
Henry Hill reacts to the first trailer for The Irishman from legendary director Martin Scorsese.
#TheIrishman #MartinScorsese #IHeardYouPaintHouses

Henry Hill reacts to the first trailer for The Irishman from legendary director Martin Scorsese.
#TheIrishman #MartinScorsese #IHeardYouPaintHouses

On this episode of the Cinephellas Podcast, Henry and Logan talk about Stranger Things Season 3 and the upcoming Season 4, Halloween 2 (2020), and More!
#CinephellasPodcast #StrangerThings #Halloween #AmericanHorrorStory1984

“One Summer Can Change Everything.” Logan Myerz travels back to Hawkins, Indiana to review Season 3 of Stranger Things that was released on July 4th!
#StrangerThings #StrangerThings3 #TVReview

The Cinephellas bring you back into the world of C2E2 in Chicago! Including the Clueless Reunion with Paul Rudd, Freaks and Geeks panel, AMC’s N0S4A2, cosplay, video games, anime, and much more!
#c2e219 #C2E2 #c2e22019 #Reviews #NOS4A2 #PaulRudd #Clueless #FreaksandGeeks
We want to give a special thanks to C2E2 for having the Cinephellas! See ya’ll next year!

Once you cross this line, there’s no going back. Logan Myerz reviews J.C. Chandor’s new heist film Triple Frontier now streaming on Netflix.
#TripleFrontier #Netflix #MovieReview #NetflixReview
“Loyalties are tested when five former special forces operatives reunite to steal a drug lord’s fortune, unleashing a chain of unintended consequences.”

One summer can change everything… Check out our Stranger Things Season 3 trailer reaction and review. The show returns to Netflix on July 4th!
#StrangerThings #StrangerThings3 #Netflix #TrailerReaction

Logan Myerz reviews the first season of The Umbrella Academy that’s now streaming on Netflix.
#TheUmbrellaAcademy #UmbrellaAcademy #NetflixReview
“A disbanded group of superheroes reunites after their adoptive father, who trained them to save the world, dies.”

Director Steven Soderbergh is nothing if not unconventional or unique. I may not always be crazy about the final product he might provide, but he’s at least playful with the medium. With High Flying Bird, he continues the trend of making unconventional choices by filming his second movie on an iPhone. It’s not an ideal choice, but I was willing to see what he was going to do with it. This unusual decision ends up working out in the end as it effectively fits with the narrative of the protagonist’s DIY plan to bring the game of basketball back to its players. High Flying Bird may not fully coalesce from a narrative standpoint, but the actors and the snappy screenplay by Moonlight writer Tarell Alvin McCraney help to make it a breezy watch.

First off, what the fuck was this supposed to be? I get that it’s supposed to be a commentary on the art world and a horror movie at the same time, but I literally don’t get what I’m supposed to get from it outside of that. There’s so many plot threads and downtime in between all the crazy parts that it causes the movie to have an inconsistent tone. Am I supposed to laugh or be scared or just think? Velvet Buzzsaw is a nearly 2 hour cocktease of a movie that has some interesting ideas, but it wants to tackle too much, and really ends up doing none of it very well. I understand the main idea though. There’s a lot of jaded pretentious art people. I got this right away and there was nothing new that the smartest comedies to even the most bottom of the barrel satires haven’t already done communicating that same idea. Art people are pretentious. It takes a large bulk of its run-time making sure we get that as we’re seeing a lot of these characters just living their life functioning around this world.

“All Art is Dangerous.” We reviewed Dan Gilroy’s (Nightcrawler) newest film, Velvet Buzzsaw starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Rene Russo.
#VelvetBuzzsaw #MovieReview
“After a series of paintings by an unknown artist are discovered, a supernatural force enacts revenge on those who have allowed their greed to get in the way of art.”