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Tag: dylan o'brien

  • ‘Twinless’: James Sweeney on Why He Wrote a Letter to Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, Toe-Sucking and Working With ‘Chameleon’ Dylan O’Brien

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    SPOILER ALERT: This story contains spoilers from “Twinless,” now in theaters.

    James Sweeney has a thing for twins. In his new quirky dark comedy, “Twinless,” he and Dylan O’Brien play Dennis and Roman, two men who form an unlikely friendship when they meet at a support group for people whose identical twins have died.

    In one scene, Dennis is shown watching Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen in their 1995 comedy “It Takes Two.” Sweeney, who wrote and directed “Twinless,” reached out to the former child actors with a letter. “I think I espoused my love for them and begged them to use their likeness from the classic ‘It Takes Two,’” he recalls. “Incidentally, they’re not playing actual twins in the movie. They’re just playing people who look identical to each other.”

    Since the film’s premiere at Sundance earlier this year, many have been assuming Sweeney has a twin in real life – he doesn’t. “I think twins were very much embedded into the cultural zeitgeist of my childhood,” he explains. “It wasn’t just the Olsens, but also ‘Sister, Sister’ and ‘The Parent Trap.’ And for me, being a military brat and having to hop around and start over a few times, I think it was sort of that fantasy of the perfect best friend who shares your sentences and wants to do all the activities you want to do. It was very appealing to me.”

    O’Brien not only plays Roman but also portrays his twin, Rocky, in flashbacks. “I wanted somebody who I believed would have the versatility to pull from different characters, not just in terms of physical and emotional transformation, but also tonally, comedic and dramatic. I think that’s something that Dylan has in spades,” Sweeney says. “And even though I felt confident in that, getting to know him and then developing the film and working with him, it really surpassed my wildest dreams. I think he’s truly a chameleon, which I find to be rare in somebody who is also a more traditional, charismatic leading man actor. I think that’s what makes him so special.”

    While a lot of attention has been paid to Dennis and Rocky’s sex scene, there’s another very intimate moment Sweeney and O’Brien haven’t talked about until now. While Dennis is giving Roman a foot massage (their friendship becomes quite a codependent bromance), he begins to suck one of his toes.

    “I had a pillow over my face the whole time because I was cracking up,” O’Brien says, before pointing out, “I also scrubbed my toe in the bathtub beforehand.”

    Sweeney says, “That was the easy part of the day. There were so many other things going on in that scene that I was more concerned about. I was more preoccupied with the shots that followed in terms of my emotional preparation.”

    The actors had plenty of time to get comfortable with each other. O’Brien had been attached to the project for about four years before the film finally got greenlit. “It was similar on my first feature [2019’s “Straight Up”]. They had similar time spans in terms of how long the projects go from inception to production,” Sweeney says. “I think my batting average is like seven, eight years. I’ll claim the positive adjective, which is resilience. But maybe stubbornness would be the other side of that coin.”

    “I would say what was different between this and my first project is I met David Permut, my producer, in 2019 and Dylan in 2020. So this one I shared the pain of pushing it uphill for all those years, which then also made sharing the fruits of the labor so much more rewarding,” he continued. “But I also think it’s a story that speaks to me. I love movies about friendship. The themes of loneliness, as well as identity and forgiveness, are concepts I’m really interested in.”

    Sweeney has also spent time working in television, most notably as a writer on Gloria Calderón Kellett’s Prime Video comedy series “With Love.” “I love TV,” Sweeney said. “‘Buffy The Vampire Slayer’ is the reason I am who I am. I think TV is an interesting place right now. I think right now I’m focused on film, but I’m trying to figure out where my voice fits in TV in a way that works in the marketplace.”

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    Marcmalkin

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  • Dylan O’Brien Says His Safety Concerns on ‘Maze Runner’ Set “Were Not Listened to” Before Accident

    Dylan O’Brien Says His Safety Concerns on ‘Maze Runner’ Set “Were Not Listened to” Before Accident

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    Dylan O’Brien is opening up about the safety concerns he had on the set of The Maze Runner: The Death Cure, which resulted in the actor sustaining serious injuries in an accident while filming.

    The Saturday Night star looked back at the “life-changing incident” during a recent interview with Men’s Health. In 2016, O’Brien was shooting the third installment in the Maze Runner franchise when he was pulled off the top of a moving vehicle unexpectedly while wearing a harness and hit by another vehicle.

