Saturday, 16 February 2019

Catherine: Full Body invades your dreams on 3rd September 2019

Catherine: Full Body invades your dreams on 3rd September 2019



CATHERINE: FULL BODY INVADES YOUR DREAMS ON 
3RD SEPTEMBER 2019

Troy Baker, Laura Bailey, Michelle Ruff, and Brianna Knickerbocker lend their voices to create a full-bodied experience in this bold new instalment.
Physical ‘Heart’s Desire’ Premium Edition and Launch Edition Now Available to Pre-Order.

Sydney, Australia – 15th February 2019 – Prepare for gaming’s most twisted love triangle to become a love square when Catherine: Full Bodylaunches on PS4 in Australia on 3rd September 2019!

Get your first taste now in the new ‘Fine Wine’ Trailer here 



Catherine: Full Body features a number of brand-new cutscenes, animated cinematics, and entirely new branching story paths. ATLUS is happy to announce that the full main voice cast of the original Catherine will be making their return in this new instalment, including:
  • Troy Baker as Vincent, our tormented main character
  • Laura Bailey as Catherine, the flirtatious and bewitching girl of Vincent’s dreams
  • Michelle Ruff as Katherine, Vincent’s long-term girlfriend with plans of settling down
  • Also, introducing Brianna Knickerbocker as Catherine: Full Body’s new central character, Rin, the mysterious amnesiac who suddenly shows up in Vincent’s life one day, potentially changing his life forever
  • …and many more!

Catherine: Full Body Features:
  • A Full-Bodied Remaster: The captivating tale of 2011’s award-winning Catherine returns in Catherine: Full Body - bigger and better than before. Improved visuals and gameplay, brand-new music, enhanced multiplayer options, and much more await in this enticing new package.
  • From a Love Triangle to a Love Square: Explore brand-new branching story paths centring around the arrival of the mysterious amnesiac, Rin. Dozens of new cutscenes and animated cinematics have been added to delve even deeper into Vincent’s complicated present life, as well as his past.
  • Puzzling Puzzles – If You Desire: Looking for a challenge? ‘Arrange Mode’ adds complex linked blocks to once-familiar levels, requiring new techniques and strategies to conquer them. With the addition of this new mode, new difficulties, and a ton of new stages added to Stray Sheep’s ‘Rapunzel’ mini-game, Catherine: Full Body contains over 500 puzzles, over twice that of the original game!
  • It’s Not Cheating: Just looking to enjoy the story? ‘Safety Mode’ gives players the option to activate ‘Auto-Play’ at any point during a puzzle, letting you sit back and enjoy Vincent’s tragic tale.

Give in to temptation with the Catherine: Full Body ‘Heart's Desire Premium Edition’


In true ATLUS fashion, Catherine: Full Body will launch with a collectible ‘Heart’s Desire Premium Edition!’ Available for $129.95 RRP, and housed in a Collector’s Box reminiscent of the looming tower from Vincent’s nightmares, the Catherine: Full Body ‘Heart’s Desire Premium Edition’ includes:
  • Sheep Plush: Be a part of the herd with a fluffy Sheep Plush, complete with Vincent's pink polka dot boxers! (Approximately 5” in length)
  • Soundtrack CD: The perfect pairing for a full-bodied bottle of wine – this CD contains a compilation of musical tracks from Catherine: Full Body.
  • Hardcover Art Book: Lead Designer Shigenori Soejima’s tantalizing illustrations fill this gorgeous hardcover art book.
  • Metal Case: Protect your deepest, darkest secrets in this metal game case featuring Rin, Catherine, and Katherine.


A Launch Edition is also available at $99.95 RRP for pre-orders and first-run copies of Catherine: Full Body, and include a collectible metal case featuring Rin, Catherine, and Katherine. Both the Catherine: Full Body ‘Heart’s Desire Premium Edition’ and Launch Edition will launch in Australia on 3rd September 2019.
Physical pre-orders for the Catherine: Full Body ‘Heart’s Desire Premium Edition’ and Launch Edition will be available at selected Australian retailers.

