
Cinematic Underdogs
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Cinematic Underdogs
@CinematicUnder
Cinematic Underdogs is a heady, nostalgic, trivia-filled podcast dedicated to sports movies. Click the link below or search for us on iTunes / Spotify & enjoy!





FIRST LOOK: Val Kilmer has been resurrected via AI to star in the new movie "As Deep as the Grave." Kilmer was cast in the movie in 2020, five years before his death. But he was too sick amid his throat cancer battle to ever make it to set. Now an AI version of the actor is appearing in the film, with the full blessing of his daughter, Mercedes: "He always looked at emerging technologies with optimism as a tool to expand the possibilities of storytelling. This spirit is something that we are all honoring within this specific film, of which he was an integral part.” “He was the actor I wanted to play this role,” says writer-director Coerte Voorhees. “It was very much designed around him. It drew on his Native American heritage and his ties to and love of the Southwest... His family kept saying how important they thought the movie was and that Val really wanted to be a part of this. He really thought it was important story that he wanted his name on. It was that support that gave me the confidence to say, okay let’s do this. Despite the fact some people might call it controversial, this is what Val wanted.” wp.me/pc8uak-1lH1PI

The way some people (not everyone) are talking about Paul Thomas Anderson like he’s some middling talent that was just discovered yesterday and not one of the industry’s most respected and celebrated filmmakers who’s been making revered masterpieces for thirty years.

JUST IN: US national debt surpasses $39,000,000,000,000.00

Tim Dillon: “The people cheering on this war in Iran have no fucking clue why we’re there.” “20 years after Iraq, everyone in this country has less money on average.” “And the same people that cheered that on are cheering this on.” “They have no morals.” “They’re a black hole.” “You say, maybe they have bad morals.” “No, no, no.” “They have no morals.” “People do not own homes.” “People do not have healthcare.” “People are in no better positioned financially than they were except the top tier.” “The people that cheered this on from their backyard in Long Island without a goddamn thought as to why we were doing it—it just felt good to them.” “It was a way to own the libs, by sending troops into a Middle Eastern country.” “These people are all hopped up on pharmaceuticals and French vanilla coffee creamer, and they have a bloodlust that is insatiable.” “The suburban American has a bloodlust that is absolutely insatiable.” “We’re becoming a sexless country.” “We’re a joyless country.” “Our only joy is in exporting violence and sitting back and watching it.” “They don’t care that we bombed a school of Iranian children.” “They don’t care because many parts of this country are a moral black hole.” @TimJDillon

Mike Johnson: "We all understood there was clearly an imminent threat that Iran was very close to the enrichment of nuclear capability ... I don't know where Joe Kent is getting his information ... the president felt he had to strike first to prevent mass casualties"


Team USA will wear game-worn U.S. Olympic hockey sweaters to LoanDepot Park today for the WBC final against Venezuela. Center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong and Olympic gold medalist Jack Hughes are partners with Fanatics, which delivered the jerseys for every member of Team USA.

Michael B Jordan playing both Smoke and Stack is representative of "You have to be TWICE a good as them just to get half as much!"

i don’t have proof for this but i genuinely think some factions online have begun to get mad and turn on him because he’s starting to look a bit older now





This scene is such a perfect encapsulation of the heart of the movie: anyone can be responsible for small revolutionary acts. The only reason Bob makes it to Willa is that normal people in his community helped him along the way. We only get out of this one together.

You are LITERALLY HITLER if you don’t want to bomb Iran and arrest Tucker Carlson..

Ever since early October, when ‘Marty Supreme’ premiered with a secret screening at the New York Film Festival, Timothée Chalamet had been considered a strong candidate to take the prize that had eluded him on his two previous nominations. What Chalamet wanted was to become the second-youngest Best Actor winner in Oscars history. What he got instead was a three-week festival of disappointment in every corner of the film industry. Chalamet’s Best Actor loss to Michael B. Jordan on Sunday night was the final step in what turned out to be a head-spinning rise and fall for the 30-year-old actor over the course of this awards season. What happened? Nate Jones writes about the ways Chalamet fell short: nymag.visitlink.me/1dEdoW