    “I’ve approached everything differently, you could say, particularly with regards to standing my ground on set,” he said of how the experience impacted his life. “It’s very commonplace in the culture for young actors to be controlled, and the way they strive to do that is by always being like, ‘Oh, don’t become difficult. Don’t be a pain in the ass. Or are you complaining, are you being difficult?’ Things like that.”

    Following his accident, the Teen Wolf alum said he’s learned to stand his ground on set, and not let taking care of yourself be conflated to being difficult.

    “Don’t let them manipulate you into thinking that is being difficult, because I can look at that day and know I was a 24-year-old kid who was raising concerns about how we were approaching things, and they were not listened to, they were not respected. And then what happened, happened,” O’Brien said. “And by all accounts, it was all pretty gotten away with, I would say, as well.”

    He continued, “It’s taught me that, at the end of the day, in these spaces, you have your own back, and that’s the most you can rely on. I just turned 33. I’ve been doing this for 15 years. I know the person I am, and the character I bring to set, and the way I treat people and the way that I treat a workspace, and I know I’m not difficult. I know I’m not an asshole. I know I was trying to protect myself that day, and so I’ve just never forgotten that. That’s always rung true as being the thing to hold with me.”

    The Ponyboi actor previously told The Hollywood Reporter in 2017 that he was grateful for his film American Assassin as it was his first project following his accident.

    “It was a really hard time that I was going through, and it was definitely difficult to wrap my brain around it and go out and do it, but at this point, I just couldn’t be more thankful that I did,” he said at the time. “I feel like it was really helpful for me in a lot of ways. It will always be a really personal movie to me. It was huge for me, really. It was like getting back on my feet.”

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    Carly Thomas

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  • Fantasmas Takes Aim at the Ever Less Gradual Stamping Out of People Who Can’t (Or Won’t) “Prove Themselves” Digitally

    Fantasmas Takes Aim at the Ever Less Gradual Stamping Out of People Who Can’t (Or Won’t) “Prove Themselves” Digitally

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    In the opening scene of Fantasmas’ first episode, “Cookies and Spaghetti,” Julio (Julio Torres) is having a nightmare about filling out an online application that asks, among other things, what his occupation is. In response, he simply fills in his name: Julio. (It’s a whole thing later on in the episode that his job is, quite simply, “being Julio.”) The screen automatically reacts to that in red capital letters that chide, “INVALID OCCUPATION.” When Julio then tries to fill out his address as “my water tower,” the screen also spits back, “ADDRESS NOT FOUND.” When he tries to submit the form, it immediately tells him, “REJECTED.” All the while, he’s been dressed in a Pierrot-meets-jester sort of ensemble topped with what amounts to a dunce hat. Every time he fills one of the questions out, he then tries to open a window that ends up not existing behind one of the curtains he pulls back. The symbolism is instantly obvious: Julio (and those like him) is being literally boxed out of society because they can’t quite fit into any specific, “prepopulated” box.

    That symbolism continues in Julio’s waking life, when he goes to Crayola to offer his consulting services. Accordingly, he tells the three suits in front of them they need to make a crayon that is clear. One of the suits responds, “But clear isn’t a color.” Julio counters, “If it isn’t a color, then what do you call this?… The space between us.” The same suit replies, “If a crayon is a clear wax and it leaves no discernible color behind, what’s the use?” Another suit chimes in, “It cannot be done! Why are you doing this? Why do you need this?” “It’s already done.” Julio then looks to his glass of water for backup to say, “Look at this glass of water over here. It’s defiantly clear. Some things aren’t one of the normal colors or play by the rules of the rainbow.” When the meeting is over and one of the suits walks him out, he tells Julio, “If we were to move forward with clear Crayola, what would we call it?” Julio responds, “Call it Fantasmas. It means ‘ghosts.’” Even that renders the executive confused as he then asks why it would be plural instead of singular. Julio has no answer that would satisfy such a “logical” mind. Thus, he pretends to go along with “Fantasma” as the title card for the show comes up and an “S” is then added to the end of the word after a momentary pause.

