The Reel Rejects - MY COUSIN VINNY (1992) MOVIE REVIEW!! FIRST TIME WATCHING!!

Episode Date: February 17, 2024

HILARIOUS & SURPRISINGLY ON-POINT!! Save Money & Cancel Unwanted Subscriptions By Going To https://rocketmoney.com/rejects  Visit https://www.babbel.com/Rejects to save 55%!   My Cousin Vinny Full... Movie Reaction Watch Along: https://www.patreon.com/thereelrejects Finally checking out this beloved legal comedy! Coy Jandreau & Aaron Alexander give their First Time Reaction, Breakdown, Commentary, and Spoiler Review for the film starring Joe Pesci (Goodfellas, Casino, Lethal Weapon, The Irishman), Marisa Tomei (Spider-Man: No Way Home, The Wrestler, The Big Short), Ralph Macchio (The Karate Kid, Cobra Kai, The Outsiders), Mitchell Whitfield (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, TMNT), Fred Gwynne (The Munsters, Pet Sematary, Lane Smith (Red Dawn, The Mighty Ducks), Bruce McGill (Reacher, Nation Lampoon's Animal House, Law Abiding Citizen), James Rebhorn (Independence Day, The Talented Mr. Ripley), and MORE! Coy & Aaron react to all the best scenes & most hilarious moments including Automotive Expert / Metallic Mint Green Buick Skylark, Her Biological Clock, Two "Yutes", Deer Hunter, The Wrong Idea, The Defence is Wrong, Mona Lisa Vito, 7 Bushes, Cross Examination of Witness, Magic Grits, & beyond!! #MyCousinVinny #JoePesci #MarisaTomei #RalphMacchio #Grits #TwoYutes #Positraction #BuickSkylark #MovieReaction #FirstTimeWatching #FirstTimeWatchingMovieReaction #YouTubersReact  Follow Coy Jandreau: Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@coyjandreau?l... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/coyjandreau... Twitter: https://twitter.com/CoyJandreau Follow Aaron On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therealaaro... Support The Channel By Getting Some REEL REJECTS Aparrel! https://www.rejectnationshop.com/ Music Used In Manscaped Ad:  Hat the Jazz by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ POWERED BY @GFUEL Visit https://gfuel.ly/3wD5Ygo and use code REJECTNATION for 20% off select tubs!! Head Editor: https://www.instagram.com/praperhq/?hl=en Co-Editor: Greg Alba Music In Video: Airport Lounge - Disco Ultralounge by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Ask Us A QUESTION On CAMEO: https://www.cameo.com/thereelrejects Follow TheReelRejects On FACEBOOK, TWITTER, & INSTAGRAM:  FB: https://www.facebook.com/TheReelRejects/ INSTAGRAM:  https://www.instagram.com/reelrejects/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thereelrejects Follow GREG On INSTAGRAM & TWITTER: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/thegregalba/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thegregalba Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:00 Don't worry, though. Sierra also has yoga gear. It might be a good place to find your zen. Discover top brands at unexpectedly low prices. Sierra, let's get moving. This video is brought to by Rocket Money and Babel. It is time to dive in to my cousin, Vinnie. That was a lot of fun. That was a hell of a lot of fun. Like, what a joyous time at the movies. That was like, I hate the expression. They don't make them like they used to. too, but I was thinking the whole time, I didn't get, I get the technical prowess of anatomy of a fall, but I didn't connect to it to best picture, best actor. Like, I just, it felt like it could have been an episode of Law and Order.
