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#Rory Scovel
jodegg · 1 year
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Posted this to twitter earlier but thought tumblr would also appreciate watching Rhys Darby getting backed up against a wall and pushing Rory Scovel onto the ground
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rhysdarbinizedarby · 11 months
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Dear Pennies and Pallers,
This week we are joined by our friend Rhys Darby! In letter one, Jacqueline asks what we would do if we experienced a sensual ghost encounter. Letter two is from Brendan, who wants to know about our dangerous hobbies.
We also hear great stories from Rhys, including his mom’s greeting card habits, his first time bungee jumping, and the time he climbed Mount Kilimanjaro!
We wish you well, sincerely,
Your Pen Pals Daniel Van Kirk and Rory Scovel
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letterboxd-loggd · 1 year
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Babylon (2022) Damien Chazelle
February 5th 2023
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It's still Kate Berlant Month on my website, and I have a new article up: 10 fun facts about Kate!
You can find out about her acting career, her amazingly creative family (hint: they have a connection to the king of mockumentaries haha), and her relationships with other famous comedians, including Bo Burnham (she says he runs comedy right now lol), Reggie Watts, Rory Scovel, Sarah Silverman, and site-favorite Maria Bamford.
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Enjoy, and keep it here for more Kate Berlant and comedy fun! ✌🏼🐔
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genevieveetguy · 1 year
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It's written in the stars, I am a star.
Babylon, Damien Chazelle (2022)
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tinamy15months · 2 years
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The House (2017)
Closing credit
Will Ferrell as Scott Johansen
Amy Poehler as Kate Johansen
Jason Mantzoukas as Frank Theodorakis
Nick Kroll as Bob Schaeffer
Allison Tolman as Dawn Mayweather
Michaela Watkins as Raina Theodorakis
Jeremy Renner as Tommy Papouli
Ryan Simpkins as Alex Johansen
Rob Huebel as Police Officer Chandler
Jessie Ennis as Rachel
Rory Scovel as Joe Mayweather
Lennon Parham as Martha
Cedric Yarbrough as Reggie Henderson
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ramascreen · 1 year
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Watch This BABYLON Ensemble Featurette
Watch This BABYLON Ensemble Featurette
BABYLON is in theaters now! Catch Li Jun Li, Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie, Diego Calva, Jovan Adepo, and more in this truly wild ride of a film. Here’s a brand new featurette for you with the whole ensemble on the making of the movie! New film footage adn interviews featuring the boldest ensemble of the year.  Paramount Pictures Presents A Marc Platt / Wild Chickens / Organism Pictures Production A…
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jayfinch · 1 year
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Babylon
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Babylon
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Babylon    [trailer]
A tale of outsized ambition and outrageous excess, it traces the rise and fall of multiple characters during an era of unbridled decadence and depravity in early Hollywood.
Maybe as a result of lowered expectations I enjoyed it more than I thought I would after the somewhat negative reviews.
It still feels excessive but there were some captivating scenes like the parallel movie making montage and crazy ones like the rattlesnake fight.
And maybe less would've been more, but to follow the story arcs of Manny, Nellie, Jack, Sidney and Lady Fay wasn't uninteresting.
I wonder if Olivia Wilde's role at some point was meant to be more substantial.
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thackerycinx · 2 years
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rhysdarbinizedarby · 1 year
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New instastory from Rhys Darby, including full clip here!
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rookie-critic · 1 year
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Babylon (2022, dir. Damien Chazelle) - review by Rookie-Critic
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Babylon was overlong, overstuffed, and over-everything. This is a textbook example of how to jam-pack so much into your movie and make things so non-stop wild that it just becomes a bumbling mess by the time the movie is over. With contradicting messaging and the romanticizing of an era that is really probably not worthy of romanticizing, by the time the movie was even at its halfway point (which is about what the runtime of the film should have actually been) I began to question what exactly Chazelle was trying to get across. He loves movies, but I guess likes the mid-to-late 20s silent film era the most? Perhaps. Although, maybe it's a general love for the art of film making we're seeing, and Chazelle just decided to have a large portion of the film dedicated to showing how soulless and robotic early talkies were? Like I said, the movie falls over on itself constantly, and if the goal was to show how magical making movies is, then he straight up failed, because it looks like a nightmare and shit show (also incredibly deadly, apparently). There are a handful of great ideas here, and maybe if the film had focused up on telling a great story about one or two protagonists instead of four or five, as well as cut its runtime in half, we might have had the best thing he's made since Whiplash on our hands. The best scenes in the movie are the ones that calm everything down and allow two characters to have a genuine moment of connection, and we learn things about the characters that I'm way more interested in than whatever the next absolutely cacophonous madhouse that awaits in the next scene is.
I can't deny that there were things about it that I did like, and the things I liked, I liked quite a bit. Diego Calva is a fantastic actor, and I love seeing big directors like Chazelle give lesser known actors like Calva a chance to really shine and have that breakout performance, of which this is most definitely his. Jovan Adepo, for what little screen time he does get, is also one of the highlights, and I wish the movie had taken a little bit of the runtime away from the less interesting protagonists (Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie's characters) and given it to Adepo, because I feel like he could have quite possibly been the most interesting character in the entire film had the time been invested in him. I don't mean to say that Pitt and Robbie do a bad job in the film, they're two masterclass actors and do a great job as their characters, I just personally didn't find their characters that engaging or interesting in the first place. Also, for as much as I have been rallying against the "muchness" of Babylon, one of my absolute favorite sequences in the entire film is the scene involving Tobey Maguire's mob boss character. It is one of the most genuinely unsettling and freaky pieces of any film I've seen this year and it's not even in a movie that could kind of be considered a horror film. Maguire oozes deplorability and absolutely steals the entire movie away from anyone else every second that he's on screen. The things that happen during that sequence are things I have not really been able to make leave my head since leaving the theater and, god, I wish I could.
I'm sure Chazelle wanted Babylon to be considered his magnum opus, that's definitely how the film reads, but it really just comes across as a movie that tries way too hard to keep the audience engaged, when it didn't really need even a quarter of the amount of flash and wildness that it had in order to accomplish that. Calva's performance alone would have been enough, and the parts of the film that worked would have just been bonus points. However, as it stands, Babylon just feels like a movie reveling in its own excess, and none of the sentiment it throws out in its final act is enough to save it from all of the unnecessary pieces that preceded it.
Score: 6/10
Currently only in theaters.
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jmunneytumbler · 1 year
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'Babylon' is an Overlong, Overexcited Warping of 'Singin' in the Rain'
Babble on! (CREDIT: Scott Garfield/Paramount Pictures) Starring: Margot Robbie, Brad Pitt, Diego Calva, Jean Smart, Jovan Adepo, Li Jun Li, Lukas Haas, Max Minghella, Samara Weaving, Olivia Wilde, Katherine Waterston, Flea, Jeff Garlin, Olivia Hamilton, P.J. Byrne, Rory Scovel, Eric Roberts, Tobey Maguire Director: Damien Chazelle Running Time: 188 Minutes Rating: R for Bacchanalian Partying,…
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the-richie · 2 months
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“ I’ve read more of the Bible than Jesus, is that funny?“
~Rory Scovel
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geekvibesnation · 6 months
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