Archive for March 16th, 2004

Larry King, Film Threat Add To JG Positives…

March 16th @ 10:49 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Cheryl Faye Schwartz, Allan, Ismael Rivera

  • Larry King, who’s seen on CNN nationwide, had nothing but great things to say about “Jersey Girl” on his program tonight. That’s great news! Here’s yet another wonderful review that just came in for the flick:
FILM THREAT REVIEW (click here to read complete review)

“I am an admittedly huge fan of Kevin Smith, but I didn’t hold high hopes for this film. I wasn’t sure he could pull off the comedy-drama. Plus, he was ditching Jay and Silent Bob and “Jersey Girl” just seemed to smack of being some kind of “I’m all grown up now-look at me!” kind of film. I was totally wrong in my assumption and I’m glad I was.

Instead “Jersey Girl” has more heart up on the screen than any film I’ve seen in recent years. I mean, we’re talking sappy, sweet, heart wrenching sentimentality that takes balls as big as softballs to put into a film in this era of cynicism. Sad as this is to say, Affleck’s inspired acting and Smith’s tender script are just begging to be skewered by cynics. But I found myself believing in the writing and performances all the way.

“Jersey Girl” still has all of that great Kevin Smith dialogue but without the dick and fart jokes. Personally I don’t think anyone handles Smith’s dialogue better than Affleck and he really shines here. I was also really blown away by Liv Tyler’s performance as the smart and sexy Maya. Her characterization and witty handling of Smith’s dialogue have given me newfound respect for someone who has started to seem sort of…sleepy in her roles as of late. Hell, everyone in this film is incredible including J-Lo, 7-year old Castro and George Carlin who drops a drama bomb at the tail end of the film that is heart breaking. Yes, I said drama bomb. ”

Tonight’s (& Upcoming) TV!

March 16th @ 10:33 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Mike Uehlein, Cheryl Faye Schwartz

  • Don’t forget, Jersey Girl week continues on The Tonight Show this week, with a guest appearance (NOT a Roadside Attraction) from Kevin Smith himself. Watch him shamelessly pimp the new flick, and share some couch time with Jay. You’ll find that on NBC.

    Before that, though, catch Ben Affleck tonight on Larry King Live at 9:00 PM. That’s on CNN, which comes with all your basic cable packages, so yep, you have it.

    Tonight, on Starz, at 8:30 PM , their “On The Set” feature on “Jersey Girl” begins to air.

    Coming up later this week, Sunday March 21st, at 11:15 AM – Bravo will feature a 15-minute segment titled “The Making of Jersey Girl” followed by Ben Affleck’s “Inside The Actors Studio” with Ben Affleck (11:30 AM).

    We’ll try and remind you of as many of these events as we can, though we suggest you watch the countdown ticker in the sidebar there, as it should always indicate the TV appearances that are happening in the near future. Schedules change a lot and appearances get announced at the last minute at times, so we WILL do our best to make sure you don’t miss all of this coverage over the next couple of weeks. Thanks for sticking with us.

Jersey Girl NewsBites™

March 16th @ 10:33 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Cheryl Faye Schwartz, Trey Yeatts, Alonso Duralde, Bill Knutson

  • You knew it was building up to this — Antony Teofilo’s big interview with Jersey Girl star Ben Affleck is now available over at Movie Poop Shoot. Antony covers all kinds of topics, from Push, Nevada, to Daredevil, to working with Damon. It’s a nice little piece, and recommended!
  • It sounds like Aint It Cool’s own Harry Knowles dug Jersey Girl from this small mention of the film at his site today :
“Between this film (“Hellboy”) — watching Kevin Smith’s JERSEY GIRL and LOVE ME IF YOU DARE… well… I’ve had a great 24 hours of film. I’ll get into it when I get the time …”

Well, he said it was great. That’s gotta count for something.

We’ll keep watch for his review.

  • The Village Voice’s Michael Musto chimes in on Jersey Girl today. Here’s what his column had to say (spoilers ahead):
Jersey Girl definitely has gossip value, seeing as BEN AFFLECK’s character learns to live again after his relationship with JENNIFER LOPEZ ends sadly. And trendwise, it’s of interest because it’s the second recent flick (Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen being the other) about a move from NYC to New Jersey, though in this one, the Garden State provides revivification, not spiritual death. Otherwise, it’s pretty synthetic stuff, with lots of characters walking in at just the wrong moment and people rejecting life in the fast lane the way no one within a mile of this project would ever imagine doing. Still, anything that climaxes with a six-year-old doing a musical number from Sweeney Todd deserves some respect.