Starting point is 00:01:48 And I was wondering what other people connected to in a way I didn't. And then, I don't have to turn this down. It's okay. I got you. Oh, hold on. It's the orange one. but I couldn't connect with it in a way that felt like it was superior
Starting point is 00:02:03 to excellent law and order or something that felt like procedural but longer. This was the difference. This felt like a movie. This felt like it had characters that I wanted to follow outside of it. It felt like it had a rhythm and flow and it was fun. The fun wasn't what's separated. And I didn't even fall is insightful
Starting point is 00:02:23 and passionate and good. But it still just felt like a two-hour captivating show this felt like a movie and there's something different to me pacing atmospherically like this to me is more best picture than
Starting point is 00:02:38 an anime of a fall no disrespect to anatomy of the fall I just like when Barbie got best picture but not best director or best actress a lot of people were like well what would you take out and for me best director Greta Gerwig over for me an animal fall and best actor over
Starting point is 00:02:55 and like I don't think Sondra Heller did a bad job job, but to me, what Margo brought had a lot more to it. And this is what I would now point to now that I've seen it of like what I thought was missing from not even fall, this had. Because this was all the things I want in a movie and it was a cop, I mean, like procedural
Starting point is 00:03:11 judge thing, but it never felt like law and order except for when we joked about the score. But like, at no point what I felt like this was episodic. At no point did this feel like something I'd just tune into. Yeah, I know. I had a really good sense of pacing and it did feel like a movie. And I like the fact that the first half of it really, like this comedy, even though it had the core elements in it.
Starting point is 00:03:30 But once he finally became that lawyer, it was like a captivating, like, law case, like some classic law and order, but like in a film form. And, yeah, this movie had a really good balance of not only being funny, being smart with his humor, but also having those moments of a genuine connection between him and Mercer Tomey's character and finding a way to use those serious moments to help us, endear us to this character because when he first comes under the scene he's like he's an experience he's a joke but he takes himself seriously yeah because he knows he can do it and over the course of the events that take place around the court case we we become endeared and we
Starting point is 00:04:13 believe in him as well because of the fact that he oh he doesn't know the book smarts but he's good at arguing he's good at um navigating situations he has the sense of intuition to him yeah and And yeah, I definitely see that why this was a Oscar contender for sure. It's funny that you brought up an adity of a fall. I'm actually as a recording this. I'm going to watch it tonight because I haven't seen it yet. Yeah. It was crazy. Well, I hope I didn't give it anything away.
Starting point is 00:04:39 But I also hope that you get more out of it than I did because that's what I always want out of movies. Like I don't like not connecting in a way that other people have. I'd always rather connect. I don't rather like when people love a movie and I don't feel any sense of like I'm going to make a YouTube video about it. I just go like, oh, it's a bummer. I got two less hours of my life of joy.
Starting point is 00:04:55 So I hope that you find another one of these. It's funny you're having such a procedural day. Yeah, I'm just like, okay, I'm down for some long. Let's get it. But I do think this also set a lot of really beautiful seeds in a way that I don't see a lot of procedures doing long form where the grits were vital, the mud was vital, the setting of the south was vital, not just for comedy, but also for narrative. The setting allowed for the jury to have an innate sense of character, the judge to have an
Starting point is 00:05:20 innate sense of character, the prosecutor, the circumstances around them, but then also the details of the case were so specifically Southern. Like there's no grits coming up in New England Like that's you know what I mean Like that's really interesting And the and the mud element Was a comedic tone for them to get stuck And that I thought was better than
Starting point is 00:05:36 There was a moment when they woke up I think a lesser comedy Would have had them be late Yeah And I remember him looking at his watch And I would have been like Yeah you'd wake up at the sunrise And I would have judged it more if they were late
Starting point is 00:05:47 But when it was mud I was like oh they took the smarter comedic route And then I wasn't even thinking mud Would tie in later And also the planting of the seeds With Marissa Tomei she's doubted throughout the film and I expected the twist being
Starting point is 00:05:59 you know her knowledge was so important to him I didn't expect it to be car knowledge and that's a way more powerful thing for her to have than her to be suddenly better at law than him because that invalidates him
Starting point is 00:06:15 and it's like he actually studied law so it would have felt a little like cheapened whereas the car being the thing it's like her knowledge obviously assisted him but her knowledge is the thing that put it over the top and I loved that. No, yeah. She was in assistance of this case, but she shined of her own.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Her own knowledge, yeah. Exactly. Yeah, I think there's a lot of really good stuff about this. One thing I will say is that I thought that when this movie started, even though it was my cousin Vinny, that it seemed like Ralph Mafio and his friend were going to be like the leads of the movie or like be more prominent, but then it kind of like put them in the back burner and then very much it was their movie, which I thought was really cool.
