moon child // Film Review: Room

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Published by Huffington Post.

Based on Emma Donoghue’s acclaimed novel of the same name, Room focalises on Jack, a five-year-old boy held captive with his mother Joy Newsome in a squalid shed at the bottom of Old Nick’s garden – a narrative in-part inspired by five-year-old Felix who was one of the children fathered by Josef Fritzl and held captive in a basement with his mother, Fritzl’s older daughter, Elisabeth.

While Room has the makings of a terrifyingly real horror story or psychological thriller, director Lenny Abrahamson refuses to diminish or cheapen Donoghue’s life-affirming story with gimmicks or horror-movie-frights, and instead creates a heart-breaking, and paradoxically heart-warming, masterpiece of cinema which tells a story of human spirit, hope and the undying and incomparable love between a mother and her child.

The opening scene of Room shows us the first brief peeps of the film’s beautiful cinematography with micro close-ups of the wall, sink, skylight, and other glimpses of ‘Room’. The mother and son’s enclosure, which is in fact a shed with a code-secured door, has a tiny kitchen, a bath, a double-bed, a wardrobe, a small table, and a TV.

These fixtures form Jack’s alternative reality where he believes there is ‘Room’, then outer space, then the TV planets, and then heaven – where the aliens shot him down from, and into ‘Room’ with Ma. Having never known anything else, Jack doesn’t realise that he is missing out on the real world and, as a result, Jack plays with Ma, watches TV, dreams of an imaginary dog called Lucky, and is a relatively happy little boy – until night-time, when he hides in the wardrobe when Old Nick comes with all the skin-crawling slime of killer George Harvey in The Lovely Bones.

The film’s first act is exquisite in its simplicity as Ma transforms a claustrophobic, cabin-fever-inducing, 10ft x 10ft prison cell into Jack’s ‘Room’ – a magical world that ‘goes in all directions, all the way to the end’ with tales of Alice in Wonderland and The Count of Monte Cristo, lullabies, games, birthday cakes, TV planets, toilet cistern paper boats, and more.

As Jack turns five, however, Ma decided to tell him about the real world as he has become ‘so old and smart’. As Jack struggles to understand and becomes angry with his Ma’s story, Joy begins to struggle more and more with the four, seemingly shrinking, walls that entrap her and her quickly growing son. And as the second act of the film begins, adrenaline starts to pump, and pulses quicken as the audience is hoping, praying and screaming at the screen for Jack to escape, gain his freedom and see ‘the world’ for the first time.

Room, with a magnificent, compelling performance from Brie Larson as Joy, and the incredible Jacob Tremblay as Jack – who after this performance could arguably be considered the finest young actor of his generation at only nine-years-old – is a must-see cinema experience that will make the audience laugh, smile, cry, and experience the ultimate feeling of warm fuzziness. With Jack possessing the same inherent and untainted goodness, innocent, hope and resilience of the unnamed boy in post-apocalyptic drama The Road, Room is a one-off film, unlike any other – showcasing the difficulties for Joy of adjusting to life after abduction, sexual abuse and captivity, and Jack’s unrivalled power of hope and love.

★★★★★

 

What did you think of ‘Room’? Let me know in the comment section below.

 

moon child // The Wonders of Pinterest

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One of my favourite social media sites that I’ve had for a long time but recently rediscovered my love for is: Pinterest.

Pinterest is essentially a wonderwall of pictures, collages and moodboards that allow you to build your own dream life and aesthetic in your own little pretty corner of the internet. On my Pinterest, for example, I have a board dedicated to my favourite animals: mostly pictures of German Shepherds, other dogs, cats, elephants, snakes, big cats and more. I have a board called ‘dream home’ (basically a lot of typewriters and pretty desks), a board called ‘Scotland’ (filled with spectacular landscapes from bonnie Caledonia and all things Scottish), a board dedicated to fashion, hair and beauty (mostly Kylie Jenner in french briads), and even a board dedicated to my favourite film and book: Trainspotting, and more!

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Pinterest is a haven for artists and creatives, and is a great hub of inspiration whether you’re an artist, photographer, writer or designer.

The great thing for me being able to create my own little world on Pinterest is that I can also post my articles, short stories, and blog posts on the site! I can simply click on ‘add pin’ and insert a link to one of my pieces, and straight away I have a new platform to introduce my writing to a wider readership.

Pinterest is so varied, diverse and packed with anything and everything you can think of that even if you’re looking for a cake recipe, summer holiday destination inspiration, makeup advice, arts and crafts ideas and everything in between, you’re bound to find something you’ll love here.

The other handy aspect of the site is, if you’re like me and are constantly having ideas and then forgetting them, you can save or ‘pin’ images that contain something that you want to try out/buy and go back to them later.

If you already have Pinterest or if you’re thinking of setting up a profile, visit my page and click ‘follow‘! I follow everyone back and I’m always on the look out for cool new pictures of fashion, food, tattoos, animals, literature and much more.

What do you think of Pinterest? Let me know in the comment section below.

Top 5 Books You Should Be Reading in 2016

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You’d probably expect a literature student to constantly have their head buried in a book. You expect them to be a complete and utter bookworm, practically eating the neated pressed piles of paper like tictacs. But, not me. To my eternal irritation, I’m actually quite a slow reader. I usually need a bit of a nudge to get into a good book. But when I do find something I love reading, I can have it finished within the day.

