
by Kevin Muller
Another year, another 365 days of films that both made me cringe and celebrate the art of movies. Let’s get the worst out of the way!

by Kevin Muller
Another year, another 365 days of films that both made me cringe and celebrate the art of movies. Let’s get the worst out of the way!

Check out our review of the new movie starring Glenn Howerton of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, BlackBerry. It tells the story of the meteoric rise and catastrophic demise of the world’s first smartphone.
#BlackBerry #BlackBerryMovie #MovieReview
“The story of the meteoric rise and catastrophic demise of the world’s first smartphone.”

by Kevin Muller
Parody is truly an art form. Mel Brooks, who did “Space Balls”, “History of the World: part 1,” and many others are that deemed classic, and David Zucker, who directed the hilarious “The Naked Gun” series, were masters of making the silly seem easy. Though it may appear that way, it is anything but simple. When it doesn’t work, it just fails horribly and isn’t even in the slightest bit funny or have any redeeming qualities. Over the last ten years, many parodies have been released and have been forgotten. Those specific movies fail to hit the balance correctly and just come off as plain idiotic, but not in a good way. How does the musical comedy group ‘The Lonely Island” do in this genre?

With Netflix streaming becoming more and more popular, the service has begun to buy movies and television shows exclusively for their network. While they started with some more popular projects, they have branched out to begin airing smaller, passion projects for its audience to enjoy. Paul Rust’s Love is one of those projects. Continue reading