Sid Meier's Civilization VI: Gathering Storm - Out Now

Sid Meier's Civilization VI: Gathering Storm - Out Now





Sid Meier’s Civilization® VI: Gathering Storm Now Available

Largest expansion ever for beloved strategy series includes an active world ecosystem filled with new environmental challenges, as well as the new World Congress


Sydney, Australia – February 15, 2019 – 2K and Firaxis Games have announced that Sid Meier’s Civilization® VI: Gathering Storm, the second expansion pack for the critically acclaimed and award-winning Sid Meier’s Civilization® VI, is now available for WindowsPC.

To view the trailer click the image below

Civilization VI: Gathering Storm presents players with an active planet that generates new and dynamic challenges for the Civilization series, with new features and systems including Environmental Effects, new Engineering Projects and Consumable Resources for players to experience a living world full of danger and opportunity.  The expansion, the largest ever created for the beloved strategy series, introduces the Diplomatic Victory and the World Congress – a new way to win the game in a forum where leaders vote on global policies.  Technologies and Civics now extend into the near future, opening possibilities not yet seen by the existing world.  In addition, there are eight new civilizations and nine new leaders, as well as many new units, buildings, improvements, wonders and more. 


“In Sid Meier’s Civilization VI: Gathering Storm, the world around the player is more alive than ever before,” said Ed Beach, Franchise Lead Designer at Firaxis Games.  “We’re excited to offer new ways for fans to discover fresh experiences playing Civ, and this expansion epitomizes that sense of exploration.  The choices players make will influence the world ecosystem and could impact the future of every civilization on the map.”

Key features for Sid Meier’s Civilization VI: Gathering Storm include:

·          ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS: Volcanoes, storms (blizzards, sand storms, tornadoes and hurricanes), climate change, floods, droughts and geothermal fissures bring the world to life in a brand-new way;

·          POWER AND CONSUMABLE RESOURCES: Strategic resources like coal and oil, as well as renewable energy sources like wind and geothermal energy, play an additional role and are now consumed in power plants to generate electricity for cities;

·          ENGINEERING PROJECTS: Players can now shape the worlds around their empires to overcome unfavourable land conditions by adding improvements like canals, dams, tunnels and railroads;

·          WORLD CONGRESS: For the first time in Civilization VI, players can make their voices heard among the other leaders of the world in their quests to achieve the new Diplomatic Victory;

·          21st CENTURY TECHNOLOGIES AND CIVICS: A New 9th Era is added to the Technology and Civics trees, introducing a new age of technology;

·          NEW LEADERS AND CIVS: Nine new leaders from eight new civilizations bring unique bonuses and gameplay, as well as a total of nine unique units, four unique buildings, three unique improvements, two unique districts and one unique governor;

·          NEW SCENARIOS: Two new scenarios are included in the Gathering Stormexpansion. The Black Death provides players with the challenge of leading their civs through The Great Plague that devastated Europe, while War Machine is a multiplayer experience pitting one player as Germany to execute a bold plan of invading France, while the French defender strives to repel the invasion;

·          MORE NEW CONTENT: Gathering Storm includes seven new world wonders, seven natural wonders, 15 new improvements, nine new buildings, five new districts, two new city sets, nine new techs and 10 new civics;

·          NEW UNITS: Gathering Storm introduces 18 new units, including the return of the near-unstoppable Giant Death Robot, as well as The Rock Band, a special kind of Atomic Era unit that generates huge boosts of Tourism;

·          IMPROVED GAMEPLAY SYSTEMS: The Espionage system is enhanced with new options, while the Culture and Science Victories are updated, new Historic Moments are added and additional improvements were made to other existing systems.


Developed by Firaxis Games, Sid Meier’s Civilization VI: Gathering Storm is available for Windows PC and coming shortly thereafter for Mac and Linux from Aspyr Media.  Sid Meier’s Civilization VI is rated E10+ for Everyone 10 and up by the ESRB and is available now for Windows PC and Nintendo Switch™.  Sid Meier’s Civilization VI is also available for iPhone, iPad, Mac and Linux from Aspyr Media.

