Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Movie Review: The Invite

 Movie Number 27 of 2026

The Movie: The Invite

The Cinema: Hoyts Victoria Gardens

Runtime: One hour 47 minutes

Stars: 4

I will come back to this one. 

Imdb.com blurb:  Joe and Angela's marriage is on thin ice. When they invite their enigmatic upstairs neighbors for a dinner party, the night spirals into unexpected places.




Today's song



Monday, July 13, 2026

So, who's the third?

Derryn Hinch I could understand and process easily. He'd lived a good life, an interesting life, he'd had a liver transplant and had various health complaints over the last decade. So mote it be and all that. Rest well, Derryn. 

But Sam Neill?!

No. 

I'm sorry, Sam Neill is an Australasian treasure, despite the fact that he was born in Northern Ireland and emigrated to the South Island of New Zealand as a child - like all things good from New Zealand - read pavlova, Split Enz, Russell Crowe (but you can have him back, please), Sam Neill was ours. 

The news came through about his passing mid-afternoon. It's sad news. He was a legend. 

Sam Neill has been on our screens since God was a boy. I remember him as Harry in My Brilliant Career. He was the awful husband in The Piano (must watch that again). He was in the Australian classic, The Dish. He played Norman Lindsay in Sirens. I'm not counting his work in the Jurassic Park movies or his better-known television appearances. 

Most particular, I loved him as Hector in The Hunt for the Wilderpeople - one of my most favourite films. 


Sam Neill (originally named Nigel John Dermott Neill... nah, he's not a Nigel) has been around since the year dot on our screens, and he was reliably good in most things. 

Adding to this, word on the street was he was a thoroughly decent bloke. My friend Geetangeli used to run into him at the farmer's market in Christchurch. During COVID, he made videos of him roaming around his acreage with this animals. He had a dry wit and a lot of charm. He had been battling a blood cancer in recent years, but appears to have beaten it in the last year. He spoke openly and honestly about his possible demise with a huge amount of grace.  

And he will be sadly missed and remembered very fondly - and can you want much more than this. 

However, it seems the rule of threes is taking out people of New Zealand origin. I mean, Derryn Hinch - Sam Neill... if I was an octogenarian Kiwi I'd be looking over my shoulder - if I were Dame Kiri Te Kanawa I'd be a little worried. 

Regardless, Sam Neill - thank you for all the joy you've brought us over the years. May you rest in power, and may heaven be exactly how you wanted it to be. Know you are very well loved. Thoughts are stretched to your large whanau. 

Today's song

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Theatre Review: Losing Face by Marieke Hardy

The Production: Losing Face by Marieke Hardy

The Company: Melbourne Theatre Company

The Theatre: The Southbank Theatre

Runtime: One hour, 40 minutes (no interval)

Until: 25 July

Stars: 4


This was fun. Good fun. And relatable. And lovely to look at. And very funny. A little bit of light relief after the serious matter that was Retrograde and the classical drama we're seeing in a few weeks when Uncle Vanya opens. 

Losing Face is a girl's own adventure. 

According to the MTC website, "Travel writer Jo is turning 50 and has invited her two ride-or-dies along for an unforgettable celebration: an all-expenses-paid visit to flashy new wellness resort, The Royal You. Expecting a long-overdue catch-up in steam rooms and infrared saunas, they instead arrive at a high-end medispa, where supercharged cosmetic procedures are upsold to unsuspecting guests. When a medical mishap turns disastrous, the women are left with some wildly unexpected and gravity-defying side effects."

Although this bordered on pastiche in places, the first thing I loved about this was the friendship portrayed between Jo (Michaela Banas), Lauren (Kristy Whelan Browne) and Simone (Madelaine Sami). The three women were all hilarious in their own way, with a lot of pathos mixed in for good measure. Looking after them at the medispa is the Nurse (Genevieve Morris) and the medical director, Tomas (Wil King).

The play is souped up for laughs. Marieke Hardy's script, which draws out the nuances of the women's friendship while providing insights of what it's like to be a perimenopausal woman in these times. The twist in the play's end put another layer on this tale of women's friendship and the search for what is perceived as eternal youth.

This was a very enjoyable night out, funny and thought provoking. You can't ask for more than that. 

Today's song:

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Sunday Stealing Ask Your Name

 I look at this and I see a lot of red flags - I mean, here are people's passwords there and ready for the taking. But as I've moved on to double authentication and I'm going to do some lying here, I'll play. I have to get ready to go to the theatre in a bit anyway, so it's good to get the questions out of the way. I need to have a shower, because I smell like dog - was cuddling a toy poodle at the hairdressers today. He was adorable and fell asleep on my shelf, but still, I smell like dog and the cat doesn't like it. 

Questions come from Sunday Stealing - but know, they're not going to be quite correct. So a big ner ner raspberry to the scammers out there. 

What Is Your ...

1. ROCK STAR NAME (current pet and first car)? Example: If you have a dog named Max and your first car was a Chevy Malibu, your rock star name would be Max Malibu.

Okay, this one is public knowledge. My rock star name would be Lucifer Holden. That's pretty cool. We'd be on the harder edge of rock, but not death metal. 

2. RACECAR DRIVER NAME (the first names of your grandfathers)?

I'll use my grandfather's middle names for this. Elliot Llewellyn. That sounds pretty good. Mind you, I think that's more suited to racing of old-time race cars. Can see myself in an old MG or Caterham jaunting around the back roads of England. 

