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Everybody Wants Some!! is a 2016 American comedy film written and directed by Richard Linklater, about college baseball players in 1980s Texas. The film stars Blake Jenner , Zoey Deutch , Glen Powell , Ryan Guzman , Tyler Hoechlin , Will Brittain , and Wyatt Russell .
"Everybody Wants Some!!" is a song by the American hard rock band Van Halen it is the second track off their 1980 album Women and Children First. It is one of the band's most popular songs, starting as a concert highlight throughout the band's early career.
Everybody Wants Some may refer to: "Everybody Wants Some!!(song)", a song from Van Halen's 1980 album Women and Children First Everybody Wants Some!!, 2016 "Everybody Wants Some", a song by Danger Danger from their 1991 album Screw It!
Austin Amelio (born April 27, 1988) is an American actor best known for his role as Dwight in The Walking Dead, its spin-off Fear the Walking Dead, and his role as Nesbit in Everybody Wants Some!! Biography
Zoey Francis Chaya Thompson Deutch (/ d ɔɪ tʃ / DOYTCH; born November 10, 1994) [1] is an American actress and producer. The younger daughter of director Howard Deutch and actress-director Lea Thompson, Deutch made her acting debut in television during the early 2010s, with roles on Disney Channel's The Suite Life on Deck (2010–2011) and CW's Ringer (2011–2012).
Linklater was born in Houston, Texas, the son of Diane Margaret (née Krieger), who taught at Sam Houston State University, and Charles W. Linklater, III. [4] [5] He attended Huntsville High School in Huntsville, Texas, during grades 9–11, where he played football for Joe Clements as a backup quarterback for the #1 ranked team in the state.
Everybody Wants Some!! Paramount Pictures / Annapurna Pictures: Richard Linklater (director/screenplay); Will Brittain, Zoey Deutch, Ryan Guzman, Tyler Hoechlin, Blake Jenner, J. Quinton Johnson, Glen Powell, Wyatt Russell, Austin Amelio, Temple Baker, Tanner Kalina, Juston Street, Forrest Vickery [48]
He wants to show us a certain strata of campus life at the present time". [24] In his review for The New York Times , Vincent Canby wrote, " Slacker is a 14-course meal composed entirely of desserts or, more accurately, a conventional film whose narrative has been thrown out and replaced by enough bits of local color to stock five years' worth ...