Videos by ComicBook.com
With a return to acting, as opposed to stand-up, we asked Shore how to pitch Guest House to potential new fans. He said part of the appeal is the simplicity.
“What it’s about? I play a guy that won’t leave out of a guest house,” Shore told ComicBook.com. “And then that’s it, that’s the joke, you know what I mean? There’s nothing else, but that. It’s like, I play a guy that goes in the army now. I play a guy that, we get stuck in the bio-dome. I play a guy that finds a caveman. I play a guy that won’t leave out of a guest house. That’s the pitch.”
Because of that simplicity, Shore told ComicBook.com that he can imagine where his characters are 20-odd years down the line for virtually all of his films, comparing their light tone and likable main characters to the Bill and Ted films, the latest of which is now on digital and on-demand.
“I think all of them,” Shore said. “Bio-Dome would be great with me and Stephen [Baldwin] — our kids get stuck in the bio-dome or something, you know what I mean? Or you can do Encino Man 2, all that stuff. I think these movies, Bill and Ted and my movie, are coming out at such a good time because of what’s going on in the world. Everything is doom and gloom, and I think this will be a refreshing feeling for people, to watch something that definitely takes your mind off of what’s going on in the world. A lot of it is timing. I don’t know if the movie would do as well, if the world was just kind of moving at a hundred thousand miles per hour. Everything’s kind of slowed down now.”
You can catch Pauly Shore in Guest House on September 4 on-demand and for digital sale.








