Archive for August, 2002

Biggs Joins “Jersey Girl” Cast…

August 27th @ 12:19 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Kevin Gnat, Alina, Frank Visconti, AKut

  • Looks like that Jay & Silent Bob cameo went really well for Jason Biggs! He’s just officially signed onto “Jersey Girl”, where he’ll play the protege of Ben Affleck’s character:
Smith’s Jersey Girl Next for Jason Biggs

American Pie star Jason Biggs has been added to the cast of Miramax Films’ Jersey Girl for filmmaker Kevin Smith, says The Hollywood Reporter. The project begins shooting this week in Philadelphia and New Jersey.

Biggs, who since April has been starring on Broadway with Kathleen Turner and Alicia Silverstone in The Graduate, will shoot “Jersey” by day on location and travel back to New York to perform onstage at night, with an understudy taking over his role for about five performances because of scheduling conflicts. It marks the second time Biggs has negotiated time away from the play, adds the trade, the first being from June through this month to shoot the Woody Allen feature Anything Else alongside Christina Ricci, Jimmy Fallon, Glenn Close and Danny DeVito.

“Jersey,” which Smith wrote, is about publicist Ollie Trinke (Ben Affleck) and the effects a new wife (Jennifer Lopez) and 6-year-old daughter have on his seemingly full life. Liv Tyler plays Maya, a video store clerk who has a significant impact on Ollie. George Carlin stars as Affleck’s father. Biggs will play Ollie’s co-worker and protege.

Thanks to Coming Soon for the text!

View Askew NewsBites™

August 25th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Bert, Dylan, DocPaul & Brian

  • Matt Damon Will Appear on “The Rove Live Show” on Tuesday the 27th of August at 9:30 on Channel 10 in Australia.
  • Movieline’s September issue (page 88) has a tiny blurb on the Jason Lee Foundation For The Arts event for Austrian artist Gottfried Helnwein, along with a few pictures featuring Marilyn Manson, Beck, Sean Penn, Mena Suvari, Leonardo DiCaprio, and a few others.
  • Jay Mewes’ recent flick “R.S.V.P.” took top honors by winning the FEATURE FILM (Jury Award) at the Malibu International Film Festival earlier this month.
  • Finally today, details on Brian Lynch’s upcoming “Monkey Man Unleashed” comic:
Day and night, he walks the streets. Hated. Feared. Mocked because he wears a helmet.

Oh, but if those who hate, fear and mock him only knew how EASY it would be for him to unleash his fantastic super powers and silence them permanently, they would surely—

—wait. They DO know. Because he DOES use his powers to silence them permanently. Anyone that stands in Monkey Man’s or his little retarded brother’s way faces the genetically engineered wrath of the most savage talking monkey on Earth.

But, a secret organization is offering Monkey Man a way out. A way for the entire world to love, accept, hell WORSHIP the ground he walks on. All he has to do?

Never use his powers again. Tame the beast. Become more “man” than “monkey”. And not even a cool man, like Fonzie, no, we’re talking 100% Potsie.

Meanwhile, a threat to Earth’s very existence arises. It’s an unbeatable killing machine bent on destruction, and only one creature in the world stands a chance against it. Will Monkey Man rise up?

Will he resort to his old ways and save the day? WILL HE BE UNLEASHED?

Well come on.

I mean, read the title of the series, you tell me.

Money Man Unleashed is coming out on 28th and a site called Comics Etc. has ordered a ton of them. They’re selling them at $2.25, almost 75 cents off the $2.95 cover price!

Philly Inquirer Touts “Jersey Girl” Filming…

August 25th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Christopher Lake, Robert Getz, Brian, Dylan Uprichard

  • “Jersey Girl” mania is starting to hit the Philly/New Jersey areas, with filming now underway. Expect a lot of articles from local newspapers in the coming weeks. Today was no exception. The Philadelphia Inquirer ran THREE articles on the film, one which details shooting locations, another written from the point of view of a real “Jersey Girl”, and this article, which featured a large photo of Kevin on the front page of their Arts section today. It reveals that Kevin will film the next two editions of Roadside Attractions for The Tonight Show in the Philly area!
Jersey Guy Looks Homeward

His office is in Philadelphia and his stars are strictly Hollywood. But Kevin Smith’s new “Jersey Girl” comes straight fromt the heart.

