Saturday, April 24, 2010
mikehudack:

dpstyles:

mattlehrer:

dwineman:

“You ever think about how in, like, a Tom Hanks movie, everyone lives in a reality in which there’s no such person as Tom Hanks? Because otherwise, people would be mistaking the main character for Tom Hanks all the time? So either Tom Hanks doesn’t exist in the world the movie takes place in, or he does exist but he looks like someone else? I mean, you could have a character break the fourth wall and go ‘Aren’t you the guy from Cast Away? Hey, sign my volleyball!’ or whatever but you can’t really do that in a serious screenplay, so you’re pretty much stuck with that bare minimum level of willing-suspension-of-disbelief before you even get started, unless it’s a period drama or something. And the funny thing is the more famous your star is, the bigger the leap of faith you’re asking the viewer to take when no one in your narrative universe recognizes him, so in a way, paradoxically, great actors undermine their own credibility by their very presence—hey, are you even listening to me? What are you—oh, that’s just Bob. He’s made of bubbles.”

via @gruber: “If this doesn’t win, then we know The New Yorker Caption Contest is fixed.”

mikehudack:

dpstyles:

mattlehrer:

dwineman:

“You ever think about how in, like, a Tom Hanks movie, everyone lives in a reality in which there’s no such person as Tom Hanks? Because otherwise, people would be mistaking the main character for Tom Hanks all the time? So either Tom Hanks doesn’t exist in the world the movie takes place in, or he does exist but he looks like someone else? I mean, you could have a character break the fourth wall and go ‘Aren’t you the guy from Cast Away? Hey, sign my volleyball!’ or whatever but you can’t really do that in a serious screenplay, so you’re pretty much stuck with that bare minimum level of willing-suspension-of-disbelief before you even get started, unless it’s a period drama or something. And the funny thing is the more famous your star is, the bigger the leap of faith you’re asking the viewer to take when no one in your narrative universe recognizes him, so in a way, paradoxically, great actors undermine their own credibility by their very presence—hey, are you even listening to me? What are you—oh, that’s just Bob. He’s made of bubbles.”

via @gruber: “If this doesn’t win, then we know The New Yorker Caption Contest is fixed.”

  1. chasemarch reblogged this from dwineman and added:
    wanna steal this...my book! dwineman:
  2. mollysamuels reblogged this from dwineman
  3. hamburglr reblogged this from dwineman
  4. lizastillman reblogged this from dwineman
  5. capacitytolove reblogged this from dwineman
  6. euni reblogged this from kneeyoncebowls
  7. kneeyoncebowls reblogged this from kayfabe
  8. mikerickson reblogged this from kayfabe
  9. kayfabe reblogged this from dpstyles and added:
    “You ever think about how in, like, a Tom Hanks movie, everyone lives in a reality in which there’s no such person as...
  10. whiskeyandrecords reblogged this from dwineman
  11. tiredandwiredd reblogged this from espressogirl
  12. rollingforaye reblogged this from rollingforaye and added:
    [img: A cartoon image of two men talking to each other, while another man, seemingly emerging from a stream of bubbles,...
  13. deepr reblogged this from espressogirl
  14. espressogirl reblogged this from woody and added:
    Posting this again because it feels so right.
  15. kateklonick reblogged this from dwineman and added:
    bubbles. [dwineman]
  16. sexinthecities reblogged this from dwineman and added:
    favorite new yorker cartoons.
  17. davidwayjr reblogged this from dwineman
  18. jdel reblogged this from mikehudack and added:
    Months later this still makes me chuckle.
  19. stillgrey reblogged this from dwineman
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