Clementine the Living Fashion Doll on Youth
Clementine, Sweet Bird of Youth.
The one and only Living Fashion Doll sings about the joys of Youth!
PermalinkOld Father Time will never harm you if your charms remain!
Clementine, Sweet Bird of Youth.
The one and only Living Fashion Doll sings about the joys of Youth!
PermalinkOld Father Time will never harm you if your charms remain!
[rating=3]
Fr: 165 min • Peccadillo Pictures • DVD
Young director Aleem Khan has a mixed reaction to Born in ’68.
PermalinkThe film is fortunate to have a strong cast, with Laetitia Casta giving a particularly good performance as Catherine. Despite the poor makeup, which more than fails in transforming her into an aged women, Casta still manages to pull off her older years gracefully and with conviction.
[rating=2]
212 pages • Ward, Lock, and Company • 1891
This classic book starts out well enough but Wilde looses control of the plot as it meanders toward its conclusion.
PermalinkThe Picture of Dorian Gray is an acknowledged classic in the canon of English literature. Reading it through one has to wonder why. It is not so much the book itself but the associations with the book’s author, his history.
What it means to be in the gay subculture.
The implications of the gay subculture, both politically and socially.
PermalinkOne battle won certainly does not mean that the fighting is done, and until there is an understanding that there are as many acceptable ways to live as there are people in the world, our war is not over.
[rating=4]
US: 99 min • TLA Releasing • DVD
Starting out in 1984, Edge of Seventeen is a coming-out story set against a time of social and political change.
PermalinkThe film captures the possibility of youth, and the edginess of that conservative decade the 1980s. The tracks by Yazoo, Thompson Twins, and Bronski Beat are for anyone who lived through the era a reminder of how conflicted a time it was.
[rating=4]
261 pages • Fourth Estate • July 23rd, 2009 [PB]
A captivating novel about the nature of truth and identity set in the aftermath of the Second World War.
PermalinkHamilton exhibits a genuine warmth and sympathy for his characters, for all their flaws and failings, which is very life-affirming. He understands how difficult it is for adults ever to be truly ‘grown-up’; however capable and stable they may appear on the surface, a lost, frightened child cowers not far beneath.
[rating=4]
256 pages • Bloomsbury • July 6th, 2009 [PB]
The author of Snow Falling on Cedars is the story of the life and death of reclusive John William Barry, as told by his loyal friend and confidant, Neil Countryman.
PermalinkTheir story forms a meditation on modern urban life in the West – hamburger world as John William scathingly describes it – with its loss of contact with, and profit-driven destruction of, the natural world.
[rating=5]
US: 691 min • Warner Home Video • DVD
The fast, sexy and thoroughly anti-Twilight series True Blood has breathed life back into the vampire genre.
PermalinkThe story arc, the murders of local fang-bangers, and the tension between the living and the undead, makes for a mesmerising series. The twelve-episode format also means that it is not necessary to dilute the tension.
[rating=3]
Released on September 28, 209
A varied affair that, whilst having its moments, does not quite gel together.
PermalinkTheir potency seems to still lie in the downbeat, trip-hop, ambient arena. The album has divided critics, but there are some real creative fires crackling whenever Mtungwazi guests and she truly lends a vibrancy to her tracks.
[rating=4]
Released on February 17th, 1978
The first Kate Bush album started an unconventional and successful career.
PermalinkThe Kick Inside is a lyrically and musically raw debut and it is powered by talent and innocence.
Polari Magazine is an LGBT arts and culture magazine that explores the subculture by looking at what is important to the people who are in it. It’s about the lives we lead, not the lifestyles we’re supposed to lead.
Its content is informed & insightful, and features a diverse range of writers from every section of the community. Its intent is to help LGBT readers learn about their own heritage and to sustain a link between the present and the past.
Polari is designed to nurture the idea of community, whether that be social and political, or artistic and creative. It is your magazine, whether you want to read it, or whether you want to get involved in it, if you're gay, lesbian, bisexual, trans, or queer.
Polari Magazine is all these: it's a gay online magazine; it's a gay and lesbian online magazine; it's an LGBT arts and culture magazine. Ultimately, it is a queer magazine.