TV Recap: Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries, 2×12
byIt’s the second last episode of Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries! When I say second last what I really mean is last. Don’t freak out there’s a Christmas Special on its way!
It’s the second last episode of Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries! When I say second last what I really mean is last. Don’t freak out there’s a Christmas Special on its way!
Also released as Something In The Air, but coming to Australia with the translation of its original French title Aprés Mai, After May is the semi-autobiographical new film from Olivier Assayas, one of the most celebrated film makers currently working in his native France.
Darlene Love. Lisa Fischer. Merry Clayton. Even if you these names mean absolutely nothing to you, there’s a fair chance that you would certainly recognise their voices once you heard them sing.
Redfern Now is breathtaking and absolutely perfect. It stays with me for days after each episode. Sometimes it brings me to tears when I think about it. So heartbreaking and stories so beautifully told that I can’t find a single fault.
Despite slightly overstaying its welcome with a running length of two and a half hours, Catching Fire is rarely anything less than entertaining and engaging. As was the case with its predecessor, the film stands as one of the better efforts in terms of cinematic adaptations of popular young adult fictions series.
The beautiful singing Detective Jack (Nathan Page) and the wonderful Phryne (Essie Davis) at the piano singing ‘Let’s Misbehave’ was possibly the most awesome thing that has happened on Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries.
The potentially devastating consequences of keeping wild animals in captivity, for both the animals and their trainers, provides the heartbreaking and engaging framework for…
Originally premiering at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival as Two Mothers, before being released elsewhere under the (much better title) Adore, this Australian-set drama comes back to our shores with the new title Adoration.
Calling for a rejection of traditional values and advocating innovative experimentation were the Beat Generation, a group of writers who left their mark on the literary and cultural landscape in the 1950s.
Some characters stay with an actor throughout their careers, making it almost impossible for audiences to see them as anyone else. Tony Soprano and…