New to GTA Online: The Declasse Vamos Muscle Car Plus Valentine’s Bonuses, Double Cash on Gunrunning Sell Missions & More

New to GTA Online: The Declasse Vamos Muscle Car Plus Valentine’s Bonuses, Double Cash on Gunrunning Sell Missions & More

The Declasse Vamos Muscle CarPlus Valentine’s Bonuses, Double Cash on Gunrunning Sell Missions & More
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Believe it or not, the Vamos began life in 1960 as a sensible and straight-edge compact car. But over the course of the decade, something wonderful happened. It moved out of its parents' garage and started hanging around with V8's and fastbacks. Its wheelbase lengthened, its grille expanded, and its hood got so long and flat you could spend a whole summer of love on it. These days, it's exactly the kind of bad influence you were looking for.
The Declasse Vamos is now available exclusively at Southern San Andreas Super Autos.
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You've got the basics covered this Valentine's Day - a gourmet meal at Up N' Atom and two tickets to Capolavoro at the Ten Cent Theater. But if you're really looking to impress, there's no greater bonding experience than barreling down Route 68 in an Insurgent Pickup while your better half fends off reams of Merryweather goons from a .50 cal turret. If that sounds right up your alley, then take advantage of Double GTA$ on all Gunrunning Sell Missions all the way through February 20th, or dive into the following team-based modes to reap Double GTA$ & RP:
  • Bunker - Till Death Do Us Part
  • Hardest Target
  • Trap Door
  • Siege Mentality

Show off your pride as a new Vamos owner with the Declasse Logo Tee, a free addition to your wardrobe when you play GTA Online anytime through February 20th.
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This week, grab 30% off all Be My Valentine content - including the Albany Roosevelt, Albany Valor and all Valentine's Day Clothing. You can also pick up any weapon from Ammu-Nation at a 30% discount, get up to 40% off all Bunkers, the Mobile Operations Center and much, much more:
  • All Valentine's Day Content – 30% off
  • Bunkers – 40% off
  • Mobile Operations Center – 40% off
  • Mk II Weapon Upgrades – 40% off
  • All Weapons at Ammu-Nation – 30% off
  • HVY APC – 30% off
  • Pegassi Oppressor – 30% off
  • Weaponized Declasse Tampa – 30% off
  • Anti-Aircraft Trailer – 30% off
  • Bravado Half-Track – 30% off
  • Dune FAV – 30% off
  • HVY Nightshark – 30% off
  • Ocelot Ardent – 30% off
  • Ballistic Equipment – 30% off
For more information on all the latest GTA Online bonuses, head to the Social Club Events page.

 
 

Friday, 15 February 2019

Fahrenheit 11/9: DVD Review

Fahrenheit 11/9: DVD Review


In a case of it's unclear whether the world has got so crazy that it matches Michael Moore's sense of craziness, Fahrenheit 11/9 is an odd film that is wildly missold by its poster image.
Fahrenheit 11/9: Film Review

With the figure of Donald Trump swinging on the golf course as the White House explodes in the background, you'd be pushed into thinking that the documentary is a takedown of Trump. And rightly so, as Moore's seething anger has been on show for all to see.

But what Moore does with Fahrenheit 11/9 is more to build a case for how America was leading to this already and the dire state of the US political scene, and citizens' landscape.

While drawing some lazy comparisons to Trump as Hitler, the large portion of Moore's latest is more about exposing the continuing devastation of Flint, as initially chronicled in Roger and Me. Returning to the story of how the contaminated water is killing the inhabitants there, Moore tries a stunt as well with the powers that be.

Fahrenheit 11/9: Film Review

But much like portions of this documentary, it feels wildly off base, as Moore rambles through his own past, through America's disillusionments, and his quest to push back against the current - and past - regimes; even Obama doesn't get off lightly.

If anything, Fahrenheit 11/9 is more a rallying cry for the end of democracy, with a speech at the end intoning "If this is the America we're trying to save, maybe ask yourself why. It didn't need to end up like this - and it still doesn't. Evil is a slow moving organism. We didn't need comfort, we needed action. Sometimes it takes a Donald Trump to wake up and realise."

All in all, Fahrenheit 11/9 suffers from the fact reality is too devastating for Moore's formerly incisive eyes; someone more in control of their critical abilities could have shaped this occasionally overlong piece into something more lean and more damning.