By Carrie Rickey
Inquirer Movie Critic

With “Jersey Girl,” director Kevin Smith returns to his roots.

Kevin Smith, the bawdy barrel of a bard behind Clerks, Chasing Amy and Dogma, hasn’t been a Jersey boy officially since he moved to Los Angeles “with the wife and kid” two years back. But he’s returned to his native state to mine its ore and its Shore for Jersey Girl, which begins its 10-week shoot in the Philadelphia area tomorrow.

With the $35 million Miramax production, a dramatic comedy starring real-life paramours Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez as newlyweds with a newborn, Smith returns to the relationship terrain of Chasing Amy (1997). That one established Affleck as a Gen X leading man and Smith as one of its defining directors.

About a guy who grows to love his daughter as much as he loves his wife, Jersey Girl came out of Smith’s experiences as husband (of Jennifer Schwalbach Smith) and father (of Harley Quinn, age 3) and is set in Highlands, the coastal clamming town where the filmmaker was raised.

Paulsboro, N.J., just across the Delaware River, will double for Highlands, while the interiors of Manhattan offices and Highlands homes will be found on area locations or built on Philadelphia soundstages. The production will film a few days each in Manhattan and the real Highlands, too.

“The irony of a movie entitled Jersey Girl being based in Philadelphia is not entirely lost on us,” says the jovial writer/director, 32, from his Delaware Avenue production office with its view of the Ben Franklin Bridge. As it happens, he couldn’t get any closer to Joisey unless he pitched his tent on the span itself.

But on the whole, he’d rather be in Philadelphia. “I am so not blowing smoke,” says the filmmaker, between drags on a Marlboro Light, “You have insanely nice people here.”

Wrote Smith in his “Jersey Girl Diary” (www.moviepoopshoot.com): “I’ve never encountered a nicer bunch of folks populating a major metropolitan area… . These Philadelphians make the legendarily polite Canadians look like Angelenos by comparison.”

In large part, Jersey Girl came about because Smith and his bud Ben, friends since filmmaker cast actor in Mallrats (1995), were at similar impasses, if at opposite ends of the Hollywood food chain. Having helped make each other’s careers, Smith and Affleck looked to each other to remake them.

During their collaboration on Chasing Amy, Smith passed Affleck’s and his pal Matt Damon’s script Good Will Hunting on to Miramax mogul Harvey Weinstein. Smith declined to direct the movie, but did executive-produce the blockbuster hit that won an Oscar for its novice screenwriters.

Affleck’s star soared, landing him one-dimensional roles in such megabudget films as Pearl Harbor and The Sum of All Fears, while Smith remained grounded in modestly budgeted repartee comedies such as Dogma and Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, both of which feature Affleck in self-mocking cameos.

“So last July Fourth I went to a party at Affleck’s house,” Smith recalls. “He was fried. He was coming off Pearl Harbor and The Sum of All Fears – he called them ‘machines’ – and said he wanted to do a movie more about performance than machinery.” (The following month Affleck voluntarily enrolled in a program for alcohol abuse; he has been sober for a year.)

Smith, awaiting the August release of Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, the slacker odyssey starring Jason Mewes and himself, felt that maybe he had played out the self-referential comedies he was known for. Maybe it was time to put away the juvenilia and do something that combined repartee with reflection.

So when the actor said he wanted to do something in the Chasing Amy vein, it hit Smith smack in the solar plexus. He went home and started developing “this vague idea I had while directing J and SB.”

“I sent Ben the pages. And then he called back and said, ‘Finish it, dude.’ ”

The collaborations between director and leading man have worked for both. Smith’s stories give Affleck depth; his presence gives Smith glam.

“But there’s also simple mutual affection,” Smith says. “I dig the guy. I think he’s a phenomenal actor. And he must like me, because Lord knows he could get paid a lot more doing other movies.”

Smith greets this sultry August afternoon bearded, bespectacled and bemused that all these big names are hitching themselves to his little project. “I thought it would be $5 to $10 million,” he says incredulously.

“Generally we’ve had bargain-basement budgets and haven’t paid people what they’re worth,” says Smith. He has to be pleased that to work with him his stars have agreed to salaries below their usual rates.

