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Reviews of the films Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle; Autofocus; Confessions of a Dangerous Mind and A Mighty Wind.
What is it about some aspects of our viewing culture that gets me so pen-snappingly cross? Perhaps I should start at the beginning, with a small Spot Quiz, folks.
The mobile phone has given us, as if we weren’t bulging with them already, a new kind of cheat: the phone-weasels who infest trivia nights.
Reviews of the films Japanese Story; Gettin’ Square; 28 Days Later and Matchstick Men.
Watching Attenborough in his second series of The Life of Mammals I couldn’t help noting that tinge of sadness in him; he knows the fragility of what he shows us.
Although it feels like last Christmas was only about four months back, it also seems like a year since Reggie Bird walked out of the Big Brother house, and an absolute aeon since Kath & Kim finished.
For whatever reason, I never really got into Friends. It was the sort of thing you’d watch with the young ones, to keep up with new stuff, so that the old parent-kid relationship wasn’t so gappy.
Reviews of the films Oldboy, Bride and Prejudice, The Illustrated Family Doctor and House of Flying Daggers.
Reviews of the films Shaolin Soccer, Fahrenheit 9/11 and Connie and Carla
Mums watching Birth Rites on SBS will remember how damned irritating everyone around you can be when you are trying to get a quart out of a pint pot.
Reviews of the films Letters to Ali, Coffee and cigarettes and The Village.
Hugh Dillon unravels the challenges of justice in Guantanamo Bay.
25-36 out of 37 results.