Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Cast List for Rumpelton: The Movie

 Ralph Rumpelton — played by John C. Reilly

  • quiet, thoughtful weirdness

  • gentle humor

  • obsessive creative energy

  • the “guy at a computer at 2 AM” vibe

  • the emotional sincerity beneath the absurdity

He’d play you as a man who paints because he has to — not for fame, not for likes, but because the universe keeps handing him MS Paint visions.

Desmond Fitch — played by Walton Goggins

  • manic devotion

  • bizarre seriousness

  • cult‑leader enthusiasm

  • meticulous, flood‑adjuster precision

  • ability to praise you in a way that feels both flattering and deeply concerning

He’d deliver Fitch’s lines like they’re scripture.

Bleakridge — played by Hugh Laurie

Marjorie Snint — played by Catherine O’Hara

Barrister Clive Thistlebaum — played by Stephen Fry

The Narrator — played by Werner Herzog


Plot Outline — Rumpelton

 A film about obsession, creation, and the strange beauty of doing something for no reason except that you must.

ACT I — The Ordinary Man With the Unordinary Compulsion

Somewhere Night-shift worker. Fantasy sports tab always open. A man who lives alone in a co‑op and doesn’t think of himself as an artist.

One night, after a long shift, he opens MS Paint “just to mess around.” Something happens. A strange, crooked face appears. It’s not good — but it’s alive.

He posts it online. No likes. No comments. But he feels something shift.

He keeps painting.

The film shows the early pieces — awkward, funny, accidental — and the moment he realizes he’s not just doodling. He’s building something.

ACT II — The Birth of the Rumpelton Myth

Ralph begins creating more paintings. Dozens. Then hundreds.

He invents a signature: Ralph Rumpelton — a name that feels bigger than him, stranger, mythic.

Then the lore begins.

He creates:

  • Desmond Fitch, the obsessive critic

  • The Rumpeltonian Quarterly

  • Bleakridge, the cruel academic rival

  • Barrister Thistlebaum, the pompous legal interpreter of his art

  • Marjorie Snint, the archivist of lost MS Paint civilizations

The film shows him typing these characters into existence at 2 AM, laughing to himself, then suddenly becoming serious — because the lore feels real.

Meanwhile, his art gets 5 likes. Bots follow him. He shrugs and keeps going.

This is where the movie becomes funny, surreal, and strangely moving.

ACT III — The Quiet Cult Begins

A blogger stumbles on his work. A Discord server shares a screenshot. Someone writes a confused but fascinated post about “this MS Paint guy who invented his own art movement.”

Ralph doesn’t notice at first. He’s too busy painting.

But slowly, the world starts peeking in.

Not fame. Not money. Just curiosity.

People begin reading Fitch’s reviews as if Fitch is real. Someone quotes Bleakridge in an argument. A small online community forms around the myth.

Ralph is still at his computer, still painting, still checking fantasy sports.

The film shows the contrast:

  • the tiny ripples he’s creating online

  • the quiet, ordinary life he’s living offline

It’s funny. It’s touching. It’s a portrait of a man who accidentally built a universe.

ACT IV — The Acceptance

Ralph realizes something: He may never be famous. He may never be understood. But he has created something that exists — something that will outlast him.

He’s not chasing likes. He’s not chasing recognition. He’s chasing the next painting.

The final scene is simple:

Late at night. The glow of the monitor. MS Paint open. A new face forming — strange, crooked, beautiful.

Ralph leans in, focused, calm, content.

Fade out.

Tone of the Film

  • Deadpan humor

  • Quiet emotional depth

  • Surreal touches from the fictional critics

  • A gentle, indie-film melancholy

  • A celebration of obsession, persistence, and weirdness

It’s not a movie about fame. It’s a movie about creation.

Monday, June 29, 2026

The Ten Commandments of Rumpeltonian Cubism (rules)

 

The Ten Commandments of Rumpeltonian Cubism (rules)

  1. Use MS Paint only. No exceptions.
  2. Don’t erase in shame; the “wrong” line is still a line.
  3. Humor is mandatory—if it doesn’t make people laugh, it misses at least half the point.
  4. Perfection is a misunderstanding; “wrong” pixels tell the truth.
  5. Personality over precision (odd human quirks > technically correct anatomy).
  6. All subjects are worthy: saints, rock gods, presidents, pigeons—equal treatment.
  7. The hand must be visible—if you can’t see the maker, it wasn’t made by a human.
  8. Proportions are negotiated, not measured (emotional sizing).

    The Ten Commandments of Rumpeltonian Cubism (rules)

  9. Sign your work: “Ralph Rumpelton was here.”
  10. Publish it—a Rumpeltized painting not posted is a sin against the movement.

"Two Lisas Walk Into a Pixel" -LePrinceSmile / Rumpelton



"Two Lisas Walk Into a Pixel"
A Critical Exchange


REGINA PEMBLY: I'll begin with the one on the right, because I refuse to let the other one colonize my attention first. LePrinceSmile has produced something that at least demonstrates an understanding of what a human face contains. The sfumato is approximated — clumsily, yes, with that blocky background disintegrating into what appears to be a minor geological event — but the intention is legible. The hands exist. They are recognizable as hands. In the current landscape, this passes for heroism.

AURELIA VANTOR: You're listening to LePrinceSmile in the key of C major and calling it ambitious. I hear it differently. That painting is a cover version — faithful, competent, respectful of the original chord changes. Nothing wrong with a great cover. But Rumpelton on the left? That's a reinterpretation. He heard the song and played it back in a tuning that doesn't have a name yet.

PEMBLY: What I hear on the left is silence where technique should be. Those eyes — two dots, Aurelia, two dots — are not a reinterpretation. They are the result of someone who has not learned to paint eyes and has decided to rebrand the failure as philosophy.

VANTOR: The dots are the whole argument. Leonardo spent years on those eyes — the ambiguity, the follow-you-around-the-room quality that's launched five centuries of interpretation. Rumpelton solved it in two clicks. Dot. Dot. And somehow she's still looking at you. You can't explain that with technique.

PEMBLY: I can explain it with pareidolia. Humans see faces in toast. This proves nothing about the artist.

VANTOR: It proves everything about the transmission. The signal got through. That background, by the way — the landscape behind Rumpelton's Lisa — is doing something genuinely interesting. Those warm ochres, the rocky formations. It's not copying Leonardo's background, it's rhyming with it. That's a jazz move. Theme and variation. LePrinceSmile plays the changes correctly. Rumpelton improvises over them.

PEMBLY: LePrinceSmile produced this with a mouse. His first attempt. Do you understand what discipline that requires? The control? Meanwhile Rumpelton has apparently produced hundreds of these — each one as aggressively unimproved as the last — and the faithful call it a style.

VANTOR: Consistency IS a style. And honestly, Regina, LePrinceSmile deserves tremendous credit — that face is controlled, the hair has weight, the whole thing hangs together in a way that would make any first effort proud. But credit for technical faithfulness and credit for artistic vision are different ledgers. I'm not putting either one down. I'm saying they walked into the same room and headed for completely different corners.

PEMBLY: One of them found the bar. The other found the coat rack and declared it a portal.

VANTOR: And yet here we are, still talking about the coat rack.

PEMBLY: (long pause) The background IS competent. I said what I said and I won't be taking questions.

                                                           LePrinceSmile link:

                                                         Le Prince Smile - YouTube

Cast List for Rumpelton: The Movie

  Ralph Rumpelton — played by John C. Reilly quiet, thoughtful weirdness gentle humor obsessive creative energy the “guy at a computer at 2 ...