to engage with their art… This poster fails to capture what the fringe is all about: a festival for the different, marvellous, unconventional acts that don’t really belong anywhere else in the arts scene.
The name started out as a joke. Co-West founder Rob de Kok was doing video editing on a project, many years ago, when his colleague suggested to him that they retire for a desperately-needed...
The belle of the ball was visiting Melbourne comic Asher Treleaven: those who’ve seen him before know to expect something special, and he didn’t disappoint.
If this is what is coming through in the emerging designer space then there are exciting times ahead.
It is hard not to walk away from this film in awe of… home-grown SA talent in the field.
Steve Coogan brings his much loved character Alan Partridge to the big screen in an over-the-top and downright bizarre comedy that flirts brilliantly and hilariously with bad taste.
Boy meets girl. Girl and boy fall in love. Bad thing happens. Love is tested. Audience rapidly loses interest in film.
What the masses said