“The accident of Jersey Girl is that it ended up being as accessible as it is,” he reflects. Much to the shock of the guy whose feature debut was so profanity-saturated that Miramax had to challenge the MPAA to win it an R rating, “There is no reason that this one can’t get a PG-13. It has about two swear words.”

“I mean, Miramax said they saw it as a Julia Roberts picture. I couldn’t make a Julia Roberts picture.”

“I didn’t screen-test Jennifer,” he says of his leading lady – now an item with Affleck, a liaison not yet public, perhaps not yet happening, when the casting decision was made.

Affleck and Lopez met earlier in the year while making the comedy Gigli in Manhattan. “I took Ben’s word on Jennifer,” Smith says. He’d rather not dwell on the star-power thing. “Hype kills, man.”

Asked if the relationship with Lopez has changed his friend, Smith blushes deep persimmon. “He’s very sweet on her.” Subject closed.

There are other big names to deal with. And not just those of Liv Tyler and George Carlin, who have supporting roles.

Miramax insisted that Smith hire a cinematographer to give his movie as much pictorial panache as it had dialogue distinction. To his surprise, Academy Award winner Vilmos Zsigmond – the legendary lensman of Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Deliverance – accepted.

Smith still can’t get his head around the apparent contradiction that “one of the world’s greatest cinematographers is shooting the world’s least visually inclined director’s new flick.”

Jersey Girl is the story of a guy named Ollie “who madly loves his wife and has totally bought into the marriage thing” but who is initially brought up short by the father thing.

“The people who say ‘Oh, your movies will be less racy now that you have a kid,’ well, they missed the target but hit the tree,” Smith says. “My movies won’t be less racy, but they will reflect my new consciousness that family is more important than film.”

This one will be the first of his movies in which Smith will not be acting, “if indeed it can be said that I’ve ever really ‘acted.’ ” And he’s happy. “It will be a relief to worry about everybody else’s performances.” (Those who can’t get enough of Smith, the personality, will be able to see his running monthly feature on The Tonight Show With Jay Leno. He will shoot September and October segments while in Philadelphia.)

If Dogma was cerebral and Jay and Silent Bob came from the funnybone, “Then this was torn from the heart and gut – like Chasing Amy.”

“You know,” he says, “I always thought of myself as a yin/yang kinda guy, thought of myself as having the feminine perspective. But not until I had a wife and daughter did I get disabused of that.”

It’s been a Jersey kind of year. The rising of Bruce Springsteen. The return of The Sopranos. The resurgence of Jersey Trilogy director Kevin Smith.

Yet ask the filmmaker what Jersey packs that other states lack and he’s stumped. “But if I had one word to describe a Jersey girl I would say, ‘earthy.’ ”

With both a smile and a sigh he adds, “The more I’ve traveled, the more I’ve found that chicks are the same everywhere.”

Here’s the full text of the second piece on shooting locations:

Paulsboro gets ready to join the big names on big screen
Connections keep “Jersey Girl” local.
By Sara Isadora Mancuso
Inquirer Suburban Staff

PAULSBORO – Our story opens with a kiss in the rain.

In the mid-1990s, Hill Studio on Paulsboro’s Broad Street used its film-production equipment to produce a rain shower of critical importance. Hill’s huge pipes pumped out the water that set the scene for a kicker of a kiss in Kevin Smith’s Chasing Amy, an indie film that became a sleeper hit.

In the next several weeks, Smith will bring members of his crew and cast, which includes Ben Affleck, Jennifer Lopez, Liv Tyler and George Carlin, to Paulsboro for his newest project, Jersey Girl.

Just which cast members will make it to filming locations in South Jersey, which also include the Berlin Diner and an undisclosed cemetery, has yet to be released. Filming in Philadelphia is set to begin Aug. 26.

Paulsboro might never have been considered for any of Smith’s films had it not been for Robert “Ratface” Holtzman, a production designer who has worked with Smith and Paulsboro Mayor John Burzichelli. Burzichelli is also an assemblyman – and owner of Hill Studio.

Holtzman has worked on commercials at Hill, and has been the production designer for Chasing Amy and now Jersey Girl, Burzichelli said. As for Smith, the native of Monmouth County started his movie career with 1994’s low-budget Clerks.

