COSMOS magazine


Syndicate contentFollow COSMOSmagazine on TwitterJoin COSMOSmagazine on Facebook

DVDs

Monsters

Monsters

September 2011

Authorities struggle to contain the alien life forms unleashed after a NASA space probe crash lands in Central America.


The Planets by One Ring Zero

Planets

February 2011

To celebrate the approaching 100th anniversary of Gustav Holst's orchestral suite The Planets, unique indie band, One Ring Zero, have revisited our Solar System for their latest album (strangely enough, titled Planets).


Lust - Is Love Blind?

Seven Deadly Sins: Lust – Is Love Blind?

February 2011

Want to cut through all of the flowers and love hearts associated with Valentine's Day and get to the core of what lust and love are really about? Tune in to the Royal Institute of Australia’s latest installment of its Seven Deadly Sins lecture series: ‘Lust’ – Is Love Blind?


The Future Prehistoric

The Future Prehistoric

February 2010

It’s a rare band that is willing to take on dark energy. In fact, Australian psychedelic folk-pop band Richard In Your Mind don’t seem intimated by much at all: scientifically, musically or otherwise.


Déjà Vu

Déjà Vu

January 2008

Here’s a thriller that combines the trademark pace of Jerry Bruckheimer, the gritty realism of director Tony Scott and the vulnerable action hero leading man that Denzel Washington reliably conjures up on such occasions. And then there’s the time travel.


The Sun: Source of All Life on Earth and The Moon: The Epic Story of an On/Off Love Affair

The Sun: Source of All Life on Earth and The Moon: The Epic Story of an On/Off Love Affair

January 2008

Our ancestors knew the warmth of the Sun was essential for their survival; and in a world without artificial illumination, the cool light of the Moon was critical, too. It is fitting that each of the BBC documentaries included on this DVD starts with a visit to a Neolithic monument.


Surviving Extremes

Surviving Extremes

January 2008

Surviving Extremes is a study of coping with life-threatening situations in an unforgiving environment, and the qualities that will be needed for future space missions – particularly exploration of Mars.


Planet Earth, Part Two

Planet Earth, Part Two

January 2008

No one does natural history quite like the BBC, and the second instalment of the Planet Earth series, already screened by the ABC in Australia, raises the standard another notch.


Space Race

Space Race

July 2007

Produced by Deborah Cadbury — the author of Space Race (reviewed in Cosmos Issue 10) — this four-part drama from the BBC adds tension and colour to her story of humanity's early steps towards the stars.


Lost Worlds Vanished Lives

Lost Worlds Vanished Lives

July 2007

We know him as a ubiquitous presence in some of the world's finest nature documentaries, but there's another side of David Attenborough revealed in Lost Worlds Vanished Lives: his lifelong passion for fossils.


Monkey Trial: Evolution, Creationism and Free Speech in Court

Monkey Trial: Evolution, Creationism and Free Speech in Court

April 2007

The Scopes Monkey Trial in Dayton, Tennessee in 1925 is the most famous showdown so far between evolution and creationism. Rather than going into the rights and wrongs of the scientific issues, this documentary looks at the personalities and movements behind the event, using contemporary newsreel footage, photographs and newspapers, as well as the usual interviews with historians and biographers, plus relatively subtle reenactments, to help the viewer understand what it was like to be there.


Mars: Dead or Alive; Welcome to Mars

Mars: Dead or Alive; Welcome to Mars

April 2007

These two complementary DVDs chronicle the program to deliver Mars exploration rovers Spirit and Opportunity safely onto the surface of the red planet, and reveal a little of what they found when they got there.


Red Dwarf, Series 8

Red Dwarf, Series 8

September 2006

Series 8 of Red Dwarf, recorded in 1998, is the final series of the iconic British science fiction comedy.


The Ascent of Man

The Ascent of Man

August 2006

With today's television largely devoted to supplying what the Latin poet Juvenal described as "bread and circuses", it comes as a surprise to discover just how challenging and engaging the medium can be when used to its potential.


The Blue Planet

The Blue Planet

August 2006

There is little doubt that the world would be a poorer place without the BBC's natural science documentaries, as it would without the well-modulated passions of David Attenborough.