The young pilgrims gathered with a sense of respect and expectation on Day Two to hear Archbishop of Perth, Timothy Costelloe SDB, give his workshop address at the 2019 Australian Catholic Youth Festival, “Listening to God, how do we know what God is saying?”
After lying dormant for more than a decade and a half, the action-comedy franchise that gave us Bad Boys in 1995 and the imaginatively titled sequel Bad Boys II eight years later makes an unwelcome reappearance.
1917 (Universal) is a great movie about the Great War. By turns harrowing and lyrically beautiful – and deeply humane throughout – director and co-writer (with Krysty Wilson-Cairns) Sam Mendes’ gripping historical drama displays both the horrors of trench combat and the endurance of fundamental decency and spiritual striving.
According to the ‘Old Boys’ (the Aquinas College Alumni) Br Clery is an institution, a brother who has become an icon of a complex set of values that represent aspiration, education, and the increasingly complex role that the Church has played in the formation of young Australian men.
In The Two Popes (Netflix), their glossy but highly speculative account of supposedly real events, screenwriter Anthony McCarten and director Fernando Meirelles ill-advisedly try to extol Pope Francis (Jonathan Pryce) by trashing retired Pope Benedict XVI (Anthony Hopkins).
Both the filmmakers and the central voice cast of the much-loved 2013 original are reunited in Frozen II (Disney). They deliver an exuberant animated musical adventure that’s suitable for a wide demographic.
Ford v Ferrari (Fox) revels in its 1960s gender stereotypes, evoking a “Great Man” age of auto racers in which the men were men and the women glad of it.
I love entertaining at home and my go-to favourite dish to cook up is Singapore Chilli Crab.
The eRecord is giving away five DVDs of “Summer in the Forest”. To enter, send an answer to the following question to therecord@therecord.com.au: Where was the location of the first L’Arche community founded by Jean Vanier in 1964?
The holiday-themed blend of romantic comedy and drama Last Christmas (Universal) is both awkward in execution and problematic in content.