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  • Welcome to Cultural Binge

    Welcome to Cultural Binge

    The rating system is simple:

    ★★★★★ – Terrific, world-standard. Don’t miss.

    ★★★★ – Great, definitely worth seeing.

    ★★★ – Good. Perfectly entertaining. Recommended. Individual mileage may vary.

    ★★ – Fine. Flawed and not really recommended, but you may find something to appreciate in it.

    ★ – Bad (& possibly offensive).

    See more reviews over at The Queer Review.

    Instagram: @culturalbinge

    Substack: culturalbinge.substack.com

    Email: chad at culturalbinge.com

  • Opera Up Late ★★★★

    Opera Up Late ★★★★

    Dame Joan Sutherland Theatre. Sydney Opera House. 18 & 23 Feb, 2023. Part of Sydney WorldPride 2023.

    Read my full review on The Queer Review.

  • The Resistance ★★★★

    The Resistance ★★★★

    Written by Kip Chapman. Australian Premiere. Australian Theatre for Young People. Rebel Wilson Theatre. 16 Feb – 11 Mar, 2023.

    Plays about the climate crisis have tended to be didactic and dull so far. It’s hard to make drama about a slow-moving disaster coming our way. The Resistance at ATYP turns focus onto the youth movement fighting to drive awareness and change the world they have to live in, and manages to create a rambunctious comedy that gets the crowd cheering.

    A motley crew of young activists (and one adult) have arranged a climate rally to coincide with the arrival of a Gerta Thumberg-style superstar, Eva Lawson. Bundilla (Lakesha Grant) wants a revolution, prepared to physically fight for justice if she has to. Miro (Jack Walton) is their uptight tech nerd surrounded by girls. Marlee (Diya Goswami) is sweet, caring and a bit disorganised. And Pepper (Thea Sholl) just wants to blow something up, nothing big of course. But when Eva’s visa is delayed, they need someone to front the group and speak to the press. It falls to the meek Marlee to be the new face of the climate resistance. Can one girl rally a nation to change?  

    The Resistance is an interactive show. The thought of interactive shows generally drives my personal, introverted anxiety sky high, but in one of the production’s best moves they spend a lot of time preparing the audience and making sure everyone is feeling secure and in the mood for a good time. Volunteers are brought on stage to fill the crowd and take on some key roles, to great comedic effect (one volunteer is drafted as a make-up artist). The cast are fantastic at looking after their nervous amateur co-stars while also delivering their own roles. Don’t worry, you’re not going to be dragged out of your seat without your consent! You may be asked to make animal noises though.

    Writer/director Kip Chapman knows how to pitch a show at precisely the right level. This is ATYP after all, and the show has a definite youth focus, without talking down to anyone. Adult audiences, just after a good show, will still get their money’s worth from the experience.

    And this cast is dynamite. I was going to refer to one as a ‘scene-stealer’ before realising I was about to write that for each of them in turn. So it’s less ‘scene-stealing’ and more ‘making the most of the great script’. I was awed by how these young performers not only produced great characters but also created a warm, welcoming vibe for the whole auditorium. They are all lovable. From Pepper’s crazy security squad, to Bundilla’s power jacket and Marlee’s nascent stubborn strength. For a show all about politics, anger and potential global disaster, The Resistance is somehow so damn likeable!

    Walking into the Rebel Theatre I tried to count the number of genuinely great plays I’d ever seen about the climate crisis and I could only think of one (Duncan Macmillan’s Lungs), but now thanks to ATYP I can add The Resistance to that list.

  • CAMP ★★★1/2

    CAMP ★★★1/2

    Written by Elias Jamieson Brown. Siren Theatre Co and Seymour Centre in association with Sydney WorldPride. World Premiere. 15 Feb – 4 Mar, 2023.

    Read my full review on The Queer Review.

  • Blessed Union ★★★★★

    Blessed Union ★★★★★

    Written by Maeve Marsden. World Premiere. Belvoir St Theatre 11 Feb – 11 Mar, 2023

    Read my full review on The Queer Review.