As it is, Fahrenheit 11/9 flounders a little, and merely blows hot air, when perhaps it should seethe with rage. 

Thursday, 14 February 2019

Capharnaum: Film Review

Capharnaum: Film Review


Cast: Zain Al Rafeea, Yordanos Shiferaw
Director: Nadine Labaki

Some films will inherently break you, push you to your limits and test you before delivering a reward.

Capernaum is one such film.
Capharnaum: Film Review

The story of Zain (Al Rafeea) launches in a courtroom with an inherently amusing premise - he's suing his parents for giving him life. What follows next sees Labaki track back to discover how Zain got to this stage.

A story of neglect in extremis, Capernaum dances a dangerous line between manipulation and mawkish, not always successfully. But what emerges works strongly because of Al Rafeea's innate watchability and a chance to elevate the material where it needs to be.

It's heartbreaking to see where the kids have been taken in this film, and how the material feels like it's drawn from a truth, not so much a fantasy. But while the story works like it should, it does also lend itself to sprawl, and feels at times unfocussed, despite the work of the first time actors.

There is a melodrama to proceedings in this Lebanese drama, and how you feel at the end may depend on how far you're willing to go along with events, but ultimately, Caparnaum works where it should, despite moments of misery and elements of cliche.

A Star is Born: Blu Ray Review

A Star is Born: Blu Ray Review


In truth, A Star Is Born's fourth iteration doesn't mess with the formula of those that have gone before it.
A Star Is Born: Film Review

While Bradley Cooper's directorial turn sees him framing Lady Gaga close up and letting her stripped back voice do the soaring, much of A Star Is Born makes for queasy viewing in a post MeToo world.
Cooper is Jackson Maine, a hard-drinking pill-popping long time veteran of the music scene, a MOR artist destined to fill stadiums, but whose love for the job is dwindling as his tinnitus grows ever stronger.

One night, after a concert, Maine stops off at a drag bar looking for his next booze fix, and is wowed by the on-stage performance of Ally (Gaga) who burns the stage down with her version of La Vie En Rose.

Swooping in on her, Maine nurtures an attraction, and believes he sees a kindred spirit in Ally, whose self-destruction is at the cost of belief in herself as a singer / performer. However, with a bit of coaching and some throwing under the bus, Ally begins to blossom, as Maine's career and star begins to fall.

A Star Is Born: Film Review

Billed as a romance, and try as one might, the overriding feeling of A Star Is Born leaves a queasy feeling it's more about domestic and emotional abuse than a star-crossed romance. And an icky one about male-fuelled control as well, given how Ally is moulded by both Maine, the music industry and a controlling manager.

While the concert scenes are incredible and Cooper manages to inject some spine-tingling touches into their exuberant execution, the fairytale side of A Star Is Born feels blessed with some corny dialogue that is fudged in the exposition.

Still, it's already proven that this is what audiences lap up, and while the unevenness of events hits the film's second half, Lady Gaga's Ally truly shines when the screen needs it the most.

It's clear Cooper as the director is in love with Gaga's voice and physique, framing her in close ups and excluding others in the handheld execution, touches which enhance the sheer power of her voice.

In truth she delivers a competent performance as Ally, from wide-eyed innocent to blossoming talent to troubled wife, Gaga delivers more of a gamut and arc than Cooper's Maine does.

Solid support comes from Elliott who appears in a clutch of scenes as Maine's brother, and delivers more than his keeper-of-the-demons-at-the-door role would have you invest in.

A Star Is Born: Film Review

A Star Is Born is a little too overlong and indulgent to fully succeed in the romance stakes - it does bless us with a cinematic talent that's already been nurtured in American Horror Story.

But to be honest, the over-riding uneasy feeling of control, abuse and male power, along with talk of how this will be showered with Oscars sits at odds with a world one year after MeToo was born.

It may not have been Cooper's intention and audiences may be lapping this up as a star-crossed romance for our times, but A Star Is Born is an odd experience, part concert tour footage and part blast from the past promotion of male privilege. 

