Roger Avary

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Roger Avary

Roger Avary

@AVARY

Director, producer, and Oscar™-winning screenwriter. CEO of General Cinema Dynamics Corporation.

These United States of America Joined Ekim 2008
727 Following23.8K Followers
Roger Avary
Roger Avary@AVARY·
@RMBee Dude, without question James Buchanan was the worst president of all time! After that dog, Joe Biden!
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Robert Meyer Burnett, Viceroy of Verisimilitude
Donald Trump’s second term is the single worst Presidential term in American history. By a wide margin. Change my mind.
Haviv Rettig Gur@havivrettiggur

Welp, I think we're done here. Trump himself is now saying he buckled under the pressure of Hormuz. It's as bad as it could possibly be. He's saying aloud that Iran can have anything it wants because America can't afford the staring contest. If this is his own explanation in his own words, then the fact that the sanctions relief is front-loaded...suddenly becomes important. The fact that the inspections regime that will verify compliance will be negotiated by an American side that has already admitted defeat, that needs this more than the opponent needs it...is now significant. And the fact that the proxy system is now recognized as legitimate by the United States -- is suddenly exactly the disaster you feared it might be. And the fact that America has declared aloud that it's not actually capable of imposing its will even in the world's most vital energy chokepoints, causing its allies in the Gulf to already begin to seek a new accommodation with Iran -- makes all of this worse than Obama and worse than the JCPOA. Remember: the great unfixable flaw of the JCPOA that none of its boosters ever had a good answer for was that it merely kicked the can down the road. It solved nothing. Trump's deal, as of this moment, is not even close to accomplishing so much. "Iran never won a war and never lost a negotiation," Trump famously said of Obama's deal (as a reporter reminded him at today's press conference). Ironic that the Iranians would win a negotiation most spectacularly against a man who styles himself the greatest negotiator to ever grace the White House. So what does it all mean? It means that in the coming years, nuclear programs will sprout like mushrooms after the rain throughout the Middle East. It means that many nations will now build out new and larger ballistic missile arsenals. It means that the state system will give way before the march of the region's transnational ideological axes. Minorities will again be trampled, new wars will be fought by stronger states to dominate the power vacuums within weaker ones. You're thinking of Israel in Lebanon -- but that's just a specific campaign against a specific enemy. Think Turkey, which right now occupies a region of Syria vastly larger than Israel's presence in Lebanon. Think heightened Iranian support for the Houthis in Yemen and a new influx of money and guns to the different sides in Libya. It means, in other words, that we will have a few more wars to fight, a few more technologies to invent to deal with this new age of cheap missiles and drones -- and also of supersonic Chinese missiles bearing nuclear warheads that Iran will eventually, inevitably, be capable of deploying against us. And it didn't have to be this bad. (And maybe, when he's heard all the criticism, it won't be.) He could have left something, anything, to concede later. He could have kept the Iranians a little bit in the dark, just a smidgen, as to just how defeated America feels. Israel's position in all this is simple, and more or less unchanged from last week. America gave us more than we had a right to ask for. But we may be going it alone from here out. Dust off the nukes. Maybe test one somewhere far away from anywhere. Quadruple the interceptor production lines, double the size of the Mossad and the Air Force. And no, don't let Hezbollah breathe, not for a second. It's the 1960s again. And Israel will have to defeat a couple more enemies before it can once again eke out a few decades of peace.

