Tapas & Spanish Best-Ever Recipes: The Authentic Tatse of Spain: 130 Sun-Drenched Classic Dishes from Every Part of Spain, Shown in 230 Stunning Photographs
Book
This title deals with the authentic taste of Spain: 130 sun-drenched classic dishes from every part...
The Beer and Food Companion
Book
The Beer and Food Companion is set to become a classic reference for anyone wishing to pair beer and...
The Food and Cooking of Greece: A Classic Mediterranean Cuisine: History, Traditions, Ingredients and Over 160 Recipes
Book
This title helps you create the evocative tastes and traditions of Greek cuisine easily and simply...
The New Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day: The Discovery That Revolutionizes Home Baking
Jeff Hertzberg, Zoe Francois and Stephen Scott Gross
Book
A fully revised and updated edition of the bestselling, ground-breaking Artisan Bread in Five...
The Taste of America
Colman Andrews and Joel Penkman
Book
America is a melting pot, a fact reflected nowhere better than in kitchen pantries. The American...
Vinegar
Book
This is a wonderful collection of 25 recipes featuring all types of vinegar from balsamic to white...
The Madness of Modern Parenting
Book
Parenting in the modern world is an overwhelming concept. It seems to divide everyone from...
LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated Moana (2016) in Movies
Nov 3, 2020
Another overly-familiar, word-for-word rehash of *all* the exact same clichΓ©s from the Disney Machine with no real profundity or nuance to back up the convention. I mean even the title character the movie is named after has about as much depth as a piece of blank construction paper. That being said however, this is - what I can only describe as - terminally cute. In spite of all its heavily trod Disney-fying and formulaic cheese it's just so damn irresistible: eye-watering in how visually breathtaking it is with a handful of lively bops from Lin-Manuel Miranda who - politics aside - rarely ever misses a beat in the musical department. Treads water (no pun intended) for the first part with all the parroting of like 10 other movies from the company practically verbatim until the charming Maui shows up, who still represents the same sorts of tropes but complete with a clever design gimmick via the moving tattoos and gargantuan, blocky proportions; plus come on he's voiced by Dwayne Johnson - you can't *not* love him. The last half hour is more or less a wondrous technical showcase for peddling this beautiful, paradise-like animation and let me tell you it's a sight to see. Very funny too. Should hate it but don't, well done. π‘π°π°π΅π°π±πͺπ’ smokes it, though.