Happy Death Day 2U: Film Review

Happy Death Day 2U: Film Review

Cast: Jess Rothe, Phi Vu, Rachel Matthews, Israel Broussard, Suraj Sharma, Sarah Yarkin
Director: Christopher Landon

Happy Death Day 2U: Film Review
2017's Happy Death Day was a blast; a slasher that combined Groundhog Day with some genuine scares, and a character arc for its more than charismatic lead, you'd almost be surprised it was never done before.

But unlike the first, this latest sidelines the scares for a more loopy sci-fi spin on what's happening to Tree Gelbman (Rothe, easily the star of this show), who once again finds herself caught in a murderous day time and time again.

Happy Death Day 2U deserves some commendation for trying something different, and while the beginning wrong foots you - in a clever manner - Rothe soon commands front and centre of this mesh up of Groundhog Day, Scream, Quantum Leap, The Big Bang Theory, Happy Death Day and bizarrely frat movies where kids take on the dean.

The resultant mix is less a mess, more a showcase of Rothe's range as the silliness gets ramped up, pushing the slasher edges to the back (which is a real shame). Certainly, the last third of the film veers too far into dumb comedy territory as the multiverse mentality comes to the fore, and the Frat
House shenanigans take precedence.
Happy Death Day 2U: Film Review

It's almost too slapstick to hit where it should - but Rothe holds it gamely together with a depth that helps elevate the material and the icky sentimentality. (Though a skydiving scene is brilliant in its execution.)

And yet, despite this, Happy Death Day 2U deserves some kudos for not repeating itself (ironically, given the nature of the first, and the premise of the latest).

It's inevitable there will be a third genre mesh-up (Happy D3ath Day, anyone?) and it's inherent on those behind it to maybe inject some of the scares back in - unless they completely go off book for the genres in the trilogy.
Happy Death Day 2U: Film Review

Wednesday, 13 February 2019

District 9 director Neill Blomkamp partners with Anthem

District 9 director Neill Blomkamp partners with Anthem




EA and Bioware have teamed up with acclaimed director Neill Blomkamp (District 9, Elysium, and Chappie) to create a live-action short film, based on the world of Anthem.


Today, Electronic Arts Inc. (NASDAQ: EA) and Neill Blomkamp, the Academy Award-nominated director of District 9, Elysium, and Chappie, have announced that they have collaborated on Conviction, an original live-action short-film based on BioWare’s Anthem™. In Conviction, Blomkamp brings the vast world of Anthem to life with his own story set decades before the beginning of the game. This live-action short invites viewers to experience Blomkamp’s unique style of creating photorealistic visual effects and bringing them seamlessly into the real world, this time with EA’s highly-anticipated new game. 

A teaser of Blomkamp’s Conviction is now live, with the full short going live February 14 on the Oats Studios YouTube channel. In the short, people will see the player city of Fort Tarsis in the game come to life, and the freelancers that live within it. These freelancers who use Javelin exosuits, have been re-created by Neill’s team to show them in live action as they fight off the main villain and head of the evil Dominion faction, the Monitor.
Anthem: Conviction

“I was really blown away by this incredible world BioWare created the very first time I saw Anthem,” said Neill Blomkamp. “Conviction sets the stage with a narrative that touches on Anthem’s beautiful and immersive world, which is ripe for exploration by these powerful Javelins. A world where danger is lurking on every ledge and in each valley.”

In Anthem, players can play with up to three friends to explore and battle in a dangerous, mysterious world with great characters and a unique BioWare story. As freelancers, players don Javelin exosuits, making them powerful heroes with strong weapons and incredible special abilities to help them survive in an ever-changing, unfinished world. Players will be able to customize and personalize their Javelins with unique paint jobs and gear so they’ll have the right tools to confront almost any situation and look good doing it. As players work together to find vast ruins, defeat deadly enemies and claim otherworldly artifacts, they’ll be unlocking their own individual story fighting against The Dominion, a ferocious militaristic society.

Players can unleash their power in Anthem worldwide on February 22 for Origin for PC, Xbox One and PlayStation 4.