3. SOAP OPERA NAME (your middle name, town you were born in)?

I'm going to use my preferred name and place of birth here. I'd be Arcadia London. I could see myself being able to sing with a name like that. 

4. WITNESS PROTECTION PROGRAM NAME (your parents' middle names)?

Neither of my parents have a middle name so I'm going to have to make this one up too. Mum has always said that if she had a middle name it would be Elizabeth. As for Dad, we'll I'll give him a generic one. His middle name can be John. So that would make me some derivative of Elizabeth John. Maybe Lizzie Johnstone. 

5. ROMANCE AUTHOR NAME (favorite flower, favorite season/holiday)?

Ah, see this one is far enough removed not to be used for a password. And again, I'm going to lie.

Jonquil Rose Winters would be my romance writers name - though I still think that my other writerly name, Trelawny Thom would be good too.

Today's song

Friday, July 10, 2026

The Land Seal

 I'm busy binge watching the Legally Blonde prequel, Elle, on Netflix. This is happily entertaining, so I don't feel like writing. 

I'll tell you about the land seal tomorrow. 

Her name is Zoe. She's a Staffie. 

Not Neil. She does look a bit like him. 


Neil, however, doesn't play fetch with gumnuts. And Neil's Dad doesn't yell out, "Zoe, your mate's here,' when I walk past. 

Today's song



Thursday, July 9, 2026

Boom Boom

Boom boom. 

Boom boom. 

Boom boom. 

Boom boom.

I'm trying to sort out a heap of documentation, helping another project get their resources in order. Get to use my rather critical eye to do the finessing. Oh, what fun. Don't millennials have an eye for detail? I ask myself. 

Boom boom

Boom boom

Boom boom. 

I ask the guy next to me if he can hear drums. 

He can. 

- They're getting ready for Modi's visit. He's talking to the masses at Marvel at six.  

- Oh, joy. So, the Indian diaspora is converging at marvel this afternoon.  

- Yep. 

Boom boom. 

Boom boom. 

Boom boom. 

- Those drums are starting to give me the shits. 

I should mention that the person next to me is a dapper, middle-aged bloke of Indian extraction. Lovely guy. 

- Me too. I don't want to celebrate Modi.

- Really?

- He's evil, he tells me. 

- Okay. I can't comment on Indian politics. I'm staying out of it. I don't know anything to have an opinion. 

He smiles at me and nods. 

Boom boom. 

Boom boom. 

Boom boom. 

- Those bloody drums. 

A colleague excused themself from the office a little earlier. They didn't feel safe. And fair enough.

But I've worked down in the Docklands for long enough not to rise to the bait of a little political insurrection. I was in the building when riot police were called in to babysit Christopher Pyne (yes, really - it was the only book launch I've been to where riot police were involved.) I was in London when the IRA were regularly bombing the place. I wandered the streets of Hong Kong during the protests. A little bit of political unrest doesn't phase me. 

Boom boom. 

Boom boom. 

Yet the drums were unsettling. 

- Those drums are annoying, I said to my colleague. 

- I don't find them a celebration, not for this man. But what are we to do?

- Maan nahi janti! I responded in the only bit of Hindi that I know. 

- You do that well. 

I know nothing other than the drums were driving me spare. A harbinger of who knows what. 

Leaving work a few hours later, the front doors were locked on the building. There was a police presence - nothing over the top. No horses. No riot squad. We could easily leave by a convenient side door. 

Everything was calm. The locked doors were a precaution, nothing more. They do that for Friday night football matches. 

We were safe. People made their way to Marvel Stadium. It was quieter than a football match. People were orderly. 

Nothing to see here. 

Boom boom. 


Today's song: 



Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Holiday Planning

 I'm not holiday planning. I'm thinking about holidays, but I'm not actually holiday planning. 

There's a couple of things that are coming up when I thinking about holidays. 

  • Where do I want to go?
  • What do I want to do?
  • How long will I go for?
Being a contractor, you have to get things planned and paid for. 

Also travelling alone, what option to I take? Solo travelling? Go on a tour? Do I go somewhere I've been before? Do I stay at home with the cat? 

If I'm going on tour, Vietnam and Cambodia are high on the list. I'd do a tour. Intrepid have a good one that takes in a lot. I really want to go to Angkor Wat. And I love Vietnamese food. 

Japan is also high on the list, but everybody is going to Japan. But Japan is safe and fairly easy to get around, from what I'm told. 

Then I could go over to the UK, hire a car and go Cathedralling. Poking around cathedrals makes me happy. Maybe hire a car and go down to Cornwall and have a good look around St Michael's Mount, Truro, Wells, Exeter, Bath, Salisbury, Gloucester. Of course a visit to Stratford-Upon-Avon to visit Shakespeare, and maybe a trip down to Canterbury Cathedral to go and visit St Thomas a Beckett - and maybe then up to Lincoln to see Richard III (They hadn't dug him out of the car park last time I was there.) And of course, I could go to my favourite of the English cathedrals - Ely. 

Okay, you're seeing my eyes light up. 

Or do similar in Scotland.... so much to explore. 

Then there's France. I'm nearly 1400 days into my daily French practice. There's so much in Paris I want to see - so many places in France to explore. And more cathedrals. 

Travelling alone, there are considerations. How do you get there? Who will look after the cat? How long do I go for. 

Or do I visit my uncle in Tijuana - though there is no way I'm going to America at the moment. 

Or maybe do a long weekend in Hobart to go roan around MONA, and then up to Uluru, because I've never been there and I rather like the Territory. 

Ah, it's a good diversion. 

Back to the ironing.