Starting point is 00:06:55 um yeah we talked we talked about the score a little bit and how that was really unique unique yeah had like it's uh it's this levity to it in the beginning and then it really got serious towards the end and then found the mix at the end then yeah yeah yeah it kind of was like a like a what do they call it when there's a sweet when it combines different sounds throughout and makes a new sound it felt like that was you know fun fun fun somber law somber law fun somber law like it became this its own thing and and that's what the movie is and i was really impressed at the score, I rarely notice it. It's not a thing that I usually, I just personally am not that tuned, but I noticed it a lot in this and had a really good time with it. I definitely think that's something that isn't as common in today's movies, the joy in a score. But I also find that I don't,
Starting point is 00:07:42 there's something inherently unique about 80s and 90s cinema where it can be situationally funny, it can be earnestly dramatic, and it can have really strong performances, but it's still more immediately, watchable. There's something like USA, T&T, TBS, about
Starting point is 00:07:59 the 20 years of movie where I don't know if it's, some of it's nostalgia, some of it's circumstantial to my love of the time, and I think there's a subconscious element to my psychology where there's pattern recognition for wardrobe and location and film aesthetic that I'm inherently more comfortable.
Starting point is 00:08:15 Like, I think there's a familiarity of meal. Like when you eat a meal that tastes like something you know, and there's a couple new ingredients, you're more likely to like the whole you know the whole dish like the whole thing
Starting point is 00:08:29 you know becomes an accompaniment whereas like a lot of movies today I don't get as immediately settled and comfortable so maybe I'm giving it a little bit more brusiness because I'm not as settled whereas this felt like something
Starting point is 00:08:39 I could throw on any point and that doesn't belittle those things whereas a lot of times movies that are quality and excellent now I can't casually watch as easily there's something really wonderful about this time yeah there's the sense of taking its content seriously
Starting point is 00:08:54 with a sense of levity to it as well. And I like that it does have that that easy watch kind of quality to it. No matter what you can put this on in the background or you can show this to a friend. Now that I've seen it. Now that I've seen it. Exactly. It'd be hell of disrespectful to be like, I wonder if they win. Watch the end. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:09:12 I agree. No, no. I think it does those things very well. And I don't watch, I haven't watched a wealth of 90s comedies like this. Oh, granted, since I've been here, like watching more Adam Sandler's and like stuff. of that uh of that season of that time but watching an older movie watching it's the way that it does
Starting point is 00:09:31 its comedy whether it's the situational stuff and like and think it's it's smart situational because it's it's able to have this this dialogue where you see where both characters are coming from but um those two two things clashing together that discomfort of it makes it more hilarious and it takes the unbelievably to just a notch too far but not so far that it becomes farce exactly yeah yeah It's still within the realm of believability And yeah And I wish that more comedies were like this Because I feel like we entered an era
Starting point is 00:10:02 Within like the early 2000s Where it was very like over the top Or like a lesser movie would have made certain bits Go on for like a little bit too long Because like huh you get the joke Or more like punchy humor with dialogue Which is fine if a movie's got comedic jokes That are delivered to camera
Starting point is 00:10:17 I don't mind jokes in film But I think that sometimes if you do Situational humor and jokes it negates them both Or if you don't get the tone that you need one or the other. And I think this did a really good job. Like, there weren't a lot of, like, zingers. It was the world building that made it funny.