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Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
EVERY FUCKING PERSON WHO HAS BEEN SCREAMING ABOUT THE EPSTEIN FILES FOR MONTHS... ...IS DEAD FUCKING SILENT ABOUT A QUARTER-OF-A-MILLION WHITE GIRLS BEING GANG RAPED BY MUSLIMS!!! I DON'T GIVE A DAMN ABOUT WHAT ANY OF YOU FUCKING PEOPLE HAVE TO SAY EVER AGAIN!!!!!!
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Roger Avary
Roger Avary@AVARY·
@cfryant Try watching a few episodes of Secret Agent (Danger Man) beforehand.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
The politicians who turned a blind eye to the Rape of Britain must go to prison
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Christian Toto
Christian Toto@HollywoodInToto·
Had a GREAT chat with director Uwe Boll about his new film, 'Citizen Vigilante' This film will rock the culture, no doubt
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Roger Avary
Roger Avary@AVARY·
@cfryant It’s the best television program of all time.
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Roger Avary
Roger Avary@AVARY·
@WillyB_303 @elonmusk We’ve already built that at General Cinema Dynamics and are actively using it in our production process.
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Owizzle
Owizzle@WillyB_303·
This is exciting. But if you really want to change the game, Elon, make a competitor to FinalDraft (screenwriting software monopoly with no innovation) that intrinsically extracts the correct elements and prompts Grok. Longform, with low(er) cuts/edits is absolutely key. @AVARY could help you and the team tremendously here.
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Disparu
Disparu@disparutoo·
We’ve made some progress but there is still much more work to do
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Plain Runner
Plain Runner@plainrunner2·
Something worth noting... there are a grand total of two women speaking in this movie, Ryan's wife and daughter at the very beginning. Some might write this off as just a boys' war movie made by men who didn't think much of that sort of thing, but look again at what the movie hinges on. Ryan feels compelled to leave his family in England because of what the Red October might represent. All along the way, his involvement escalates because he sees what could happen. But the key that unlocks his theory is right there in that unforgettable "You sonofabitch!" scene with the generals. What is it that convinces him Ramius is defecting? The date. It is one year since the date of Ramius' wife. And Ryan knows this man. He knows that she would have been everything to him. The love and loss of a woman is the lynchpin of the plot. And not just any woman. A woman of faith. You see it in the masterful scene where her Bible is being read by the Soviet political official. His barely restrained disdain for someone who might believe such things sets the tone of his exchange with Ramius. His commitment to the weapon and the collective above all else is juxtaposed with Ramius' own regret that he'd given his life to this machine only to lose his beloved wife while he was at sea. That simmering conflict over tea, which ends in the official's death and kickstarts the plot is a collision of worldviews. Ramius will say as much at the end. He knows the ship was built for the purpose of robbing countless families of their husbands, their wives, their children. His wife, though she is gone, is with him, driving him to freedom, driving him to save life. Ryan sees this. Their talk of fishing with their respective grandfathers is an aching echo of Eden, for it reminds us this is what we risk it all for. Home. The closing shot of Jack asleep at last on a plane, taking a teddy bear back to his daughter, as he'd promised, is no cute throwaway. The dreadful, sleeping bear that was the Soviet Union has been beaten by men who knew what mattered. Home is safe again.
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Plain Runner@plainrunner2

"When I was twelve, I helped my daddy build a bomb shelter in our basement because some fool parked a dozen warheads 90 miles off the coast of Florida. This thing could park a couple hundred warheads off Washington and New York and no one would know anything about it until it was all over." This film doesn't just hold up, it stands strong. Less an action movie (which the latter films increasingly became), and more a thriller, it remains the best adaptation of a Clancy novel. Don't get me wrong, the Harrison Ford films are good, but this one maintains the spirit of its source from start to finish, and Alec Baldwin is still the best onscreen iteration of Jack Ryan. The cast is absolutely stacked, with everyone turning in solid work. James Earl Jones, Courtney Vance, Stellan Skarsgard, Tim Curry, Joss Ackland, Fred Thompson... don't even get me started on Sam Neill's endearing, heart rending performance. Then you've got Scott Glenn (in his best role) going toe to toe with the titanic Sean Connery, who sells the deepest emotion and calmest control with only a twist of his mouth or the gleam in his eye. The script is a master class in tension, every scene tightening until the conclusion. John McTiernan (director of 'Die Hard') never loses his way with this film, never calls for more than a scene needs, despite the global crisscrossing and spiraling ensemble, and his editing team never wastes a frame. It's a film of massive scale mostly caught in camera, including submarine miniatures and real life warship and aerial maneuvers (CGI had yet to turn its sparkle on everything in sight). You feel the cold and the wind when Ryan has to jump from a helicopter into the ocean alongside a sub. Basil Poledouris delivers a fittingly grand, yet claustrophobic score, capturing the stakes of a war fought within these steel cans. The rousing Russian pride, the soaring American grit, the subtle loss, the tendentious peace... it all coalesces like something from another time, from a world built on nerves we were already forgetting. 36 years later, and you still want to believe this could have happened in the shadowed halls of power, in the dark depths of the sea... where some good men kept the whole powder keg from blowing. "Welcome to the New World, Sir." The Hunt For Ref October (1990)

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Variety
Variety@Variety·
Once a pipe dream, the idea of a federal film subsidy now seems like a real possibility: • California Sen. Adam Schiff is working on introducing an incentive bill in Congress • “We have a lot of our influence around the world as a result of American film and TV,” Schiff says. “We don’t want to lose that soft power.” Read the full cover story on the mass exodus of LA productions by @GeneMaddaus: wp.me/pc8uak-1lHp4O
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Variety
Variety@Variety·
This week’s cover story: Hollywood’s Mass Exodus: Why Film and TV Production Is Fleeing L.A. and What Can Be Done About It wp.me/pc8uak-1lHp4O
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