  • Big Screen, Small Queen (Everything I Didn’t Learn in Film School) ★★★★

    Big Screen, Small Queen (Everything I Didn’t Learn in Film School) ★★★★

    Created & performed by Etcetera Etcetera. World Premiere. KXT King’s Cross. 11 – 23 Feb, 2023.

    Read my full review over on The Queer Review.

    And read my interview with Etcetera Etcetera here.

  • Queer Screen’s Mardi Gras Film Festival 2023

    Queer Screen’s Mardi Gras Film Festival 2023

    I’m reviewing films at Queer Screen’s Mardi Gras Film Festival 2023 for The Queer Review, so this page will be updated as new reviews go live. I’ve also included the films reviewed by other reviewers (clearly labelled) at The Queer Review to help make this a centralised hub.

    Feb 18 – Goran Stolevski/Of An Age interview added. Wandering Heart, Wet Sand and The Origin of Evil reviews added.

    Feb 16 – Of An Age review & Enda McGrattan/How To Tell A Secret interview added.

    Feb 12 – Tank Fairy and Mars One reviews added.

    Feb 7 – Andrew Mercado/Number 96 and Simon Hunt/Stephen Cummins interviews added.

    There are some brilliant films on show, and some niche ones that’ll tickle your particular fetishes.

    I’m sorting these by rating to make it easier to see which ones The Queer Review highly recommends.

    Stephen Cummins’ Resonance

    Interviews

    Exclusive Interview: Irish drag star Enda McGrattan aka Veda on HIV documentary How To Tell A Secret

    Exclusive Interview: Simon Hunt on the legacy of queer Australian filmmaker Stephen Cummins ahead of Mardi Gras retrospective

    Uncovering Australian television’s lost queer history with Andrew Mercado

    Exclusive Interview: Goran Stolevski for Of An Age (interview by James Kleinmann)

    Exclusive Interview: The Inspection stars Jeremy Pope & Gabrielle Union (Interview by James Kleinmann)

    How to Tell a Secret

    ★★★★★ Reviews

    All the Beauty & the Bloodshed ★★★★★ (reviewed by James Kleinmann)

    How to Tell a Secret ★★★★★

    Of An Age ★★★★★

    #LookAtMe ★★★★★

    Wandering Heart (Errante corazón) ★★★★★

    Horseplay

    ★★★★ Reviews

    The Inspection ★★★★1/2 (reviewed by James Kleinmann)

    ALL MAN The International Male Story ★★★★ (reviewed by James Kleinmann)

    Blitzed! The 80s Blitz Kids’ Story ★★★★ (reviewed by James Kleinmann)

    Elephant (Słoń) ★★★★

    Framing Agnes ★★★★ (reviewed by James Kleinmann)

    Horseplay (Los agitadores) ★★★★

    Lotus Sports Club ★★★★

    Mars One/Marte Um ★★★★ (Reviewed by James Kleinmann)

    The Origin of Evil (L’origine du mal) ★★★★

    Outrageous – The Queer History of Australian TV ★★★★

    Tank Fairy 桶妝仙女 劇照 ★★★★ (Reviewed by James Kleinmann)

    Wet Sand ★★★★

    You Can Live Forever ★★★★

    The Venus Effect

    ★★★ Reviews

    The Blue Caftan ★★★1/2

    Gateways Grind ★★★1/2

    Lonesome ★★★1/2

    Punch ★★★1/2

    The Venus Effect (Venuseffekten) ★★★1/2

    Punch

    In From The Side ★★★

    In Her Words – 20th Century Lesbian Fiction ★★★

    Shall I Compare You to a Summer’s Day? (Bashtaalak sa’at) ★★★

    Trans Glamoré ★★★

    Where Butterflies Don’t Fly (Kam motýli nelétají) ★★★

    The Winner Takes It All ★★★

    The Longest Weekend ★★1/2

    In From The Side

    And just a reminder of the rating system:

    ★★★★★ – Terrific, world-standard. Don’t miss. (★★★★★ will be rare).