Jersey Girl is about a man, played by Affleck, and the effects a new wife, Lopez, and 6-year-old daughter have on his life. Tyler plays a video store clerk who has a significant impact on Affleck’s character. Carlin plays his father.

About a month ago, scouts for Jersey Girl explored Paulsboro. They snapped photos of Paulsboro High School’s Red Raiders-theme auditorium and Loudenslager Elementary School, District Superintendent Frank Scambia said.

Renovations the last few years have spiffed up Loudenslager’s front; the original front steps and 1920s door, now at the back of the school, were part of the scouts’ tour.

Burzichelli and Scambia said they were unsure whether the filmmakers would provide compensation for use of the schools.

“We would think there would be some kind of donation, and we would probably push that to the Boys and Girls Club,” Burzichelli said.

Donation or not, production dollars are sure to trickle throughout Paulsboro, one of the poorest municipalities in Gloucester County.

“There’s always going to be a certain amount of commerce coming into town that without the film might not have been there,” said Sharon Pinkenson, executive director of the Greater Philadelphia Film Office.

It could be “anywhere from a few thousand to many thousands” of dollars, she said.

In Philadelphia, the economic impact of Jersey Girl is more likely to be $10 million to $20 million.

Typically, filming a movie requires production companies to rent private homes in an area, pay for municipal services, or hire off-duty police for security, Pinkenson said.

Stores often reap the benefits of last-minute needs for props and wardrobe.

“Invariably, they need something that they don’t have,” Pinkenson said.

Big-screen name recognition is another benefit for local establishments.

“I want to point out how great it was when Striped Bass was used in a movie,” Pinkenson said, referring to the Philadelphia restaurant used in M. Night Shyamalan’s 1999 hit, The Sixth Sense.

As for using the Berlin Diner, “even if it’s just one key scene, it could be great” for the restaurant, she said.

Paulsboro residents also may get a piece of the action. A casting agency in Philadelphia is accepting applications for extras. And “the movies always look for fresh faces,” Burzichelli said.

A starstruck small town this isn’t. Burzichelli’s studio has, over the years, brought in Bruce Willis, Phil Collins and Patti LaBelle for films and videos.

But even Burzichelli acknowledges that the stars of Jersey Girl may outrank past visitors.

“There have been a few independent projects, but when you have Ben Affleck, Jennifer Lopez and a director like Kevin Smith, I don’t know that it gets any bigger,” he said.

Nino Gervasi has a message for J. Lo:

Whenever she gets tired of the food carts usually laden with goodies for the celebs, piles of pasta and fresh fish will await her at his Italian eatery, Gervasi’s Restaurant.

“I hope she’s going to come in here for lunch,” he said.

“The town is going to be nuts.”

You can read the slightly off-topic Jersey Girl article online HERE. That is, if your eyes aren’t bugging out after reading through those first two!

Vugar: Unrated DVD Review!

August 23rd @ 7:26 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • We’re happy to report that we’ve finished going through the Unrated Vulgar DVD from Lions Gate and have a full review for you online in our DVD Reviews area! This is absolutely another must-have disc, with a top-notch commentary, a great transfer of the film, and the long-awaited Dogma documentary. Visit our DVD Reviews area to check it out, and buy the disc everywhere next month!

Trentonian: Jersey Girl Filming In Paulsboro, Philly…

August 23rd @ 7:25 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Keith Progebin

  • We’ve got some new articles from the Trentonian newspaper (see scans above) that detail some Jersey Girl shooting info and lots more. Apparently a lot of the film will be shot in Paulsboro, New Jersey as well as Philadelphia. The article confirms a budget of around $20 million dollars and a PG-13 rating.
  • Check out THIS ARTICLE for information on filming locations in Paulsboro for the coming days and lots more!

THIS ONE talks a bit more about the filming in Paulsboro and the effect on the town.

Kevin Hits The Boards With TONS Of Info…

August 23rd @ 7:24 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Kevin Smith

  • Kevin’s been stopping by the boards lately to answer a ton of questions and being quite forthcoming with a TON of information on Jersey Girl and other stuff. Did you know that the film’s not slated to open until Novemeber 2003, over a year from now? Wow. Let’s hope they push it up a bit! Anyway, an incredible wealth of knowledge below, in Kevin’s own words with questions from fans just like you:
Affleck in Jersey Girl… goatee or no?