One of my mini resolutions for 2016 is to actively make attempts to read more, and little reading challenges like this are the perfect way to push myself into exploring a wider variety of literature. So, if you’re like me and need a little nudge to pick up a page-turner, have a gander at the top 5 books you should be reading in 2016 to make you a more active and varsatile reader:


  • Read a banned book

A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess

A Clockwork Orange was banned by several schools, libraries and booksellers across America and further afield following its release because of the text’s ‘objectionable language’ and controversial subject matter – that almost guarentees it must be a good book, right?

Burgess’ 1962 dystopian novel follows Alex and his ‘droogs’ in an alternative future where the youth have formed their own extremely violent and merciless subculture called ‘ultraviolence’. Teenage Alex and his gang seem untouchable as they kick, punch and rape their way through countless vulnerable and innocent victims, until Alex is caught for his crimes and imprisoned. In order to be released early from jail, Alex volunteers to be a part of the controversial Ludovico Technique which aims to rehabilitate convicts through aversion therapy by giving participants vomit-inducing injections as they are forced to watch violent scenes in an eerie cinema.

Mixed with Russian Nadsat dialect, Burgess’ intelligent, gritty and surreal novel is a must read for the banned books section of your bookcase.

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  • Read a book published this year

The Winds of Winter (A Song of Ice and Fire Series) – George R.R. Martin

R.R. Martin’s eagerly anticipated The Winds of Winter has been keeping Thrones fans waiting for months on end. But, hopefully, we’ll finally see its long awaited release in 2016. Following A Dance with Dragons, the sixth installment in R.R. Martin’s epic fantasy series is promised to resolve several cliffhangers left from the previous book with at least ‘one planned large battle’ to take place very early on.

R.R. Martin has also hinted that some of the plotlines from the forthcoming novel will play out in season 6 of the adapted TV series Game of Thrones. (So, does that mean the book will be released after the next HBO season in April? Stop torturing us, George!)

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  • Read a graphic novel

Habibi by Craig Thompson

This 672-page long book is an Islamic fairy tale graphic novel depicting the relationship between Dodola and Zam, two escaped child slaves. This love story and parable of humanity’s relationship with the natural world explores the cultural divide between classes as well as the first and third worlds, and the history of religion with focus on Islam and Christianity.

If you’re looking to read something different from what you usually read in terms of genre and form, and something that you will learn from as well as enjoy reading, Habibi is the one for you.

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  • Read a funny book

Scotland’s Jesus by Frankie Boyle

As arguably the most controversial, most hated/loved comedian of our time, Frankie Boyle has also proved in recent years that he is a dab hand at writing, too.

With Boyle’s acid-tongue, pessimistic sense of humour coupled with his hyper intelligence of politics and current affairs, ‘Scotland’s Jesus’ is a hysterical and paradoxically bleak outlook on the state of the world today, including chapters ranging from international politics to the animal world.

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  • Read a scary book

The Shining by Stephen King

King’s horror masterpiece The Shining centres around Jack Torrance, an increasingly unpredictable and dangerous alcoholic/struggling writer, his wife Wendy and their son Danny, who possesses telepathic abilities and is able to read minds and experience premonitions of the future as well as the ghostly past.

In an attempt to start over after Jack’s latest violence outburst, the family move in for the winter at The Stanley Hotel where Jack takes on the job of off-season caretaker. But Danny, and later the rest of his family, realise that the hotel has a terrifying and sinister presence of its own as the ‘shining’ shows Danny horrific visions of the terrible events that have taken place in the hotel.

Stephen King, cabin fever, telepathy, a violence alcoholic, and ghosts – what more could you want in a horror novel?

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What books will you be reading in 2016? Let me know in the comment section below.

‘moon child’ Fiction Published in Germ Magazine

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Happy new year, everyone! It’s been a great start of January for me and I’m on my way to fulfilling one of my New Year’s resolutions (get more fiction published) as I’ve just found out that, ‘The iBrain’, a short story I wrote when I was 18 in my first creative writing semester at university, has been published by Germ Magazine!

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It had been a long time since I even looked at this story but when I was rummaging through some old folders of short stories and poems a few months ago, I came across it and decided to submit it to Germ Magazine, and they accepted it!

Here is a short extract from ‘The iBrain’, my futuristic, sci-fi short story about how Apple could take over the world:

September 24th, 2097.

Within a year of graduating, my inventions began to attract attention and I was headhunted as an engineer at Apple Inc. I excelled in every enterprise I was involved in and was gradually promoted to CEO. I was even given the prestigious Steve Job’s Award: A prize for revolutionary development of electronics. Awarded to Rebecca Ivy McFall in May, 2085, for entrepreneurial brilliance and innovation at Apple Inc.

I have always been very independent. Even as a little curly redheaded child, I would read alone rather than play with my siblings. I threw myself into my career, putting my relationships second. I have worked at Apple for over 20 years now, and I have developed their most successful products: iTattoo, an automatic machine that can tattoo picture-perfect copies of any photograph in minutes; iPortal, a teleport that can transfer someone from their current location to anywhere on Earth; iTime, a time machine that can transport someone to any period in history or the future; and now iBrain, a device that allows the viewer to see inside the mind of a dead brain. For the iBrain to fulfil its true potential, I need one last ingredient: Dr Jacob S. Fitzpatrick’s brain.

You can read the full version of ‘The iBrain’ on GermMagazine.com

If you’re a writer of fiction or creative nonfiction, submit your work to Germ Magazine for a chance to be published among some amazing work by talented writers. The website has a whole host of writing from short stories and poetry to personal essays and much more.

A big thank you to Germ Magazine for featuring my work!

What did you think of ‘The iBrain’? Let me know in the comment section below.