    ★★★★ – Great, definitely worth seeing.

    ★★★ – Good. Perfectly entertaining. Recommended. Individual mileage may vary (most shows are ★★★).

    ★★ – Fine. Flawed and not really recommended, but you may find something to appreciate in it.

    ★ – Bad. Not worth your time or money.

  • Hubris & Humiliation ★★★★

    Hubris & Humiliation ★★★★

    Written by Lewis Treston. World Premiere. Sydney Theatre Company. Jan 20 – Mar 4, 2023

    Read my full review over on The Queer Review

  • Holding Achilles ★★

    Holding Achilles ★★

    Written by David Morton. Sydney Festival. Carriageworks. 19-22 Jan, 2023.

    High flying multidisciplinary show Holding Achilles comes to Sydney Festival after a successful run at Brisbane Festival last year and it’s a real mixed bag. But there’s one thing for certain… The acrobatics are graceful but the script is clunky!

    Young, troubled, too-smart-for-his-own-good Patroclus is sent away to live with Peleus’ family where he meets the cocky Achilles. It’s typical hate-at-first-sight between them. But when Patroclus helps Achilles out of a sticky situation they are sent out together to find and train with the Centaur Chiron. At this point they fall in love. We know this because we are told this explicitly in the script. You’d never have guessed otherwise. 

    But you can’t frolic in the woods forever, and when Patroclus and Achilles return home they discover that the pesky Trojans have kidnapped Helen and thanks to a big “a-ha” moment Patroclus has no choice but to go fight to bring her back with the rest of the army. Achilles joins him to keep him safe, and also become a hero, but mainly to keep him safe, honest. Patroclus hates the war because he hates war except when he has to fight a war to help people who they are actually at war with… look he’s a flighty young thing and changes his mind a lot while giving whiny speech after whiny speech.

    This script is, as I mentioned, pretty basic. Lacking in emotion or subtext, it’s a kids’ pantomime without the charm to appeal to anything broader than the most basic of minds. Didactic in the extreme, and delivered like, well I guess they’re going for a “traditional Greek theatre” vibe by half shouting every line and telegraphing every move to the rafters? Or it’s just directed that way, I’m not sure TBH. ¯\_ (ツ)_/¯

    The real star of the show is the puppetry by Dead Puppet Society (a pair of gorgeous bear puppets manage to elicit more genuine emotion than any melodramatic human on stage). Second billing goes to the physical theatre work which, when it’s great, feels fresh and inventive, and when it’s not-being-great is the relatively average “look they’re swimming in the air” that we’ve seen in plenty of other shows. But the training “montage” with Patroclus and Achilles is particularly beautiful, and Chiron is well realised – but then who doesn’t love a philosophical, non-binary, warrior centaur amiright? 

    But two great moments don’t make a show and there is a lot of “moving around to fill the time” going on. The fight scenes feel slow, bloated and imprecise (the nature of the stage fighting reduces everything to “slow-motion” moments), and much of the other “movement work” is sloppy. It’s the difference between an actor moving between point A and point B holding a pose versus a dancer moving with intention. 

    Oh, and I forgot to mention there’s a singer as well. She wanders on and off the stage at various points. Maybe she was the spirit of Achilles’ mother? Beautiful voice. I couldn’t really catch the lyrics but blame the acoustics of the cavernous Bay 17 at Carriageworks, I guess? I’ve no clue what she was doing there, it’s not like they needed to entertain us during a set change…

    Holding Achilles felt like a dress rehearsal, a walk-through, before everyone gave it their all for the real audience. Visually stunning at times, it can’t shrug off the childish script and overly long running time. But then again, Stephen Madsen has a rockin’ bod and uses it to great effect with all that aerial work.

  • Blue ★★★★

    Blue ★★★★

    Written by Thomas Weatherall. World Premiere. Sydney Festival. Belvoir St Theatre. Jan 14 – Jan 29, 2023.

    Thomas Weatherall (Heartbreak High) cements his place as an Australia talent to watch by writing and starring in his own one-man show, Blue, at Belvoir St Theatre. And it’s good! Very good!