He was trying to grow one, but we decided against it.

What sort of things are you trying, beyond clothes and such, to try and evoke the spirit of a decade so recently past in “Jersey Girl”?

“Jersey Girl” takes place from ’94 to ’03 now, so it’s not that difficult.

Any ideas for a release Date for Jeresy Girl?

November, 2003.

Are your plans to start the animated flick right after JG’s release?More or less.

Will Walt and Bryan be given roles in JG?

Not this time around. It’s a pretty small cast.

When will you need the first group of extras for Jersey Girl?

Paulsboro. This Thurs/Fri, I believe.

Jersey Girl has officially started shooting, let the fun begin (and watch for our Jersey Girl site as soon as we can settle on a good layout — very very soon we’re hoping).

View Askew NewsBites™

August 23rd @ 7:23 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Travis, Tim Kurkowski, Benjamin Leatherman, Ken Kauno & Mike McGranaghan

  • If you missed Kevin’s Roadside Attractions on the site last week (our capturing equipment is just plain bad, thus we haven’t gotten a copy up here either) — Many local affiliates rerun Tonight Show episodes 1 week later at 2 AM. So, if that’s the pattern, that would mean that at 2 AM tonight, some affiliates will show that very episode. Check your listings!
  • Kevin and ViewAskew.com get mentions in this SF Gate article which discusses stars who are very vocal on their web sites.
  • Congratulations to “Drop Dead Roses” (starring Brian O’Halloran), which took home its first award yesterday — The award for “Best Foreign Film” (it’s Canadian-made) at the Long Island film expo! Congrats to all cast and crew.

  • The new UK Askew website is coming, with all your UK-related info surrounding the Askewniverse, with new webmaster Chris Harrison and new artwork from Brian Harley (see above). The site’s due to launch on September 1st.
  • This Rueters article cites Jay & Silent Bob’s strong opening $11 million opening weekend last summer, which proved to be one of best last summer during a rather light year at the box office.
  • After you’ve read our Vulgar review, check out another take on the film HERE. A quite positive one at that!
  • IGN.com has a section in there DVD area called “Spot the Glitch”. DVD watchers can send in clips from movies that contain discrepancy or errors. Today Mallrats was mentioned. Check it out HERE.

“Jersey Girl” In Logan’s Square This Monday!

August 23rd @ 11:22 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Dark Horizons

  • Dark Horizons reports today that Jersey Girl will film in Logan’s Square THIS MONDAY in Philadelphia. We’ll have a lot more news on shooting locations for the film later, so stop back!

Kevin Reaches “The Onion”!

August 21st @ 9:42 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Andrew Conover, Andrew Klein, Colin Fisk, Adam Bertocci, vonCameron, J.R., Ken, Tina, John Lotshaw, Dennis Goodman, Shaun, Alonso Duralde, Lazlo & Rob Unck

  • Probably the most scoopage we’ve ever received on a single story — So many that we couldn’t even run all your names, only the first who sent it in. The immensely popular online humor newspaper “The Onion” ribbed Kevin in one of The Onion’s “infographics” about Celebrity fashions. We’ve got that graphic above for the three of you who haven’t seen it yet. Enjoy! Check out the story at their site HERE as well.

View Askew NewsBites™

August 21st @ 9:41 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Matt Booker, Lauren, Alonso Duralde, Cathy Kropp & Brian Jones

  • Spidey/Black Cat #2 should be in comic stores TODAY according to Diamond Distributors! The series will now run 5 issues instead of the originally planned 4. Get it NOW!
  • Affleck and Damon’s Project Greenlight 2 kicks off on September 19th, and unlike the first Project Greenlight, this one is open to both screenwriters and directors. (They can apply online at www.projectgreenlight.com.) USA Today ran an article on this with lots of quotes from Affleck and Damon. Check that out right HERE. E! Online is also running new clips today with Affleck and Damon regarding the project. They’ve also got a new Jason Lee clip, by the way…
  • And finally in this short update today, Jay & Bob appear in what looks like it might be an ongoing arc in the net comic “Bob ‘N’ Ed” today. Later!