Starting point is 00:10:30 Exactly, exactly. It was the world building. It was the type of characters that we had. It was the connections between them. And, yeah, man, we just don't see that a lot these days. It's funny that we watched, me and John watched Big Daddy. And that movie, have you seen that movie? Yeah, have, yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:47 Yeah, so that movie also ends with a court case. But I feel like this movie did that so much better. even though that movie had heart to it and it's also a comedy but I feel like it found that balance of in spite of the fact that it was this comedy had that layer of taking its content with a degree of seriousness
Starting point is 00:11:04 You're gonna genre as court case man That's a lot that's three Like that's sorry I just noticed it's like your big daddy this And then going in Maddiville fall Oh look at the courtroom man Let's in it been in the law Man isn't genre content court
Starting point is 00:11:16 No we were gonna say something right Yeah I was just gonna say like I think that a big daddy is a very similar tonally, but I do think this does it better. I'm agreeing with, like, I think that this movie establishes a world a little stronger so that when things go to an 11, it feels more like it's suiting that world versus Big Daddy. I definitely feel like it's like sometimes it, Sandler's where it's just like, I get it. And I like Adam Sandler, but there's moments that definitely feel like they're for Sandler comedy's sake
Starting point is 00:11:46 versus versus the world building. And respectfully, Marissa Toome. Yeah. God damn, just respectfully. Just like, I'm just like, damn woman. I just want to give, and also,
Starting point is 00:11:58 shoulder pads. This movie is 32 years old now. Wow, 32 years old. Marissa Tomei is aging like, why. Fine, like I just got acknowledged like 32 years is, I mean, a life.
Starting point is 00:12:11 A whole life's life. And she looks. It's more life than me. Immaculate. Immaculate. So I just wanted to give, I just wanted to give love to Marist Tomey. Aunt May.
Starting point is 00:12:18 Aunt Bay, doing the work. All right, Reject. Nation, let's get real for a moment. Running this channel is incredible. But managing finances, especially taxes and budgeting, both for the channel and my personal life, can be overwhelming. That's where Rocket Money has been a financial lifesaver for me, even before I ever partnered up with them. Like I said, I've been very fortunate to be working with brands whose products I already use, so it's a win-win for them. But it can be a win-win for you too because there's a reason I use them. Rocket Money is a personal finance app that simplifies managing money by canceling
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Starting point is 00:15:43 Comunicacion. we're done with this app now i got to also say joe pesci uh i forgot about home alone when i was listing right home alone i haven't seen him he is okay i'm not crazy yeah yeah i'm not being heightest it's not just because it was a small guy uh i thought it was as soon as i said it i was like am i somehow stereotyping short men angry
Starting point is 00:16:09 um yeah like little angry italian men um i'm glad it's him but also another different type. Like he's very, hey, that Joe Pesci's gone places. He's going to have a long career. I'm 30 years behind and complimenting the work of Joe Pesci, but like he's so good that I didn't even think of him in a role like this because he's so versatile. He's super versatile, and I wish that I would see more Joe Pesci around these days
Starting point is 00:16:33 because he's super good. I haven't, I started it. Don't hate me. I started it, but the Irishman. I know he's in that. Yeah, that's much more of that good fellas. I mean, it's Scorsese, obviously, and all that stuff. as a lover of Scorsese
Starting point is 00:16:46 Irishman doesn't make my top five so I'm not offending to the finish okay I think Scorsese is one of the greatest filmmakers to ever live Irishman just didn't connect with me because the de-aging was so distracting for me that when there's a point where like De Niro's de-age to be like a 20 year old
Starting point is 00:17:01 but like he still moves like a seven-year-old so I felt really uncomfortable I was like I feel bad for everyone involved because it's it's De Niro moves amazing for a seven-year-old the fact that De Niro's like rocking around like I'm like Yeah, but he doesn't move himaving for a 20-year-old. And it pulls you out of the narrative, and it makes it more of a, like, I'm out of the story because I had a moment to be like, oh, right, no, De Niro.
