- The official Jersey Girl film site is now FULL of new content, including of course the trailer, but in addition, tons of photos, interviews, contests, wallpapers, and heaps more. Get over there now and enjoy all of the great new offerings, and don’t forget to pass the site on to your friends, family, co-workers, etc, and get the buzz going for the big March 26th release.
Archive for February 24th, 2004
Kevin Hits The FM Airwaves…
- Two bits of FM radio news for ya today. First up, Kevin made a rare in-studio appearance on Alice 97.3 in San Francisco this morning, and Mario’s got a wonderful summary for us:
1) Sarah told Kevin he was a control freak. Kevin responded with, “oh and how do you know? you’ve known me for all of 4 minutes?” and she told him she just thought so because he directs and edits all of his films, and he laughed and said “that’s why i’m a control freak!”
2) Every celebrity guest removes a piece from an Operation board game and signs it. Kevin was given the Writer’s Cramp to remove.
3) A caller phoned in to praise Kevin on his Prince story from the Evening…DVD. Sarah and No Name (the Alice hosts) had never heard the story and asked him to re-tell it. He told them it was way to long, like 40 minutes long. They begged for the shortened version to which Kevin responded, “Prince is Crazy.” It was hilarious!
4) A new addition to the Sarah and No Name morning show is an in studio Karaoke machine, and they try to get guests to perform something when they show up in studio. Kevin agreed to do “Dead or Alive” in true Jersey fashion. He really got into it and it was funny as hell, but the cd started skipping so he had trouble keeping up with it.
5) Kevin will be doing an appearance in Berkeley, CA at the end of March.
Next: Tomorrow, kdge.com 102.1 FM in Dallas, Texas is claiming that Kevin will be “in the studio” at 8 AM. We’re not sure if Kev’s making the big trek there in person or just phoning it in. You can listen to their station live, via streaming video, at their website. Click “New School” for the LIVE broadcast tomorrow. Don’t ever say we didn’t help ya pass through the workday!
View Askew NewsBites™
- Wizard Universe reports that tomorrow’s edition of Wizard will feature “The Kevin Smith I-Skew test” in the issue. Bet we can beat ya! Here’s some of their samples:
2. We think he got Justin Timberlake to sing the theme. What is the name of Cardinal Glick’s campaign to raise interest in the Catholic Church in “Dogma”?
3. Randal, champion of the working man. In “Clerks,” who is Randal concerned most about after witnessing the destruction of the Death Star in “Return of the Jedi”?
4. In “Chasing Amy,” fashion plate Banky sports the insignia of what comic character on his shirt?
5. Name the two books (one for Marvel, one for DC) that Smith was set to write but never got around to even completing an issue.
Grab Wizard #150, on stands tomorrow, and try for yourself.
- There’s a way cool desktop wallpaper-sized version of the Green Hornet artwork that ran yesterday here at the site. Jump over to Files Askew to grab yourself a copy.
- Traci Briery got a ton of kudos for the custom Silent Bob doll she made a while back, and now, he’s got a buddy. That’s right, the Jay doll has been completed and is now ready to be presented to Jay at a future engagement, from the sound of things:
Visit’s Traci’s website, The Doll Doctor, to see more of her cool creations.
- And finally today, don’t forget to cast your vote in the new poll over there on your left. Thanks to DocGreedo for the topic inspiration. As always, if you’ve got future poll ideas, we love hearing ‘em. ‘Til next time!
US Magazine’s HUGE Jersey Girl Spread!
- There’s an absolutely FANTASTIC Jersey Girl 2-page spread in the latest issue of US Weekly. Spoiler warning for those of you that have still somehow avoided that early plot point, otherwise, just a ton of new photos and candids, as well as some tidbits on scenes that didn’t make the final cut. We saw a lot of this stuff in the test screening last year, so expect yet another DVD full of great deleted material to come somewhere down the line. From what we’re hearing though, the final cut of the film will play just perfect, and audiences love it. Click the scan above to take a closer look at the photos and text from this story. Lots more to come!