    And it is a pointed title, for a large core of the show speaks to how many people in this world are forced to become “ghosts” when they either can’t or simply refuse to bend to what society demands of them. This includes, at the top of the list, having a sizable paper trail that proves both your existence and your longstanding ability to pay for things. In the U.S., the one certainly can’t exist without the other. Something that Torres has grappled with not just when he was dealing with visa-oriented paperwork after graduating from college, but also as a result of his newfound success. For, even now, Torres resents the idea that you have to have a credit card in order to build the credit that helps prove your existence. As he told Indiewire, “I do not have a credit card, and have always had trouble [renting an apartment] because of it. That’s the impetus for the whole [storyline]. Although I made the money to have the kind of apartment that I was applying for, I was rejected, even though I was willing to basically pay a year’s rent upfront. They were like, ‘No, we went with an applicant who had,’ and I quote, ‘overqualified guarantors.’ Wink, they have really rich parents.” The automatic assumption, especially in New York, that those without a credit history or a lot of money can “just” get help from their parents is also addressed in Fantasmas.

    This moment arises when, Edwin (Bernardo Velasco), a food deliverer who can’t bring Julio’s order to him in a timely fashion because every form of transportation requires proof of existence (obvious shade at the updated version of the MTA’s MetroCard, OMNY, a “tap-and-go” system that requires a debit or credit card), ends up talking to Gina (Greta Titelman), another recurring character in the series. Having recently been dumped by her sugar daddy, Gina sits on a bench sobbing. Edwin, almost as desperate as she is, decides to ask her, of all people, to explain to him what proof of existence is, and how to get it.

    She shrugs, “You just go to the app, and you put in your social and your credit score—” Edwin tells her, “I don’t have that.” “Don’t have what?” “Any of that.” Gina then brightens, “Well, can you use your parents? You know, I had to use my parents’ address after Charles dumped me.” Edwin is confused about the suggestion, wondering, “What do my parents have to do with it?” After all, unlike many white folks, it doesn’t come as an automatic given that one can turn to their parents for financial support. Thus, Gina proves herself to be the very sort of cliché that gives white women a bad name. Even so, she explains the same thing to Edwin that Julio’s been told by his manager, of sorts, Vanesja (Martine)—who is technically just supposed be a performance artist performing as his manager. Which is: sometimes, “exceptions” are made if someone is, like, “a thing” a.k.a. famous enough. Here, too, Torres makes a commentary on how fame has become the sole pursuit of many people growing up (and even after they’re theoretically “grown”), without having an actual focus in mind. In other words, they don’t care what they’re famous for, they just want to be famous (even if it’s “famous for being famous”). After all, it makes you an “exception” to every rule.

    In real life, though, Torres hasn’t found that to be entirely true, also telling Indiewire of his post-fame apartment-renting experience, “It’s not about getting the money that you’re asking for, it’s about the kind of person that you’re renting to. You’re measuring people by not only how much money they have, but how long they’ve had that money for and how equipped they are to win this race. The idea that everyone’s born with a clean slate is false. And so, I was very interested in exploring that [in Fantasmas].”

    The show version of Julio’s ongoing struggles with finding an apartment (the one he’s currently in is slated to become a “General Mills Café and Residencies”) harken back to Lily Allen singing, “It’s just the bureaucrats who won’t give me a mortgage/It’s very funny ’cause I got your fuckin’ money/And I’m never gonna get it just ’cause of my bad credit/Oh well, I guess I mustn’t grumble/I suppose it’s just the way the cookie crumbles.” This said on 2006’s “Everything’s Just Wonderful.” A phrase Julio has a harder and harder time telling himself as the walls start to more than just figuratively close in. Still, he remains defiant about not capitulating to getting his proof of existence card. No matter how “easy” it’s supposed to be. As he tells his usual cab driver, Chester (Tomas Matos), who also doesn’t have one, “I don’t have it because I don’t want it.” It’s become a matter of principle now, a way to say “fuck you” to a system that has never made it easy for him—or anyone like him—to get by.

    Even when he tries to eradicate himself as an actual body (in one of many acts of desperation related to not being able to find an apartment without proof of existence), Vicky (Sydnee Washington), the employee at New Solutions Incorporated, inquires with genuine shock, “How do you have an apartment? I mean, how do you take out a loan? They’re gonna be asking for it as soon as you’re on the subway.” Julio automatically tunes out these questions—so accustomed to dissociating in scenarios where he’s bombarded with stressful queries related to “getting real” and living a normie lifestyle—and focuses in on a commercial that’s playing on the TV in the background (it’s here that Denise the Toilet Dresser [Aidy Bryant] gets her moment to shine).