At the premiere, director KEVIN SMITH said he’s desperate to change the film’s title to The Passion of the Jersey Christ. When he also cracked that they would hold the screening until J.Lo got there, Affleck squirmed, then laughed and said, “Thanks. Friends like these, folks!” Most fascinatingly of all, Affleck groveled before HARVEY WEINSTEIN, who in turn compared the Smith-Affleck team to SCORSESE and DE NIRO. But the mogul also helpfully described his boys’ complex relationship. (“Say the lines the way I wrote them.” “Of course, I won the Oscar for Good Will Hunting.”) And then I grabbed the gift bag and headed back home to Rahway. Kidding. M.M.

  • In E! Online’s “Clip of the Day”, Affleck dishes on Jersey Girl and Jennifer. You can access the clip from their front page.
  • Entertainment Tonight has another column today with Affleck discussing his desire to go “back to basics” with Jersey Girl:
“It’s really a far cry from ‘Armageddon,'” he says. “There’s no giant rock hurtling toward the earth, no sticking animal crackers down [Liv’s] pants. This was a more developed story in terms of my relationship with her character. We’ve known each other for a long, long time, so it was very easy and comforting. There was no awkwardness.”

  • And finally in the JG newsbites today, another great review from 2 local San Francisco papers. Click the scan above to give it a look.

View Askew NewsBites™

March 16th @ 10:32 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Dave Stevens, Starlite, Nashie, HomerGator, Patrick Boutin, Alonso Duralde

  • Yarrr! Catch Kevin as Captain Scurvy, as he appeared on MAD TV this past weekend. Ming’s got the clip now available in Quicktime Format HERE. It’s a really funny segment, and Kevin does a fine fine job with it. Recommended viewing.
  • Once again, DJ from Drawing the Line has slipped a small View Askew (Clerks Cartoon) reference into his strip. Check it out at the DTL site.
  • UK tabloid “The Sun” apparently loved Question #9 from Playboy in which Kevin revealed a bizarre request made by the self-proclaimed “King of Pop” himself:
Jacko: I wanna be a car

MICHAEL Jackson wanted to make a Hollywood movie in which he turned into a CAR so a young boy could drive him around.

The pop star sent his script to top film director Kevin Smith, who rejected it for being “the weirdest thing” he’d ever read.

Smith, 33, – whose latest movie Jersey Girl stars Ben Affleck – said: “It was about Michael Jackson morphing in to a car – no lie.

“Jackson was behind it. He wanted it to be a story about a guy, played by himself, who hangs out with a little boy.

“This boy goes into the car and drives around.”

Jackson, 45, later tried to get other Hollywood directors interested without success.

Smith said: “In retrospect, I’d love to make it.

“But it wouldn’t be anything like the version Jackson wanted to see.”

MSN picked up the newsbite as well.

  • According to this report from the latest Harry Potter film, it seems that Alan Rickman is keeping a Harley Quinn doll given to him by Kevin very close by. Cool stuff.
  • And finally today, ya gotta dig Affleck for this movie. The guy WANTS his Razzies! Let’s hope they make good and see the he receives his prizes. He earned ’em, after all. We’ll see ya again soon, things don’t slow down here enough to take a break these days!

‘Jersey Girl’ shows growth in characters, director

March 16th @ 7:42 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Dateline Alabama caught an early look at “Jersey Girl”, and liked what they saw! Here’s their full review. As always, watch out for spoilers, as this review does go through the plot in a fair amount of detail:
‘Jersey Girl’ shows growth in characters, director

A surprise to many viewers, ‘Jersey Girl’ delivers a coming-of-age story, sure to restore your faith in Ben Affleck and become a valid addition to any DVD collection.

Growing up isn’t easy to do. While it’s been rough for Kevin Smith, he’s finally made it to a point where serious meets light-heartedness and crudeness becomes the rough edges of everyday life.

“Jersey Girl” could be considered the coming-of-age film of Smith’s career, going back to his “Chasing Amy” roots where serious and dramatic topics can still entertain audiences, and offer chances for laughs. While life lessons can turn a crowd quickly, Smith is still able to impart to his audiences something they take home with them without feeling force fed.