Paulsboro & “Jersey Girl”…
- Paulsboro, NJ newspapers are getting the fever and starting their press on Jersey Girl’s arrival. This weekend’s Gloucester County Times ran a HUGE Jersey Girl story, which we’ve got the full text for just ahead. We don’t have any direct scans from the article, but a lot of set location photos were featured. We do have some small thumbnails of a few of ‘em here for ya, though. The article DOES contain a few spoilers, nothing MAJOR as far as the plot, but it does reveal a scene towards the end of the film. Some nice mentions of Ratface’s work, and a lot of coverage of the Paulsboro people and locations that have made it into the film’s final cut. So, read at your own risk, if you like:
By Jeanette Tallant
On a quiet, tree-lined street in Paulsboro stands a pale yellow Cape Cod house — a dwelling that, like many others of little significance, has gone unnoticed for several years.
Who could have guessed that quaint home would give Paulsboro — and Gloucester County –its on-screen debut in a major motion picture?
The movie “doesn’t happen without it,” said Paulsboro’s Mayor John Burzichelli of the house on Thompson Avenue, “and we don’t have a street named ‘Kevin Smith Way.’ “
The movie he’s referring to is Kevin Smith’s “Jersey Girl,” the second film to feature the now-defunct Hollywood couple Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez. “Jersey Girl” was shot in Paulsboro over a three-month period in 2002.
According to Steve Granados, director of Burzichelli’s Hill Theatre Studio in Paulsboro, art director Robert “Ratface” Holtzman knew what type of house he wanted for the film’s central set long before the shooting began. He looked all over New Jersey
and was about to move the shoot to Canada when he came across the Thompson Avenue home.
The rest, as they say, is cinematic history.
The people of Paulsboro should be proud to know that this house, along with a few other Paulsboro dwellings, are among the very first images magnified on the big screen in the final cut of “Jersey Girl,” which is due in theaters March 19.
“It was wonderful to see the whole experience and then see it on the screen,” Granados said Friday after a Philadelphia preview screening of the movie. “This was so much more dramatic.”
The film is set in small working class town called Highlands, N.J. It opens with a classroom scene shot inside the Loudenslager School, portrayed in the film as a Catholic school.
In the film, the hometown corner bar is called Clamdiggers, a name the movie crew painted on the side of the small tavern and promised to remove –until the owner decided to display it next to the original name.
“I think Clamdiggers has a new life in front of it,” Burzichelli said of Fiorile’s.
Other than the house on Thompson Avenue, the bar is the most photographed Paulsboro establishment in the movie. It’s also where the final scene takes place.
In real life, a pool table occupies the spot in Fiorile’s where Affleck and Lopez’s characters once slow danced to the music of Al Green.
After the filming wrapped, hometown regulars took back their seats at the bar where — in the movie — George Carlin and his buddies sit and sip their beer.
But the folks who frequent Fiorile’s said the Hollywood treatment of their favorite watering hole hasn’t changed a thing.
“It’s very surprising that they picked it, but it’s not surprising in the sense that it’s a very, very, nostalgic bar,” said Randy Brown, who grew up in Paulsboro. “It’s just a place where you stop, you have a drink and a sandwich and go. You’ll meet people from Paulsboro here.”
Paulsboro schools are also prominently featured in the movie –images from Loudenslager and Paulsboro High School are combined to make the Catholic elementary school attended by Affleck’s movie daughter, who is played by young Raquel Castro.
Inside Paulsboro High School, the bold red seats and thick red curtain of the school auditorium — where Affleck, Castro, Carlin and Liv Tyler grace the stage for a family talent show — also made the final cut, as did Borough Hall.
In one scene with Affleck pitted against his Highlands neighbors, he stands at the front of a room in Borough Hall and addresses an angry crowd –some of whom are Paulsboro residents. While Affleck speaks, serious-looking men sit behind him listening intently. Many Gloucester County viewers will recognize these non-speaking characters from their real-life roles as Paulsboro officials –Mayor Burzichelli; several Paulsboro councilmen; and Gloucester County Democratic Party Chairman Michael Angelini, the municipal solicitor in Paulsboro.
So, how’s the flick?
“It’s fun,” Burzichelli said. “I think people are going to enjoy what they see, and they’re going to have a lot of fun picking out people they know.”
Municipal Administrator John Salvatore helped Smith and his crew scout locations for various scenes, including the bar and the schools. He probably has the best eye for what didn’t make the movie.
Scenes shot at the Paulsboro lighthouse were left on the cutting room floor, he said. So was a wedding scene showing Affleck and Lopez on the steps of St. John’s Church, which might have become the only time America would see them together in wedding attire.
