
Review: Yurlu | Country: Healing “Poison Country”
Ask anyone about Chernobyl and most identify it as one of the world’s most disastrous nuclear sites. Ask someone about Wittenoom and you’ll most likely

Ask anyone about Chernobyl and most identify it as one of the world’s most disastrous nuclear sites. Ask someone about Wittenoom and you’ll most likely

Grief becomes a horrifying entity in this adaptation of Max Porter’s prize-winning 2015 novella, “Grief is The Thing with Feathers”. Based on Emily Dickinson’s poem

I Swear, based on the life of Tourette Syndrome activist John Davidson, is not a “woe is me” drama. Instead of wallowing in self-pity, the

Whenever one thinks of cognitive decline in the elderly, it is usually the extreme changes that come to mind. The lack of lucidity, the bad

When I first told my husband we were going to watch Lizzy Hoo, his first remark was – oh the Australian Ali Wong? It’s easy

The Sidesplitter Comedy Festival is in full swing, and I caught John Safran’s Squatting at Kanye’s and Other Adventures, based on his latest book Squat

If you are a novice to the opera and are thinking of dipping your toes in, Giuseppe Verdi’s Il Trovatore makes for a pretty good

Without giving too much away, Twinless is a dark comedy that will leave you gasping, both for air from laughing too hard, and from the

As the credits rolled on Journey Home, David Gulpilil, I felt a deep sense of gratitude. I am grateful that even in death, David Gulpilil

Sovereign, directed by Christian Swegal, is an unsettling yet thought-provoking film that is extremely relevant in today’s political climate. Jerry Kane (Nick Offerman) is a

Deeper isn’t just a documentary about cave diving, it’s an intense and intimate exploration of mateship, courage, and the human drive to push beyond fear.

Paolo Genovese’s Somebody To Love (Follemente) was the perfect movie to open the ST. ALi Italian Film Festival 2025. This irreverent rom-com grabs the viewer from the