Bohemian Rhapsody: DVD Review


Bohemian Rhapsody: DVD Review

To be honest, Bohemian Rhapsody does not, and will not, care for what critics think.
Bohemian Rhapsody: Film Review

This broad, crowd-pleasing attempt to turn Queen's life story - and ultimately, that of Freddie Mercury - into a cinematic experience, is more akin to putting an inordinate amount of money into a jukebox and blasting out Queen's Greatest Hits on repeat, with Brian May's guitar riffs ultimately numbing you into submission..

That is to say, the Antony McCarten-penned biopic is electric and offers a kind of magic only when its lead Rami Malek prances around on stage, overbite and all, effecting the mannerisms of Mercury himself and the flamboyancy of performance. It's here that Malek just about manages to transcend his "Stars In Their Eyes" moment to remind you of why these songs endure.

Unfortunately, it's all the rest of what sits in between the culmination of the Live Aid performance and Queen experimenting with their sound that feels like a bum B-side, depressingly put out solely because the label demands it.

Bohemian Rhapsody: Film Review

Racing formulaically between narrative beats, and hitting every familiar moment of a rags-to-riches story - including family tensions and subsequent resolutions, Bohemian Rhapsody suffers from plodding plotting, a defiant coyness over the star's bisexuality and rampant hedonistic lifestyle and also offers an insulting nod'n'wink at hidden gay sexuality throughout. (It's no wonder Frankie Howerd's Up Pompeii is playing on a TV early on).

In many ways, it feels like a three act West End musical in its execution (though some drone shots at the Live Aid performance at the end are thrilling, a sense of spectacle and scale evident in every swoop from the skies through the crowd and to Freddie himself on stage) and is pigheadedly determined to ensure that it provides more dancing to the crowd as it dances around its subject, and subsequently provides rarely any insight into Mercury other than what the downpat story beats demand of it.

Bohemian Rhapsody: Film Review

While Malek is transcendant at times, and occasionally sells the internal conflict of Mercury well, he's let down massively by a script that's as formulaic as it is predictable.

Ultimately, Bohemian Rhapsody is more interested in serving a crowd a slice of rock'n'roll pie than providing a full meal - heaven alone knows what Freddie would have made of it. 

Tuesday, 12 February 2019

Just Cause 4: PS4 Review

Just Cause 4: PS4 Review


Released by Square Enix
Developed by Avalanche Studios
Platform: PS4

Just Cause 3 was a blast; a game where logic defied the odds, and where physics was a concept rather than a reality.
Just Cause 4: PS4 Review

But it was also a game that took its action movie roots seriously and progressed the story of revolution via Rico Rodriguez. Above all that it was also fun.

Just Cause 4, somewhat disappointingly, is a case of more of the same. But with a few technical issues marring the actual gameplay as well as new gadgets to tweak

This time, Rodriguez is taking on the Black Hand, a group of mercenaries last seen in the previous episodes as they sweep over Solis, a fictional South American country. But factored in this time to issues within Solis, Rodriguez has to deal with weather problems as well...and a father figure hides in the background

Just Cause 4 has a kernel of a good game within, but developers have over-complicated some of the gadgets in the hope of tweaking the system and improving on what was already done. It's a tough line to negotiate, embrace and enhance the past, but also try something new - and Avalanche don't quite get there.

Rico's trusty grappling hook has the ability to be updated with the chance to launch tethers with balloons on them to hoist people up and cars as well; or thrusters to do much the same. They're nice additions to have but difficult to execute in combat in reality. There's little time to quickly equip them and fire them off unless you plan ahead.
Just Cause 4: PS4 Review

The reality is that Just Cause 4 feels like a progression of the third instalment; the flight abilities with wingsuits and parachutes still work incredibly well, shifting you around the world with speed and panache.

And the open world has potential but the place feels a little empty in places, with large swathes of fields having nothing but combatants within. Bolstering the army of rebels is one of the sole causes of the game, causing regions to be gradually liberated, and squads to push back the Black Hand factions.

It takes a little time to master the map skills, and the upgrade system as well; it's not intuitive and does feel a little over-complicated in parts. Extreme weather is nicely executed, but it's seldom the game-changer you'd be expecting, given the fanfare that comes with it.

Once Just Cause 4 has some of your time, you begin to realise the game's core mechanics are the same they have ever been - destruction is the name of the game still, and Just Cause 4's commitment to OTT set explosive pieces brings the fun that you'd expect.

