Review – The Dark Garden
Paul McDermott created The Dark Garden, a collection of paintings and songs, several years ago while he was grieving the death of a friend. The paintings were displayed in an exhibition for the Adelaide...
Paul McDermott created The Dark Garden, a collection of paintings and songs, several years ago while he was grieving the death of a friend. The paintings were displayed in an exhibition for the Adelaide...
The play is very light comedy peopled with very stock characters telling a very unimaginative tale. But it isn’t actually boring, somehow. The actors are very good, despite some verbal fumblings, and the vernacular dialogue is dead-on.
The screenplay, as written, is already funny, but in concert with Joss Whedon’s usual sense of humour it’s even funnier still.
Bourgeois and Maurice strike exactly the right balance between light entertainment and cultural critique.
Cassandra Wilson has won accolades from all over for her talents as a crossover artist, and no one is in any doubt of her talents as a singer and composer. But she is also a gracious host, a sublime entertainer and a wonderful guide to the worlds of jazz, blues, country, folk and pop.
Griffiths is not merely a musician capable of making a song his own, but an actor able to embody a character; a performer able possess a stage and seamlessly carry an audience back-and-forth between heartfelt and hilarious.
Clandestine Childhood offers a unique perspective on a dark period of Argentine history, but keeps a small focus to prevent those elements from overwhelming the narrative. It’s a good movie, all round, and if it hasn’t made much of a splash since its release its still well worth taking a look at.
The filmmaker achieves much with what would be a very small budget, which only limits a few scenes in their scope. The film provides a wonderful snap shot into many different parts of Columbian life, contrasting the hardships of the jungle with the various forms of city life.
In 1955, Juan Peron has been exiled to Panama. To raise the cash to get him into Spain his handler pawns Evita’s prized jewels, which Franco’s wife spots and falls in love with.
Mojo Juju is an all round class act: this is a perfect date night activity, or dress-up event.
This is art-house thriller territory, a three-act epic by the director of the somber Blue Valentine.
Celebrity Theatresports went off with a bang this season, with a colourful array of talented performers from stage and screen competing and collaborating in high paced and ridiculous improvised games.
What the masses said