Archive for April, 2010
April 2010 Pet Of The Month, Cassidy Cruise
by Meg on Apr.30, 2010, under More Pets
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CRUISE CONTROL
She was on a boat when she appeared as our August 2007 Pet of the Month, and now 27-year-old hottie Cassidy Cruise is making a splash in a swimming pool. Guess she just enjoys getting wet…
Photography: Mark Goldberg Continue reading “April 2010 Pet Of The Month, Cassidy Cruise” »
Inside The May 2010 Issue
by Meg on Apr.29, 2010, under Current Issue
Australian Penthouse May 2010 is out now!
Get the May issue of Australian Penthouse for the latest on who’s hot and what’s happening in your world today.
THE BABES
Pet of the Month JAYMA; RENEE PEREZ; KOBE; BAMBI & ASTRA; CAPRICE; JULIA CROWN; SHYLA; TORI & JAMES; HARMONY!
SIN CITY: CRIME AND CORRUPTION IN 20TH-CENTURY SYDNEY
by Meg on Apr.28, 2010, under Web Exclusives
FROM crooked police, politicians and judges, through to the shysters, hucksters and thugs who ran Sydney’s sub terrain, few cities have experienced such overt corruption as Sydney during the 20th century.
Organised crime held a grip on the city and corruption was rife, infiltrating the top levels of politics, law and justice.
Focusing on the 1940s to the 1980s, the new Sin City exhibition at the Justice & Police Museum will examine some of the audacious crimes, fascinating people and various vice trades – from suburban bookmakers and sly-grog sellers to narcotics dealers and flashy illegal casinos – that bankrolled corruption.
By presenting a mixture of new interviews, short biographies, rare objects and a comprehensive news archive, Sin City will uncover the elements of Sydney that condoned and encouraged corruption, and expose some of the popular myths associated with this celebrated topic. Sin City lifts the lid on lives that were made and ruined by organised crime including key players such as George Freeman, Lennie Macpherson, Neddy Smith and Chris Flannery.
This hard hitting exhibition coincides with a hard cover book by the same name to examine some of the big names and illicit activities that once earned Sydney the sordid reputation as one of the most corrupt cities in the western world.

Continue reading “SIN CITY: CRIME AND CORRUPTION IN 20TH-CENTURY SYDNEY” »
Reviews – Film: Greenberg
by Suzan Ryan on Apr.28, 2010, under Reviews, Web Exclusives
Greenberg
Director: Noah Baumbach
Stars: Ben Stiller, Greta Gerwig, Rhys Ifans, Jennifer Jason Leigh
Universal Pictures
Roger Greenberg (Ben Stiller) will make you feel uncomfortable—perhaps even angry. The too hip, too flip 40-year-old is so far removed from authentic emotion that he exists solely on a superficial level of human interaction where feelings are mere words to be disparaged or dealt out in order to get what you want. Roger Greenberg sits uncomfortably close to home, because Roger Greenberg lives in us all.
When it comes to cinema, the trick is to make an unlikeable character work on the screen for 2 hours—maintaining audience interest not only in his actions but also in the outcome of his character arc. Academy Award-nominated screenwriter/director Noah Baumbach (The Squid and the Whale) pulls this off, finessing emotional lines by examining honestly how crippled emotions, and fear, can affect our lives.
And while Stiller excels as the uptight and distant titular character Roger Greenberg, the heart and soul of the movie lies with Greta Gerwig, in her breakout role as the sweet and naïve Florence.
Florence is a personal assistant to Roger’s brother, Phillip (Chris Messina) and his wife. When Phillip and his family take a vacation, Roger arrives from New York to house-sit, where he finds himself marooned—in New York nobody drives, but in L.A., without a car, you’re stranded. And his initial excitement about meeting up with the friends and former lovers he left behind when he took off for the east coast 15 years ago dims as he realises that his friends have moved on while he has stagnated.
At 40, Roger hasn’t had a meaningful relationship in years, his L.A. friends have families and are either married, divorced or enduring painful separations, and his former flame, Beth (Leigh) doesn’t look as fondly on their early-20s relationship (or with as much gravitas) as Roger does. Roger is unable to connect on a level that doesn’t exist in the past, and it’s because his “present” is bereft of status, of meaning; he is suffering depression that he won’t admit to and he has no partner and no career. Roger feels like the world has changed and left him behind. But within this isolation and denial sits the luminous Florence (Gerwig).
Florence is the opposite of Roger: she is uncertain yet not insecure while Roger is opinionated yet terrified; she is finding her way and open to learning, whereas he is certain he has all the answers and is resistant to change. Florence lives in a single room studio apartment and sings at open-mike nights, and the soundtrack, by LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy, is both nostalgic and uplifting, buffering the movie and supporting the film’s message of underlying hope.
Roger’s former best friend and band mate Ivan (Ifans) is a separated father of one, who tries to connect with his former friend, but Roger takes no interest in Ivan’s life as it is now other than to encourage him to dump his wife. The singularity of Greenberg’s narcissism and self-involvement is painful yet familiar to watch. We’ve all met people who exist to serve themselves, who are involved only on their terms, who look over your shoulder in case a more exciting conversation companion arrives—it’s not personal, and they’re not malicious; they just can’t care about you as much as they do about themselves.
A pivotal scene involves Ivan and Roger meeting at a restaurant because it is Roger’s birthday. Roger tells Ivan about Florence, and on a whim, invites her to join them for lunch. But when she arrives, Roger is immediately uncomfortable—one on side is a friend who knows him too well and on the other is a woman onto whom he is projecting an idealised image of himself, so when a trio singing waiters approaches their table with cake, he freaks out. “I don’t want to be one of those L.A. people where it’s all about them!”, he screams. The irony being that Roger’s entire life has been about him; he has no sense of humour about himself and no perception of what’s real and what isn’t, only of what fits his idealised version of what’s cool and acceptable and what isn’t and therefore ripe for ridicule.
Roger can’t yet accept that now defines who he is, and it’s who you are now that matters, and the interplay between Florence and Roger throughout the film honestly and simply conveys the revelations we all face on the road to finding ourselves.
Greenberg is released in cinemas nationally on July 22
Contender: Nikita
by Meg on Apr.27, 2010, under Aussie Babes
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Nikita is an Aussie babe who would love to be in Penthouse! Vote for Nikita now!
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Contender: Zahra Storm
by Meg on Apr.27, 2010, under Aussie Babes
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Zahra Storm is an Aussie babe who would love to be in Penthouse! Vote for Zahra now!
Continue reading “Contender: Zahra Storm” »
Contender : Fabian
by swerve on Apr.27, 2010, under Aussie Babes
71 Comments :blonde, milf, Past Aussie Babes more...Contender: Summer
by Meg on Apr.21, 2010, under Aussie Babes
Leave a Comment :Past Aussie Babes more...Contender: Emma
by swerve on Apr.21, 2010, under Aussie Babes
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Emma is an Aussie babe who would love to be in Australian Penthouse, vote for Emma now!
Continue reading “Contender: Emma” »
Charlie
by Meg on Apr.16, 2010, under Girl Galleries
PICTURE PERFECT
A keen photographer and a dancer at Kittens in Melbourne, sexy 21-year-old Charlie is a pin-up girl fantasy come to life.
Photography: AUTOMODELZ
Continue reading “Charlie” »