There's a lot of repetition in the side missions and the main story as well, so you'd be forgiven for simply tooling up Rico and heading out into the world to see what happens - it's never as exciting as you'd expect and the feeling of deja vu is disappointing in some ways.

Ultimately Just Cause 4 does what it says on the tin - nothing more, nothing less.

Monday, 11 February 2019

Border: Film Review

Border: Film Review

Riffing on the actual borders of a country and also the borders of what lengths humanity will go to, Swedish drama Border is a curio of a film, anchored by a tenacious lead.

Based on a short story by Let The Right One In's John Ajvide Lindqvist, it's the story of Tina, a misfit integrated into society, who literally has a nose for trouble, but who sits on the fringes of the outside world.
Border: NZIFF Review

Working as a border agent, and with an ability to sniff out guilt on people, Tina's a loner, separated by her looks from others, and with a father whose spiralling illness and dementia is further heightening her feeling of separation.

However, one day when Tina sniffs out another like her at the border, she finds her world changed.

Border is an intriguing mix of supernatural edges and drama as well as an interesting look at identity.
Eva Melander imbues Tina and her overbite neanderthal look with a great deal of heart and hesitancy.

Sniffing the air, second guessing herself and also using a sixth sense to connect to animals around her, Tina is a character out of place, but Melander's portrayal of her is never anything less than a lost soul trapped in a world she appears at odds with.

Themes of identity and embracing your own imperfections sit alongside Border's darker grittier edges (the likes of which are sadly spoilers to discuss) but director Ali Abbasi keeps the mystery rattling along - but never at the cost of the "human" element.

While the back third of the film suffers a little from some of its reveals, the tenacious performance of Melander helps overcome some of the narrative foibles, added in by a series of writers (including Holiday's director Isabella Eklof) and expanding from the original story.

At its heart, Border is about the borders between light and dark; but equally, it's actually more about the borders of the self and identity.

It's one of the more genre audacious films in the festival and proffers an intriguing insight into another world - and our own humanity. 

Sunday, 10 February 2019

Alita: Battle Angel: Film Review

Alita: Battle Angel: Film Review

Cast: Rosa Salazar, Christoph Waltz, Jennifer Connelly, Ed Skrein, Mahersha Ali
Director: Robert Rodriguez

Little more than the sum of its hollow parts, Alita: Battle Angel is a spectacle bar none.
Alita: Battle Angel: Film Review

Sat with James Cameron for the best part of two decades, the CGI movie, which meshes cyberpunk with Young Adult sensibilities (not always successfully, one may add) is an interesting start to the beginning of a hopeful franchise.

Taken from the Manga source material Battle Angel Alita, Waltz is Dr Dyson Ido, a cyber-surgeon in a city several centuries in the future. Finding a cyborg with a functioning heart in the scrapyard, Ido rebuilds her in the hope that she will live again.

But when Alita (Salazar, recently seen in Bird Box) comes around, she has no memory of who or what she is. Hunted for what she represents, Alita finds her world turned upside down as she regains flashes of who she is.
Alita: Battle Angel: Film Review

It's fair to say that Alita: Battle Angel looks incredible.

The mix of the CGI realisation and the integration of technology with human edges is nothing short of flawless, and Salazar brings life to the CGI character lead, lending a heart that's needed.

Alita's wide eyes may suggest innocence and be in keeping with anime's trademarks, but it also helps the character stand out from the crowd, as she's forced to deliver some truly groan-worthy dialogue, ripped from the pages of a pulpy Young Adult novel, via some Nicholas Sparks style imagery.

Waltz adds humanity to his doctor, ensuring that the paternal relationship hits the right notes, even if it follows down the well-worn paths of any father-daughter movie.

It's Alita's mix of familiar that stops the film from feeling truly original; from elements of Rollerball crossed with Transformers, portions of the City that Never Sleeps Spider-Man DLC, via Detroit:
Becoming Human, Ghost In the Shell elements, to a love story in among separated societies that was part of Mortal Engines, there's an incredible sense of deja vu on show here, coupled with a feeling that the story's as low stakes as it could be, with frustrating hints proffered of what could come in a future instalment.
Alita: Battle Angel: Film Review

Whether that does eventuate will be another matter entirely, and certainly in the film's back 20 minutes, the feeling of resolution is frustrated by out-of-character character behaviours that don't gel and jar the flow.