In the end, as the screen fades to black and the credits roll, Paulsboro and its residents get their due in a big thank you to the mayor, the borough, and the people of Paulsboro.
Burzichelli said he hopes to hold a Paulsboro screening of “Jersey Girl” sometime in March, giving the many residents who stood on the sidelines and watched, and those who were lucky enough to get roles as extras, a chance to see –in their hometown –the movie that was made in their hometown.
The article’s also archived at their site. In addition, an editorial appeared in that same paper today:
The reviews are in. Paulsboro is very much in the much-awaited Kevin Smith-directed movie, “Jersey Girl,” which was partially filmed in the borough.
A totally unbiased preview audience (it included Mayor John Burzichelli and borough Administrator John Salvatore) was totally “thumbs up” concerning the way Paulsboro looks in the Ben Affleck-Jennifer Lopez picture, and how much screen time the borough gets.
That would be considerably more screen than one scene that remains entirely on the cutting-room floor, our preview spies report. A wedding scene involving the two co-stars, who are no longer star-crossed lovers in real life, was not in the version of “Jersey Girl” screened last week. Wonder whose idea that was?
Sorry. We forgot for a moment that this is the editorial page, not the celebrity gossip page. But the latest dish is that even though snipping out the wedding scene nixed some views of the steps of St. John’s Church, there are still plenty of local landmarks that audiences can see. Included are the Loudenslager School, and some of its inhabitants, and Fiorile’s Bar, known in the movie, and perhaps hereafter, as “Clamdiggers.”
A Clamdiggers’ sign from the 2002 filming remains on the tavern, which is perhaps poised to take full advantage of the kind of publicity that turned a once-obscure Boston pub called the Bull&Finch into “Cheers.”
It would be great if Paulsboro and its citizens can find other ways to capitalize on the March 19 wide release of “Jersey Girl,” even though, in the movie, the borough is a stand-in for a Central Jersey shore town.
The box-office success of “Jersey Girl” is not assured, but the sneak peeks show us Paulsboro is on screen more than long enough for the borough and its residents to have a boffo opportunity to shine.
As the guy who will host the Academy Awards next Sunday used to say:
“You look mahh-velous.”
Green Hornet News ‘A Plenty!
- There’s a lot of websites buzzing about the Green Hornet project, and, though we don’t expect we’ll have any major breaking stories on the project for a little while yet, we still figured we’d let you check out all the places that are excitedly discussing Kevin’s involvement with the project.
Hollywood.com reports a blurb on the announcement HERE.
The Fletch Won fansite has an idea for the role of Kato in their latest news brief.
Thanks to the famous masked cartoonist for his fun work on the graphic above, too — Kevin tells us that there’s a concept similar to this that will be featured in a new logo to go before the film when it’s eventually released.
View Askew NewsBites™
- You want Stash pictures? This on-site report features more than we’ve ever seen. In fact, we’ve been to the place a lot and STILL think we’re seeing more in these detailed, colorful photos. Definitely worth a look if you’d like to check out all the amazing memorabilia that’s on display there. And hey, next time you in town, stop by and see us!
- Sixty Second Films has a Clerks tribute short entitled “Simulacrum” available for your viewing pleasure. Check out a couple of familar spots in very familiar black and white.
- Liz Phair starts a small tour in the US late this month, and who knows…Perhaps she’ll debut her “Jersey Girl” tune at some of the shows! I’ll be at the April 2nd show at the E-Factory in Philly, hope to see some of you locals there. The new Liz album is still a great listen.
- In other Jersey Girl music news, Chrisie Santoni, the girl who won Unisong’s “Song of the Year” contest, says her winning song “Mona Lisa” is loosely based on the JG, as she came up with the lyrics while working on the set as a location assistant. Congrats, Chrisie!
- A huuuuge interview on Askew vet Brian Lynch appears at Silver Bullet Comics. The article focuses on Lynch’s comic work mostly, but does mention again that Big Helium Dog, his rarely seen but very funny View Askew-produced sketch comedy film, is still due on DVD sometime this year.
- Vacation’s over, and we’re both back full time at the site now, so feel free to send your scoops, questions, etc, to either of us again, and we’ll get back to you as soon as possible. With this update, we should be caught up on all the latest now. See ya soon.








