On the third of July 2007, Transformers released in theatres. Attached to every screening like a parasite was an unlabelled trailer, comprised entirely of handheld footage. In it, people mill about at a going away party for a man named Rob.
Shoji Morimoto knows exactly what he wants to do with his life; nothing at all.
With a dream-like blend of fantasy, horror, musical, romance and drama, this film is like something straight out of the David Lynch playbook and is just as strange as it sounds.
Light, Dark, Light Again is an album that details McMahon’s journey with anxiety, healing, love, heartbreak, learning, and growing.
Look out, world, Sabrina Carpenter is the new IT girl of pop. There, I said it. She is also undeniably my new girl crush. Carpenter has been pursuing a music career since starring in the Disney Channel teen favourite, Girl Meets World, which ran from 2014 to 2017.
Gris is a platform adventure game about a young girl and her tumultuous and beautiful journey with grief, after the loss of her mother. The premise of Gris is that you must collect enough stars to form a constellation bridge, which will allow you to leave this world and heal from the grief and pain you have endured.
This year I read a total of 33 books. This included fiction, non-fiction, poetry, memoirs, short stories, self-help books and plays. I have narrowed down my five favourites, and I hope I can persuade you to pick up at least one of these fantastic books. If you do, let me know what you think!
‘The bathtub scene’, ‘the grave scene’, ‘the vampire scene’. If you have seen any of these words trending on X recently and felt confused, it must mean you haven’t yet seen the aesthetic atrocity — and I mean that in the best way possible — that is Saltburn, the new film that is as intriguing as it is disturbing.
Explore Flowah Powah, QUT alum Alice Lang's latest exhibition at the QUT Art Museum, through the eyes of Glass contributor, Hannah Vesey.
Review by Sia Hills