Starting point is 00:17:21 And then you just don't think of it. And that pulled me out consistently. There's a lot of moments like that where I'm like, I wish they'd just cast younger or I wish they'd made a different choice or the technology is not there yet. Don't make that part of the story. Yeah. Whereas Pesci and De Niro in Goodfellas, they had a time go by, but it was never a thing that was so aggressively far in the future or past that you were thinking about them. You were in the story. So this is a great peshy for me because it was the most comedic next to Lethawain,
Starting point is 00:17:50 but it was the opposite character. In Lethal Weapon, he's inept but lovable, and you are confused why you love him because he's so cloying and greeting and like he's grating on your nerves. And in this, you're like, oh, he's not the right guy for the job, but he's all heart. And he's not treating her well, but you can tell he loves her because they establish so many scenes of their love and their passion. and that's how they fight, that the love is the first thing, the annoyance is back there. Lethal weapon,
Starting point is 00:18:18 the annoyance is first, and you reluctantly love him. So they're almost the inverse character. So I really love this because I was like, oh, Pesci, because it's really hard to play the exact opposite of yourself comedically.
Starting point is 00:18:30 Interesting. And I'm now I'm curious who Pesci's more like. You know what I mean? You really want to make me watch that movie. Dude, the Litha Weapons transcend. I need to watch lethal weapons
Starting point is 00:18:38 of all time. I've probably watched Leitha Weapon more than 30 times. Wow. Damn. Like, I love that movie. That's a comfort movie and an every Christmas movie.
Starting point is 00:18:45 Shit. Just saying. What's your, okay, comedy, drama, the spectrum of movies, what is your barometer for what makes a good movie for you? In order to get five stars,
Starting point is 00:18:55 which only 27 films ever have. Wow. I've rated 2,700-something movies. 27, like less than 1%. That's a incredible. No, I'm at 3,000 now. 3,000 films, 27 I got in five stars. Wow.
Starting point is 00:19:07 3,000 films. Jesus. That's amazing. Technical prowess, acting, directing, originality of story impact personally and then the big one
Starting point is 00:19:17 to make it five stars versus four and a half is rewatchability. So a movie can be exceptional and can have all those other things but if I don't feel like rewatching it again
Starting point is 00:19:23 I give it four and a half because like that's an A but it's not an A plus because like I need to want to go back in. Yeah. To me, Leitha Weapon is an A plus because it's something
Starting point is 00:19:32 I've watched too many times and I think it's so genre redefining and I think it's a lot of those things but like what's a good example like both Paddingtons are five star but like like I adore a knight's tail. I adore it, but it's four and a half.
Starting point is 00:19:46 Okay. Because there are things that I'm like, I don't think this is for everyone. It's too specific to me. So I can't give it the A plus because I could understand how someone wouldn't love it. So like if it's, if it doesn't appeal on a general sense, you like knock a, I acknowledge that to have a five star, I think it's more universal. Okay, okay. Whereas like Paddington, if you don't like Paddington, I'm like, that's odd.
Starting point is 00:20:06 Hmm. I've seen, okay, I've seen the part of the first Patterson. I need to see the second one. But when people don't like it That gives me more of like I'm not gonna think less of you But I'm definitely gonna be like I'm surprised by that
Starting point is 00:20:18 But if someone doesn't know like a night sale I'm not surprised I'm just like oh that's a really specific movie It's not your couple You know what I mean? We have different tastes Yeah Whereas I think the Matrix is a five star film
Starting point is 00:20:27 But if you hate like sci-fi It might not be for you But I'd be more like Well that's not your genre So you wouldn't have ever given it a chance So it's not gonna you know what I mean Yeah I feel like for me It's like kind of something you talked about
Starting point is 00:20:37 Like it is that feeling that invokes in me I can recognize the the difference between like oh that was a very well-made movie versus like oh that was a really good movie for me to me yeah and i think that watchability is something that is really important to me like when i get excited about movie or i know when i love a movie it's like oh i want to show this to other people yeah and like i want to experience this i want to not only watch it again so i can catch other things or relive that that experience but i want to see you react to the things that i experience and i want to share it with people exactly yeah you want to know that you're spreading the work like to me this is four and a half stars
Starting point is 00:21:09 yeah this is super high for me like i i gave this the reason i gave in that whole system was because i think this is four and a half stars this is an a this is acting directing fun score very rewatchable very heartwarming a good share movie like i want to share this people everyone else has already seen it but uh here we are we caught up 32 years later but uh let us know in the comments below what you guys thought uh for us four and a half four and a half yeah absolutely blast love this movie understand the appeal now going to look into all those character actors in the 80s 90s, I was like, I know them. And there were so many.
