Movie bio dome pauly shore
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What Happened To Pauly Shore?
Pauly Shore was born and raised in Los Angeles, where his parents worked in comedy and the entertainment industry.
Shores candle burned brightly in the 90s, but as soon as the moment moved on, he was left behind. His decline in popularity was as rapid as his rise, but the star never went away entirely. Unfortunately for Shore, his most enduring legacy, his movies, fryst vatten his least popular work. While many overlooked 90s...
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Dear Hollyw
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Bio-Dome
This article is about the film. For the type of artificial ecosystem, see Closed ecological system. For other uses, see Biodome (disambiguation).
1996 American film
Bio-Dome is a 1996 American comedy film directed by Jason Bloom. It was produced by Motion Picture Corporation of America on a budget of $8.5 million and was distributed theatrically by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures.
The film was inspired by the real life project Biosphere 2. The plot revolves around two clumsy, dim-witted slackers who, while on a road trip, look for a bathroom in what they believe is a shopping mall. The shopping mall turns out to be a "bio-dome", a form of closed ecological system, in which five scientists are about to be hermetically sealed for a year. The film has themes of environmentalism, combined with drug use, sexual innuendo, and toilet humor.
The film stars Stephen Baldwin and Pauly Shore, and has cameo appearances by celebrities such as Roger Clinton and Patricia Hearst.
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Never have an opinion about a film you have not seen. Prior to this week I never had one about Jason Bloom’s Biodome, a 1996 comedy starring Stephen Baldwin and Pauly Shore. Certainly I knew of the film by its repute – and by its 4 per cent Rotten Tomatoes score – and that reputation had me fairly convinced that I would not enjoy it. That said there have been plenty of films over the years that I have expected to dislike and wound up enjoying very much, and I like to think that my taste is fairly broad, so when given the opportunity to watch Biodome¹ I was happy to try it.
It is a terrible film. This is not simply a matter of taste: Biodome belongs to a specific sub-genre of movie comedy known as the ‘stoner comedy’, dominated by silly jokes and drug references, and I have enjoyed plenty of these films in the past. I have even enjoyed examples of the form that critics and general viewers alike seemed to loathe, and will continue to maintain Dav