    The pressure that even casual strangers put on Julio to “get with it” and surrender to proof of existence (and everything that such a surrender actually entails) goes back to the aforementioned recurring dream. In it, Julio would have to leave the room (you know, the one with no windows in it) in order to get fresh air. The problem is, outside, it’s freezing cold, which is why everyone passing by is wearing an “unremarkable black puffer coat.” Julio can see that if he, too, wants to join the others in freshness, he would have to wear one of the same puffer coats. And there just so happens to be one within his grasp that literally has his name on it. All he has to do is walk out, take the jacket and put it on.

    But to put it on would mean becoming one of them. One of those “proof of existence” people. He sums up the dream by saying, “The only way I would be able to leave [the room] is by compromising somehow.” And this is the dilemma that every artistic person (or, also in Torres’ case, every U.S. immigrant) is faced with sooner or later. Often cropping up repeatedly if they never succeed in finding a way to dodge it. To become an “exception.”

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Pee-Wee’s Playhouse + The Science of Sleep + The Mighty Boosh + Problemista + Kafka = Fantasmas

    Pee-Wee’s Playhouse + The Science of Sleep + The Mighty Boosh + Problemista + Kafka = Fantasmas

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    Many people still like to tout that we’re in the Golden Age of television, forgetting perhaps that, for much of the 2000s, a new wave of innovation not seen since the 1980s was happening with said medium. Obviously, the most creative and absurd television show to come out of the Decade of Excess was Pee-Wee’s Playhouse. In fact, it’s a wonder that the show was ever greenlit and then allowed to continue for even more than a season, so “offbeat” and “weird” was it. And yet, children (and adults) immediately gravitated to the content, which was so different for the era of “normie Reaganism.” In commenting on the appeal of the show to Time in 2006, Paul Reubens stated, “At the time there weren’t many live-action people on [kids’] television. It was a time of Transformers and merchandise-driven shows that I didn’t think were creative. I believe kids liked the Playhouse because it was very fast-paced and colorful. And more than anything, it never talked down to them. I always felt like kids were real smart and should be dealt with that way.”

    In the present, it has become more and more the case that even adults are talked down to and treated rather stupidly (which is perhaps part of the reason why the U.S. has gradually transitioned into a place that’s destined to fulfill the predictions laid out in Idiocracy). Not only that, but all the programming geared toward that demographic has either become so serious or, on the other end of the spectrum, mind-numbing “reality” TV. In the early 00s, just as the latter category of television was gaining popularity, the British duo known as The Mighty Boosh (Julian Barratt and Noel Fieliding) would come together to eventually bring audiences The Mighty Boosh, a surrealist comedy that aired from 2004 to 2007. Sandwiched in between those years was the release of Michel Gondry’s The Science of Sleep in 2006, an equally as surreal offering that seemed to indicate the population’s desire to retreat into fantasy at a time dominated by the brutal, embarrassing (for Americans, anyway) realities of war in a post-9/11 world. With Pee-Wee’s Playhouse, the same phenomenon was happening in the world, where a desire to retreat into the fantastical was preferable to further exposing oneself to the brainwashing propaganda instilled on both sides by the Cold War.

    Perhaps it can be said, then, that the arrival of Julio Torres’ Fantasmas also coincides with an overall desire to retreat into fantasy. Because, despite the “hope” of Kamala Harris taking things in a new direction for the U.S., the realities of 2024 remain particularly bleak. That doesn’t just include the ongoing Palestinian genocide, but so many other horrors that are less publicized, including the civil war and famine in Sudan, the violent oppression of women in Afghanistan, the violence and political instability in Venezuela, the total lawlessness of Haiti, the high rates of femicide in Mexico (indeed, Latin America overall has one of the highest rates of femicide in the world), the climate-related disasters that have led to something as impactful as the endlessly raging wildfires in Canada. The list truly does go on and on. And with so much brutality in the world, even in “ultra-modern,” “land of the free” America, one can’t blame Torres for often retreating into the comforts of his mind, where reality can be diluted and subdued. Especially since he lives in one of the shittiest places on Earth: New York. Of course, it’s no secret that New Yorkers get off on their misery, pride themselves on being able to “take it” where other more “lily-livered” types can’t. (Or simply have the good sense and self-respect to leave.)

