SWEET DREAMS FOR QUEEN BEES
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KIDS
Posted 31st Jul 2008 by Luka Du Chateau



I was positive that I’d seen this film but when i watched it, I realised that I hadn’t.
I like Larry Clark, and Harmony Korrine is a straight up funny weirdo but this film was pretty gnarly...“Telly” is such a Dirtbag that it makes me cringe.
Y so redundant?
Posted 24th Jul 2008 by Camilla
Unless you've been living under a rock, you're aware that the Dark Knight hit cinemas last week. You can't escape Batman mania, and now that evil joker grins is everywhere! Seriously, it's all over the internet! To mark the release of the movie, bloggers everywhere have been defacing their avatars with evil joker grins. Warner Bros. has even created an application which lets the owners of iPhones or the iPod touch put a sinister smile on their face. Here's just a few I found.



If you've managed to get your paws on an iPhone or already own an iPod touch, you can download the Warner Bros. application through iTunes. The rest of us can make do with this application on Facebook.
If you want to sing out, sing out
Posted 22nd Jul 2008 by Katie May Ruscoe

Tonight, Sydneysiders, grab a blanket and head to Darlinghurst from 7.30 because the Darlo bar is playing Harold & Maude...for free!!! A most amazing, quirky film, Harold and Maude is a cult classic that plays with slapstick, black comedy, existentialism and beautiful whimsical imagery. The soundtrack was also composed and performed by Cat Stevens. Darlo Bar is at 306 Liverpool street, sydney. Get in early!
Gettin' high
Posted 17th Jul 2008 by Katie May Ruscoe

One day back in 1974 thousands of New Yorkers stared up at the Twin Towers in shock and horror. No, I'm not confused, I'm just referring to the day that Phillip Petit attempted a high-wire walk between the top floors Trade Center towers. "Man on Wire" is a documentary chronicling Petit and the various tight-ropes walked and laws broken during his career (including one involving the Sydney Harbour Bridge). Directed by film maker James Marsh, the hair-raising documentary debuted earlier this year at Sundance - where it one the Grand Jury prize.  "Man on wire" is due in Australian cinemas later this year.
Disney a lot deeper than you thought...
Posted 10th Jul 2008 by Kirsten Drysdale

If you're an 80s baby like me, odds are you also grew up singing "Under The Sea" along with Sebastian the lobster and longing for a mane of ranga-red hair.

Well, the things you learn on Wikipedia...

"Seachange
or sea change is a poetical or informal term meaning a profound transformation; big significant change. The expression is Shakespeare's, taken from the song in The Tempest, when Ariel sings,

'Full fathom five thy father lies,
Of his bones are corals made,
Those are pearls that were his eyes, Nothing of him that doth fade,
But doth suffer a sea change,
into something rich and strange,
Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell, Ding-dong.
Hark! now I hear them, ding-dong, bell.'..."

"Ariel". What a perfectly ironic moniker for the singing mermaid who longs for life on the land!
See you at the Darlo, dahliink
Posted 8th Jul 2008 by Katie May Ruscoe


In my humble opinion the Darlo Bar is up there as one of the coolest pubs in Sydney. A big call I know (especially as Sydney is so well known for it's bars aye) but consider these reasons:
a) It's located conveniently around the corner from my house, which makes it "a local" and therefore necessitates my endorsement
b) It has a sweet courtyard with white wrought iron furniture, Astroturf, comfy couches and glamour shots of kittens
c) Each Tuesday it puts that courtyard to fine use by holding a free movie screening.
Yes my friends, settle in with a glass of red, free popcorn and an expertly chosen classic flick. Previous movies have included Rosemary's Baby; the amazingly excellent Withnail & I and Manhattan. Tonight, Tuesday July 8 sees Monty Python's the Meaning of Life as your entertainment. Seating is first in, best view so to be sure to get to the corner of Liverpool and Darlinghurst Rd by 7.30pm.
"If it can be written, or thought, it can be filmed”
Posted 1st Jul 2008 by Katie May Ruscoe


Do you know who once uttered the title of this post? If so then maybe you should consider entering a film in this years DigiSPAA competition. Although it sounds like a new model of swimming pool, DigiSPAA is in fact the leading showcase for low-budget filmmaking in Australia and New Zealand. Recognising that big ideas don't necessarily need to be backed up by big budgets, DigiSPAA encourages young people to experiment with more accessible and cheaper forms of filmmaking technology. Entries for this year's competition close on Friday September 19, with the finalist films being screened at the SPAA Fringe Conference at Sydney's Chauvel Cinema on October 24 and 25. Oh and did I mention prizes? How about $15,000 cash, $20,000 worth of postproduction and a return trip to the prestigious Rotterdam Cinemart International Feature Film Market? Phew! If this sounds like something you could have a crack at then head here for details.
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