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Luke Buckmaster

Luke Buckmaster

Film Critic/ Editor at Flicks.com.au

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Email address
l*****@*******.auGet email address
Influence score
56
Location
Australia
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • Entertainment

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Recent Articles

flicks.com.au

The best comedy movies on Netflix Australia

We’ve combed through the Netflix archives to find the very best comedy movies on offer.
flicks.com.au

The Lost Bus is a terrifyingly immersive disaster movie

Matthew McConaughey steers through an inferno in this pulse-pounding film, which showcases the intense, famously restless style of director Paul Greengrass.
flicks.com.au

Spinal Tap 2: The End Continues rocks harder than expected

Spinal Tap II: The End Continues reunites rock’s most pathetic legends – who are now older, slower, but more endearing than ever.
flicks.com.au

The terrible irony at the heart of KPop Demon Hunters

Flicks lead critic Luke Buckmaster puts his fingers in his ears and tries to comprehend the incredible success of KPop Demon Hunters, which is now Netflix’s most streamed movie.
flicks.com.au

AKA Charlie Sheen delivers what we want: pure, uncut debauchery

From tiger blood to 18 hour nosebleeds, AKA Charlie Sheen serves unfiltered chaos and indulgence. It’s spectacle over substance, but very entertaining.
flicks.com.au

An island of other realities: the magic of Venice Immersive

Venice Immersive – recently visited by Flicks critic Luke Buckmaster – is part of the Venice Film Festival, devoted to virtual and mixed reality experiences. It showcases art that blurs reality and redefines how stories can be told.
flicks.com.au

Touching the Sky turns the dream of flying into a thrilling VR docu...

Available on Meta Quest headsets, Touching the Sky is an hour-long VR documentary that turns extreme sports into a soaring immersive experience.
flicks.com.au

Alien: Earth is a kick-ass combo of big ideas and gnarly spectacle

The Alien franchise crashes into TV with smart sci-fi, savage scares, and a freakin’ gnarly eyeball monster.
flicks.com.au

Ang Lee’s Hulk is a bad movie, but it could’ve changed cinema

A split-screen revolution lost in a green blur: Luke Buckmaster explains how Ang Lee’s 2003 superhero movie could’ve been a game-changing production.
flicks.com.au

With Trainweck and Titan, Netflix deliver tragedy by algorithm

Trainwreck: The Astroworld Tragedy and Titan: The Oceangate Submersible Disaster prove Netflix loves tragedy—packaged neat, optimized, and ready to binge.
flicks.com.au

The Surfer is Wake in Fright, with waves and wetsuits

Sun-scorched madness brews as Nic Cage battles beach bullies, broken dreams, and brutal Aussie heat.