So it might seem possible, that as we advance in science and technology, we might be able to construct a wormhole, or warp space and time in some other way, so as to be able to travel into our past. If this were the case, it would raise a whole host of questions and problems. […]
Monthly Archives: December 2013
On/Off – Lisa Chappell and the torch(urous) masks of Cabaret. (Theatre review)
posted by lisathatcher
Sydney-siders know the Bordello Theatre wasn’t purpose-built for Lisa Chappell’s ebullient and darkly erotic comedy On/Off, but it sure feels like it was when you’re sitting there. Bordello is the kind of theatre that makes me sorry I don’t smoke anymore, with its weighty velveteen, its lavish gold brocade, its sumptuous carved wood, and it […]
Enders Game – Gavin Hood adapts and directs a film that will be defined by its sequels. (Film Review)
posted by lisathatcher
In the raging battle for the pre-teen, teen and YA market place Enders Game is the latest addition to hit the screens, but its a little tricky for Lionsgate Films to land this one safely and it will be interesting to see how Enders Game goes. The film’s story is a long way from the […]
Night Train to Lisbon – Billie August paints us a rather empty Pascal Mercier. (Film Review)
posted by lisathatcher
Raimund Gregorius (Jeremy Irons) is a Swiss professor of ancient languages who happens upon a woman on the brink of suicide as he is meandering to work one day in the rain. He cries out to stop her, and when he is successful, acts a little like the dog surprised it caught the car. Gregorius is […]
King Lear – The Independent Theatre Company and a thriving Sydney Shakespeare Festival. (Theatre Review)
posted by lisathatcher
King Lear is arguably Shakespeare’s greatest tragedy, and this is partly due to the ambiguity of its moralising, as well as its starkly contemporary themes. Who can’t relate to a tired ruling father going a little “odd” in his old age, sibling rivalry over a fortune, or acting out of ego rather than rational common […]
Something In the Air – Olivier Assayas remembers what was never grasped. (Film Review)
posted by lisathatcher
If books, film and art were not dangerous, they wouldn’t need to be burned, banned or derided, but it is possible that the destruction of powerful art isn’t as prevalent as necessary, because there is no doubt it is one of the signposts that informs our choice of reading material. In the 1933 riots in […]
Gravity – Alfonso Cuarón retells Kubric and Tarkovsky in a feminist reading. (Film Review)
posted by lisathatcher
Ryan, you’re going to have to let go. I want to hear you say you’re going to make it. At the risk of being unpopular (and who cares about being popular right?) I’m going to perform a completely feminist reading of Gravity, because it does justice to the film maker, so if the ‘F’ word […]