    Perhaps knowing that the “real” New York isn’t all that romantic, Torres opts to create an “alternate version” of it in Fantasmas. And yes, as he freely admits, there are many correlations to his directorial debut, Problemista, in terms of both setting, tone and character. As he told Indiewire, “It feels like a sequel to [Problemista], with achieving the quote-unquote ‘Dream.’” But more than that, it’s the types of magical realism details in Problemista that parallel Fantasmas. Take, for example, how Alejandro (Torres) works at a place called FreezeCorp in Problemista, where clients pay to have themselves cryogenically frozen so that they might come to life in the future (again, Idiocracy comes to mind…or Austin Powers). In reality, as Isabella Rossellini narrates, “This company provides a form of euthanasia.” In the commercial, the FreezeCorp spokeswoman admits, “Our scientists are working around the clock to one day discover how to bring our patients back.”

    The FreezeCorp-esque entity in Fantasmas, called New Solutions Incorporated, instead pivots to the notion of uploading one’s consciousness and disposing of their corporeal self altogether. As Vicky (Sydnee Washington) assures Julio, “Our incorporeal service can free you of your daily bodily ailments and discomforts.” And, considering Julio is convinced he has skin cancer, he’s only too ready to get on board with what Grimes was already advocating for back in 2018 with “We Appreciate Power” when she said, “Come on, you’re not even alive/If you’re not backed up on a drive/And if you long to never die/Baby, plug in, upload your mind.” That’s just what Julio intends to do—the only problem is, like every other minor endeavor in this hyper-bureaucratic world, the company requires him to show “Proof of Existence” in order to participate. Irritated yet again by this demand, Julio asks incredulously, “I need to prove that I exist so I can stop existing?”

    It’s enough to drive him battier than riding in the car with Chester (Tomas Matos), a former Uber driver who has decided to create his own rideshare app called, what else, Chester. It is in his car that Julio first learns about the existence of a show called Melf, playing on the TV in the back of the cab. Needless to say, it’s a sendup of ALF (an acronym for Alien Life Form), the late 80s sitcom that centered on an alien that looks more like he fled from the Planet Sesame Street. Like Alf, Melf ends up landing on the doorstep of a suburban family, but Julio takes the original concept and turns it on its ear by creating a sordid romance between Melf and Jeff (Paul Dano), the character modeled after Willie Tanner (Max Wright). Instead of making it “wholesome” family content, Julio positions Melf and Jeff as secret lovers who hide their trysts until it finally becomes too obvious to Jeff’s wife, Nancy (Sunita Mani). Despite the pain he causes his family—and the international scandal it invokes—Jeff is happy he can finally be his authentic self, free to love the, er, being he really wants to. It is little digressions like these that also make Fantasmas reminiscent of the Pee-Wee’s Playhouse style. Granted, Torres has far more “k-hole” moments, if you will, than Pee-Wee ever did. From Dodo the Elf (Bowen Yang) to Denise (Aidy Bryant) the Toilet Dresser to Becca the Customer Service Rep for Assembly Plan Insurance. It is the latter character who also ties into a scene from Problemista when Alejandro calls a banking representative after seeing that he has a negative amount in his account.

    Not understanding how he got so overdrawn, she chirpily tells him, “Every time you overdraft, the bank must impose a penalty of thirty-five dollars.” In disbelief, Julio snaps back, “So, what? Like an eight-dollar sandwich becomes a forty-five-dollar sandwich?” “Forty-three dollars,” she corrects matter-of-factly, adding, “That’s the policy, Mr. Martinez.” Julio continues to rebuff, “But that makes absolutely no sense. I distinctly recall making a cash deposit.” “And that deposit was flagged as potentially fraudulent, so it’s on hold now. For your protection.” “Right, but then that hold made me overdraw… Why would you let this happen? Why not just let my card get declined?” Unfazed, the representative says, “That’s not the way things work.” “But that is the way things should work. Otherwise, the bank is just benefitting from my misfortune. From the misfortune of people who can’t afford to make any mistakes. From people who have no margin of error.” “It’s policy. It is what it is.” Julio then launches into an even more emotional plea, concluding, “I know that there’s still a person in there, and I know that she can hear me.” For a moment, it seems like she might actually come around, only to end up shooting him in the face as she declares, “I stand with Bank of America.”

