Coming soon to a movie screen: a remake of “The Odd Couple,” starring Dexter Lawrence and Daniel Jones.

The Giants rookies are rooming together at a local hotel during training camp, at Lawrence’s request. They are both products of the ACC, North Carolina natives, first-round picks and hopeful building blocks for the Giants’ future, though their similarities, on the surface, seemingly end there.

Still, the 6-foot-4, 342-pound, big-personality defensive lineman and the 6-foot-5, 220-pound, quiet quarterback have life chats on their nightly schedule, Lawrence said, except for the past few nights when he went to bed before Jones got back to the room. Perhaps there was some extra studying or film work for the quarterback to do before Thursday’s preseason opener against the Jets.

“[He’s] kind of quiet,” Lawrence said Tuesday. “I’m bringing it out a little bit, his personality — swag, that’s what they used to call him [in college]. So I’m bringing that out.”

Lawrence made the unlikely pairing happen when requests were being taken during May’s rookie minicamp, he said. He prides himself on blocking out the noise, but heard enough about Jones and the heat he was getting for being the Giants’ pick at No. 6 overall in April — and that was before Jones got booed at Yankee Stadium in June. Lawrence, the No. 17-overall pick, wanted to help.

“I knew he was getting it hard and all that stuff,” Lawrence said. “That’s why I wanted to be his roommate, just to keep his mind straight and not think about stuff like that. I want to be that kind of guy to motivate him a bit more, and show him, since I don’t get into that stuff. I just do what I have to do and be where I have to be.”

Of course, that doesn’t mean Lawrence can’t give Jones some ribbing himself.

The two played against each other last fall, when Lawrence was at Clemson and Jones was at Duke. Clemson won 35-6, but Jones did enough to catch Lawrence’s attention, completing 24-of-43 passes for 158 yards.

“First half, he was killing us up and down the field, they just couldn’t score,” Lawrence said.

But when asked if he got a few shots in on Jones, Lawrence couldn’t help himself.

“Oh, yeah. Multiple shots. He’s still feeling them,” he said before breaking into a big grin.

Past transgressions aside, the two seem to be a good fit. Lawrence will sometimes ask Jones questions like what quarterbacks look for in opposing defenses. But when they’re unwinding at night, they try to keep football talk to a minimum.

“I just liked his personality,” Lawrence said. “He’s humble and he’s hungry. He’ll never tell me he had a good day, even when I think he had a good day. So that non-satisfaction keeps getting better each day.”

Lawrence believes he feeds off the same kind of attitude.

Unlike Jones, he has been getting consistent reps with the first team, alongside Dalvin Tomlinson and B.J. Hill on the defensive line.

Defensive coordinator James Bettcher has said Lawrence — an enormous presence who can move well, too — can play all three positions on the line.

“[I feel] a lot more comfortable,” Lawrence said. “When I first got out here at OTAs, I was just getting adjusted. I hadn’t played football since like early December [he was suspended for the College Football Playoff after a test showed a trace amount of a banned substance]. So it was a little rough. Then we got to training camp, the first couple days were a little slow, not feeling myself. But as the days kept going on, the weeks stack up, I feel like I’m a little more comfortable.

“But I’m not satisfied. There’s a lot I still have to work on. I’m trying to get better every day.”