post_page_cover

Kyle Marvin Interview on ‘Splitsville’

Aug 16, 2025

When Kyle Marvin made his first movie, he made one big mistake. “I gave up my day job way before I should have,” he says with a laugh.

At the time, Marvin, 40, was working in advertising with his best friend, actor and director Michael Angelo Covino. They shot sketches, produced the occasional project and eventually decided to write, produce and star in their own short film, The Climb, about a friendship tested during a weekend bike ride. “My wife and I had a good life, we were raising two children, and I was like, ‘I’m going to give it all up and go make movies,’ ” Marvin recalls. ” ‘And I’m going to make absolutely nothing — in fact, I’m going to lose money.’ I sold our family car to finance the movie.”

The Climb premiered at Sundance in 2018 and was so well received that it was expanded into a feature, which premiered at Cannes in 2019 and went on to play Telluride and Toronto that same year. Now, half a decade later, Marvin is reteaming with Covino, co-writing, co-producing and co-starring in Splitsville (in theaters Aug. 20), a relationship comedy with studio muscle from Neon and extra star power from Adria Arjona and Dakota Johnson. “I have more stability now, obviously, but I still have that same ‘fuck it’ mentality,” he says. “Where it feels like you’re taking your clothes off, jumping into a pond and you might drown.”

In this case, the metaphor isn’t far off — Marvin has more than a few nude scenes in Splitsville. It opens with his character and his wife (Arjona) on a drive to a couples weekend with their best friends (Covino and Johnson) that turns out to be filled with bombshell revelations, starting with his wife’s confession that she’s been unfaithful and wants a divorce. Once they arrive, the confessions keep coming — including that their friends are in an open marriage. The chaos spirals into sexual entanglements, absurd confessions and an extended slapstick brawl that sends Marvin and Covino crashing through windows, tumbling over furniture and getting Marvin’s eyebrows singed off in a hairspray-and-lighter stunt gone wrong.

“We really, genuinely beat the shit out of ourselves filming that, and we shot it before I had to go and do the nude scenes,” he says. “The makeup team would take my clothes off and just be like: ‘What?!’ They were airbrushing bruises and cuts off of me.”

Marvin with Adria Arjona in Splitsville.

Neon/Courtesy Everett Collection

The premise, Marvin insists, comes not from his own marriage (he’s been with his wife for 20 years, and they now have three kids) but from conversations — some overheard — as he and Covino searched for a lean, spicy concept that could be shot quickly and economically. “Everybody in my life has said that I stole a piece of their story for this movie,” Marvin says. “This movie isn’t only about open marriages or cheating — which is what they used to call open marriages — it’s about how we’re all challenged in our relationships. The movie is just trying to unpack all that in a fun setting.”

Since The Climb, Marvin also has built a parallel, more commercial career: portraying WeWork co-founder Miguel McKelvey in Apple TV+’s WeCrashed, directing Paramount’s 80 for Brady and prepping a biopic about mountain climber Warren “Batso” Harding. He says that trajectory wasn’t plotted out in advance — not even when he quit his job and sold his car — but rather came from taking small steps toward what he wanted and proving himself along the way.

As for what’s next, Marvin’s hoping Splitsville‘s momentum will help him keep climbing. “It feels like bullshit when I say it out loud, but I really do just want to make things that reach a lot of people and yet still have that tone and potency I’m always chasing.”

Marvin with Jared Leto (left) in WeCrashed.

Peter Kramer/©Apple TV+/Courtesy Everett Collection

This story appeared in the Aug. 13 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Erotic Horror Is Long On Innuendo, Short On Climax As It Fails To Deliver On A Promising Premise

Picture this: you splurge on a stunning estate on AirBnB for a romantic weekend with your long-time partner, only for another couple to show up having done the same, on a different app. With the hosts not responding to messages…

Oct 8, 2025

Desire, Duty, and Deception Collide

Carmen Emmi’s Plainclothes is an evocative, bruising romantic thriller that takes place in the shadowy underbelly of 1990s New York, where personal identity collides with institutional control. More than just a story about police work, the film is a taut…

Oct 8, 2025

Real-Life Couple Justin Long and Kate Bosworth Have Tons of Fun in a Creature Feature That Plays It Too Safe

In 2022, Justin Long and Kate Bosworth teamed up for the horror comedy House of Darkness. A year later, the actors got married and are now parents, so it's fun to see them working together again for another outing in…

Oct 6, 2025

Raoul Peck’s Everything Bagel Documentary Puts Too Much In the Author’s Mouth [TIFF]

Everyone has their own George Orwell and tends to think everyone else gets him wrong. As such, making a sprawling quasi-biographical documentary like “Orwell: 2+2=5” is a brave effort bound to exasperate people across the political spectrum. Even so, Raoul…

Oct 6, 2025