    This bank representative is so clearly the precursor for Becca in Fantasmas, who gets an ostensible orgasm over other people’s suffering as she delivers the voiceover, “God, I love insurance. And banks, and credit cards, and the military. Law and order. I pity those who do not stand behind us.” Torres’ contempt for people who are simply “following orders” (you know, like the Nazis) is a hallmark of his work. Along with his total inability, as someone with an abstract artist’s mind, to fathom how anyone could live with themselves at such a job (acting as a gatekeeper who gets off on their own small form of power). Apart from the reason of “needing money to survive”—by fucking up other people’s survival.

    In this sense, too, Torres touches on the idea that the employees of color so often working in these roles are only hurting their own kind in service of the white CEOs and other assorted power mongers at the top. The system in place, thus, continues to thrive through division and pitting people (usually the “unmonied”) against each other.

    Another noticeable similarity between Julio in Fantasmas and Alejandro is that the latter has a similar form of hypochondria, at one point texting his mother a picture of his tongue with the caption (in Spanish), “Do you see those dots? Is that something bad?” For Julio, the obsession becomes all about the birthmark that looks like a mole just underneath his ear. Rather than focusing on the crushing pressure and simultaneous banality of dealing with his ever-mounting bureaucratic affairs, Julio would rather obsess over finding the oyster-shaped earring that was the exact same shape as his birthmark so that he can place it against said birthmark in front of a doctor to prove that it’s grown, therefore needs to be biopsied.

    There to occasionally try to make him see reason is his “manager.” Or rather a performance artist playing his manager, but who has been doing it for so long that she’s really just his manager now. Alas, not even Vanesja (played by real-life performance artist Martine) or Julio’s “assistant,” a robot named Bibo (Joe Rumrill), can distract him from his quest to be distracted. And in the world of Fantasmas, there are many shiny people and objects to be distracted by—as there should be in any narrative worth its weight in magical realism.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Dylan O’Brien Details How His Viral ‘Ponyboi’ Transformation Came to Be

    Dylan O’Brien Details How His Viral ‘Ponyboi’ Transformation Came to Be

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    When Ponyboi shooting gaffer Don Sean shared photos from the movie’s set on Instagram featuring Dylan O’Brien in 2022, the images quickly went viral. Fans shared their reactions on social media to the actor’s transformation for the film, which included a close fade, slits on his eyebrows, multiple chains, and facial hair shaved into a chin strap. It was a stark departure from his signature shaggy hair and beard.

    While speaking with The Hollywood Reporter at the Sundance Film Festival on Saturday, O’Brien and his co-star River Gallo (who also wrote the film) detailed how the look came together.

    O’Brien noted that coming up with the character’s hair and costuming was a collaborative effort between himself, Gallo and director Esteban Arango. While Gallo wanted the actor to go for a look inspired by Jersey Shore star Pauly D to fit the film’s Jersey setting, O’Brien envisioned his character to have cropped hair.

    “We had this barber do this really cool cut on me that just sort of combined all,” explained the actor. He then turned to Gallo and recalled, “Remember that day in the trailer? We were doing like the goatee and you were like, ‘Leave the chin strap.’ I was like, ‘Sure.’ And then you fought for the chinstrap and kept it, thankfully, because I love it.”

    Another one of Gallo’s ideas for O’Brien’s appearance stuck. “River literally texted me about a tattoo idea that early on when I first came on board and I was like, ‘I love it,’ and I’ll leave it as a surprise,” said the Teen Wolf alum.

    Once the look was figured out, O’Brien was able to fully grasp who his character was.

    “It just kind of came together and really informed me. I mean, those things just helped so much, especially with something that was a departure for me, for sure and it’s not who I am by any means,” he explained. “I definitely felt like I knew exactly… I knew this guy. I knew kids like this. I knew exactly what I wanted to do. But all those things just really evolve as you start the process comes together and the tattoos come in and the hair and the clothes, my fit. I could never have stepped into the role in the way that I ended up doing without all those pieces in the process.”