Starting point is 00:21:41 Like, I think that the guy that was the expert on tires was in, like, ER or something. He looked super familiar. Anyway, exceptional film, adored it. Joe Pesci, he's going places. Marissa Tomei is perfection. We just learned in real time. Please like this video. Please subscribe.
Starting point is 00:21:56 Please let us know what else are blind spots you want us to watch next. Leave a comment below. Do you enjoy my cousin Vinny? I hope you do, because it's an A for us. Much love, Reject Nation. We'll see you soon. David Gandy. my friend
Starting point is 00:22:10 David Gandy This is a romantic month It's the V month My friend It's a romantic month Now if I know you And believe me I do know you
Starting point is 00:22:25 I do I'm gonna say Don't Enjoy this month of romance And love Don't be tempted With another body No
Starting point is 00:22:36 You enjoy it with God the way you want to you take all that love and sexual tension and you convert it to your love for a god yeah go out
Starting point is 00:22:50 do what you want with it pray reflect behold the majesty of his creation and then you know maybe do some like we don't know God's pronouns that's true their
Starting point is 00:23:01 God's God's creation don't just assume so Dr. Who says that's true I should be listening to the word of the doctor, most certainly. And that's a way in which, you know, you live much better than I do, David. You're an inspiration to each and every one of us to appreciate, you know, whoever, however God likes to be described, the creation, you know, brought forth, you know, and you are here to capture it.
Starting point is 00:23:28 You are here to put it through your unique lens and prism, and we can all be inspired by that. I would love for you to sing a cover of, And if our God is for us, then who could ever stop us? That's a great song. There's some great Christian songs. Let's hear it. I just did it. I mean, give me the CD.
Starting point is 00:23:50 Give me a link. What can I? Burn me, get me a mixed cassette tape so I can listen to it in my car. With the top down. That's good. I need to hear more. Russian rock music. I was born again!
Starting point is 00:24:08 Is it heavy? Is it like Christian new metal? Have you never been to like a Christian church where they have like a rock group? You know, I haven't. I'm not Christian. I will tell you guys that I genuinely love the music and I get down with it. I've never been to rock and roll church. They are awesome.
Starting point is 00:24:26 I would love to see that. You get a good one like on a holidays or a rich area. sure sure like Newport Beach there's one of Newport Beach I went to once is it so like it's like Bentley's in the
Starting point is 00:24:41 oh yeah it's a little bit of irony before you go in this everybody they'd be tithing for mojacks right off he is
Starting point is 00:24:50 and uh god created all and that includes the capitalists but like the lights the light show that happens with it it is like a rock and rum
Starting point is 00:25:02 for i'm not being uh sarcastic is this the white people rock and roll equivalent of like a really passionate like baptist ceremony or something like that where it's just like everyone's really into it and it's like joyous and yeah i mean kind of but like just with way more production value and money behind us i've never been to a baptist church that sounds fun my idea of everyone i've seen in a movie yeah uh and and then also you know you could also learn more about love this month through uh i i know sometimes you know a lot of these Christian speakers often get like a lot of flack for you know certain things they believe in
Starting point is 00:25:36 say but it's a while they say things that I'm like there's some good messages here you know there's some things that are really good and uh and uh and uh you know I there's been like some nice messages I've heard from like Joel Austin and Joyce Myers absolutely her Joyce Meyer she's good and um oh my God what is his name uh John C Maxwell no he's not like a he's Christian I think he's like a pastor or something but I've heard his talks on other things outside of that and so yeah man there's a lot of ways you can find like some really good love so all jokes aside i'm saying this to say that i know religion is sensitive and i want to follow it up with don't worry i really respect a lot about it
Starting point is 00:26:17 absolutely it is so they can inspire a lot of beauty so going a day with god this month david yes leave room for the holy spirit take him now for free breakfast at at meant to say sticks at olive garden take him out for a breakfast of breadsticks at the olive garden love you buddy

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