Ultimately, Alita: Battle Angel is a worthy attempt at something new and is visionary in its visual execution once again (as you'd expect from Cameron et al) - but once again, a sci-fi epic is frustratingly hamstrung by its human edges, and its lack of commitment to tone that leaves Alita floundering for a USP in an ever-crowded pantheon of franchise wannabes.

Saturday, 9 February 2019

This Week in GTA Online: The Schyster Deviant Muscle Car, Schyster T-Shirt Unlock, Double GTA$ & RP Opportunities, Weekend Bonuses and More

This Week in GTA Online: The Schyster Deviant Muscle Car, Schyster T-Shirt Unlock, Double GTA$ & RP Opportunities, Weekend Bonuses and More


Southern San Andreas’ roads get a little beefier with the arrival of the Schyster Deviant muscle car, now available at Legendary Motorsport. Players can also log in anytime this week to receive a free Schyster T-shirt, along with opportunities to receive GTA$50,000 and rare vehicle manufacturer and DJ T-Shirts for each delivered Business Battle Crate.

Double GTA$ & RP opportunities abound this week in the new RC Bandito Races and likewise for those looking to settle scores in Trading Places (Remix). Nightclub owners will also receive a 2X Boost on Nightclub Popularity from Nightclub Management missions during the same period, along with a doubling of Nightclub Income.

Players can continue earning a GTA$250K reward for logging in each weekend this February, with the possibility of being awarded up to GTA$1M in total.

Please see below for further details, including discounts on select Properties and Vehicles and more.


Once upon a time the Deviant was considered an underdog in the muscle car field. But in the land of opportunity, an underdog is only a genetically-engineered monstrosity in waiting, and that’s something Team Schyster know all too well. Revamped, remodeled, re-engineered and released on the unsuspecting streets of Los Santos, the Schyster Deviant is back with a point to prove - available now at Legendary Motorsport. 
Challenge miniscule racers at major stakes with Double GTA$ & RP on the recently released RC Bandito Races all week long, then settle the age-old conflict between Beast and Juggernaut to earn double rewards on Trading Places (Remix) for the same period.
Pack the house at twice the speed this week with a 2X Boost on Nightclub Popularity gained from Nightclub Management missions. You'll also rake in Nightclub Income at twice the usual rate - just be sure to empty your safe when it reaches capacity.
To celebrate the release of the Deviant, Team Schyster is awarding all players who log in this week with a freeSchyster T-shirt
And for a limited time, successfully delivered Business Battle Crates have a chance of awarding a cool GTA$50,000, along with a hand-picked mix of rare T-Shirts from your favorite vehicle manufacturers and After Hours DJs.
Play GTA Online any weekend this February to earn a GTA$250K reward the following week, up to GTA$1M for the month. So if you played at any point between February 1st and 3rd, be sure to jump in this weekend to claim your first GTA$250K cash drop.
Make the most of this week's Nightclub bonuses with a suite of After Hours discounts to get you up and running: 
  • Nightclubs & Renovations – 30% off
  • Nightclub Garages – 30% off
  • Nightclub Warehouses – 30% off
  • Nightclub DJs – 30% off
  • Maibatsu Mule Custom – 30% off
  • MTL Pounder Custom – 30% off
And save big on a host of bleeding-edge machinery through February 13th - stage your hacking operations from the safety of the Benefactor Terrorbyte or reign supreme in the Arena with the MTL Cerberus:
  • Pegassi Oppressor Mk II – 25% off
  • Benefactor Terrorbyte – 35% off
  • Benefactor Terrorbyte Add-Ons & Renovations – 30% off
  • Annis ZR380 – 25% off
  • MTL Cerberus – 25% off
  • HVY Menacer – 35% off
  • B-11 Strikeforce – 35% off
For more information on all the latest GTA Online bonuses and coming events, head to the Social Club Events page.

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