    Watch the full interview in the video above.

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    Tatiana Tenreyro

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  • 2022: The Year Gen Z F–kboys Infiltrated Pop Culture

    2022: The Year Gen Z F–kboys Infiltrated Pop Culture

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    Every generation gets the onscreen fuckboy they deserve—pop-culture representations of the all-too-common breed of man sleazy enough to raise problems, but charming enough to make you forget them for a while. In 2022, the first proper Generation Z model infiltrated movies and TV. 

    As a species, we’ve long been fascinated with the fuckboy, which is defined by Urban Dictionary as a man who is “fundamentally confused,” “superficially intimate,” and “unable to truly respect and be present with any woman he is with.” Past generations’ fuckboys have included The Graduate’s Benjamin Braddock, Sex and the City’s Mr. Big, Andy’s boyfriend, Nate, in The Devil Wears Prada, and Jason Bateman’s character in Juno. These men are not Billy Zane-in-Titanic-level offenders, lewd dudes who are just outright villains. Instead, they lure you in with grilled cheeses or promises to adopt your unborn child, taking and taking until you’re left with nothing but a specific appreciation for the Taylor Swift lyric, “Karma is my boyfriend.”

    Members of Generation Z, as defined by Pew Research Center, are those born between 1997 (that’s me) and 2012, and are now ages 10 to 25. The eldest of this range can still remember life with Blockbuster DVDs, but without smartphones. The youngest, however, were born after Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram had come to define many aspects of everyday life. 

    This generation in fuckboy has been dabbled in before, namely via Jacob Elordi’s number one gaslighter Nate in Euphoria and some of the smarmier men on both The Sex Lives of College Girls and Industry, all of which returned for second seasons this year on HBO. And who could forget the now dearly departed reality-competition series, Fboy Island, where embracing this identity was incentivized for a cash prize and oodles of Instagram followers? But this space truly started to scuzz up over the summer with the release of Hulu’s Not Okay, A24’s Bodies, Bodies, Bodies, and Netflix’s Do Revenge—a heightened, spiritual trilogy in how Gen Z operates. Within those films—all starring and made by women—emerged an unmistakable commentary on male toxicity, as brought to life by Dylan O’Brien, Pete Davidson, and Austin Abrams, respectively, in a trio of fuckboy characters.

    Other entries into this canon would emerge with Hulu’s Tell Me Lies (although that story is technically set in the mid-2000s, Stephen’s patchwork of red flags, as embodied by Jackson White, feel apiece with current Fboy discourse) and HBO’s The White Lotus with Leo Woodall’s “cock” hat-wearing Love Island proxy Jack (and despite his most white-knuckled efforts, occasionally Adam DiMarco’s Albie). As Meghann Fahy’s Daphne put it on the latter show: “I feel sorry for men, you know. They think they’re out there doing something really important, but really they’re just wandering alone.”

    In their searching, Gen Z men have often reverted to fuckboy-ery, which abides by three Fs: being fickle, fragile, and falsely feminist. And conveniently enough, in 2022 movies’ and TV’s worst offenders followed this scientifically sound theory. 

    First, this generation’s fuckboys are particularly fickle, with unlimited options at their disposal via dating apps and social media. Enter Not Okay’s Colin, played by O’Brien. He’s the culture-appropriating weed influencer who Zoey Deutch’s wannabe tastemaker Danni (the film’s “unlikable female protagonist”) so desperately wants to impress. Colin breadcrumbs his vape-clouded attention so sparingly that Danni will stop at nothing, even falsely placing herself at the site of a global tragedy, just to get a follow back. Just as quickly as she earns it, Colin is gone again—but not before calling Danni his “damaged little girl” midway through a cringeworthy hookup.

    “Colin, to me, represents all of these scum-bro culture-vulture fuckboys of the internet who embody all of the worst things,” Not Okay writer-director Quinn Shephard told Vanity Fair. “Colin is sort of a walking example of everything that Danni idolizes, and everything that she wants to be.” Shephard added, “Danni has a conscience deep down. I just think that she lacks self-education and self-awareness. I don’t know that Colin has a conscience anywhere.” Deutch couldn’t resist one more dig. “I also think Colin is unintelligent,” she said. “Like a-many-of fuckboys are.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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