    As you enter the upstairs Belvoir theatre you are greeted by a sea of blue, washing up a curved wall, with a solitary chair on the stage. Weatherall plays Mark, a young man who has moved out of home and is settling into life as a renter. As he tells stories of his childhood, and recites letters between his mother and himself, he paints a picture of loss, pain and mental health struggles that have defined his young life so far.

    One man shows are tricky beasts and director Deborah Brown keeps the action moving by having Weatherall running up and down the wall, moving elements of the staging around (it’s a beautiful set designed by Jacob Nash and Cris Baldwin). Combined with projections by David Bergman, sound design by Wil Hughes and lighting design by Chloe Ogilvie, Blue is never static, never stale. 

    Twenty-two year old Weatherall has an appealing stage presence. Warm and inviting while also insecure, there is a real “love me” puppy dog energy to Mark – a wounded young man missing intimacy. As Mark’s tale unfolds, you feel the pain and disappointment he masks behind his smiles and story-telling delivery. To not only hold an audience for the 80 min duration, but to keep them emotionally and intellectually engaged the whole time, is no easy task and Weatherall acquits himself with style. 

    The script is strong, presenting the issues of depression with a welcome lack of melodrama (mined from Weatherall’s personal experiences). In the programme Weatherall says he wants to start a dialogue about youth mental health and this is a great place to start. The notably younger-than-usual audience were clearly listening closely. While lacking the amplified highs and lows of the best monologues (see Simon Stephens’ Sea Wall as a similar example), the story of Blue unwraps itself at a more steady, almost matter-of-fact pace, which never feels dull, but could possibly benefit from opportunities for added dynamism. 

    Thomas Weatherall is clearly a talent we can expect years of great work from. Combining mainstream TV appeal with a clear understanding of stage-craft he seems destined for great things and Blue is hopefully the start of a brilliant stage career.

  • Room ★★★★★

    Room ★★★★★

    Written by James Thiérrée. Sydney Festival. Roslyn Packer Theatre. 11-25 Jan, 2023.

    The phrase you’re looking for is “What the fuck did I just watch?” but not said in a bad way, said with a mixture of awe and discombobulation and respect. Room, now inhabiting the Roslyn Packer Theatre as part of Sydney Festival, is a clash of absurdist humour, dance, music, acrobatics, theatre and cabaret… and it’s utterly brilliant.

    There is an unloved 1998 ensemble film called Playing By Heart (stay with me here) and I instantly thought of one line of its dialogue as I walked out of Room. Angelina Jolie leans into Ryan Phillipe while on a date and says “talking about love is like dancing about architecture”, which is as good a description of Room as any, especially as the architecture does indeed dance.

    James Thiérrée’s incredible concoction feels like an explosion of his creative subconscious. It’s something more akin to reading a particularly trippy X-Men comic than a piece of stagecraft. I was reminded of Mark Z. Danielewski’s creepy debut novel House of Leaves, and episodes of Doctor Who more than I was of any theatre piece I’d seen in the past.

    Room is a space of endless potential, for art and for chaos, and we are shown both in abandon (though like all the best stage chaos it is intricately choreographed which makes it all the more breathtaking). Even Thiérrée wrestles aloud with what the show actually is about, trying to impose order where there is none. A commentary on the creative process, its random sparks of activity, its dreamlike logic and stressful/joyous journey.

    Photo: Manon Bollery

    Absurdist theatre can often feel impenetrable or frustratingly vague, but Room soars through these thoughts by being relentlessly entertaining – lavish costumes, a constantly morphing set, characters that appear and disappear in an instant. If Moulin Rouge: The Musical is a non-stop mix of hit songs, Room takes the same principle to every aspect of its performance – everything changes, everywhere all at once.

    Easily one of the most electrifying theatre experiences I’ve had in a while (and as you can see from recent posts I’ve been seeing a lot of great theatre these last few months. I haven’t reviewed a dud in a really long time!) Room is an honest-to-goodness, must-see experience.