The eternal love story takes yet another twist in “Jersey Girl.” Ollie Trinke (Ben Affleck) thought his job was the most important thing in life. Being the youngest “flack” to ever head a department in his public relations firm, Trinke is the pinnacle of spin doctoring and proud of it. Even a workaholic has to take a break, and when that happens he falls in love.

Enter Gertrude Steiney (Jennifer Lopez), the love of Ollie’s life and who he spends the night hours within New York City, one of Ollie’s two categories of life.

Happiness appears to abound for the New York power couple until it seems Ollie’s career could interfere with the picturesque family life Gertrude wants, and, since she wants it, Ollie wants it, too. Differences are worked out until things take another step toward the worse when Gertrude dies giving birth to the couple’s daughter, Gertie (Raquel Castro).

Ollie soon learns that life is hard when he loses his dream job because of one explosive dealing with the press, Ollie trashes his client and learns that home, the New Jersey category of life, is where the heart is. After moving back home to his widowed father’s house, Pops (George Carlin) helps Ollie realize there is more to life and helps him find it right there in New Jersey.

Raising a child as a single parent is one thing, but falling back in love after seven years of mourning is another. When Ollie meets a quick-witted and invasive grad student working part time at the video store, perspective changes once again for him. Falling for Maya (Liv Tyler) while trying to get back into the PR business is when all Ollie has learned is put to the test.

Although the whole Benifer thing was overblown and overplayed, the ambiguously together-as-one duo does play a picturesque and overly sweet, perfect couple. Jennifer Lopez gives a Meg Ryan-like performance in her short-lived role in this picture. Only around long enough to fall in love and have a baby, J-Lo dies within the first 15 minutes of the movie, which, had the scene not been so dramatic, would have drawn cheers from the audience.

Ben Affleck gives a performance that makes up for such films as “Dare Devil” and “Pearl Harbor.” While he may be considered to be too much of a hunk to play the role of a loving and caring father, he does give merit to a role that could have easily become a long-running stereotype. While many worried about another spin-off of “Gigli,” this film certainly knows how to avoid the pitfalls of expectations and audience intelligence.

Liv Tyler does well too in her role sans pointed elf ears. Her beauty on screen is captivating and the personality of her character makes it hard for all the guys in the audience not to fall in love with her. Playing the ideal woman cannot be easy, and so a lot of praise must go her way for this film.

George Carlin plays a significantly sized role in this film, which, by far, overshadows any of his previous appearances on the silver screen. Supplying most of the comic relief, Carlin still manages to play his character with such authenticity and conviction that he makes audiences believe he really is a grandfather. This role was created for Carlin to play. Bypassing his typically short, often crude, cameos, he was able to prove his worth as an actor, rather than an iconic comedian appearing on screen for the sake of the film having his name in the credits.

Raquel Castro played a perfect character, giving a performance rivaling any other one could expect from a child star. Her delivery and understanding of the material transfers well, and Castro comes off as a child we’d all want, but wouldn’t want to raise by ourselves.

Of course, not to discredit all of Smith’s previous film classics, Jason Lee and Matt Damon make quick cameo appearances as PR executives at one of Ollie’s many interviews. Just seeing Lee in a role where you know his subtle meanness and toothy evil grin will appear make that minute or so of the film worth the ticket price. Will Smith has a cameo, imparting the idealistic wisdom that other dramatic Smith films have, although usually delivered by Silent Bob.

Jason Biggs plays a befuddled and quaking assistant living in Ollie’s shadow. While Biggs rarely has more expression than a museum portrait, this role could be a springboard for Biggs and might help people forget what he did to that in that “you know, that one movie he’s in, with Nadia.”

Playing supporting roles, but ones that help extend the comic relief of Carlin and prolong the senses and feelings of a New Jersey borough, Stephen Root and Mike Starr play Greenie and Block, Gertie’s two uncles who Ollie says “aren’t your real uncles. They barely qualify as your peers.”

Kevin Smith fans might be disappointed to learn that Jay and Silent Bob are, as it seems, officially retired as promised. But it almost would have been a sin to include them in this film, making it too corny and pushed to have them just for continuity’s sake. The film was better off with Smith behind the camera doing what he does best — writing and directing.

The cast really comes together to deliver a surprising performance as a whole. Carlin especially will surprise you with his grandfatherly delivery and job as an on-screen surrogate parent. The cohesion of the actors and their performances make “Jersey Girl” a top runner for being one of Smith’s best films to date. While it will be hard to oust the others, seeing this film twice, or more, certainly wouldn’t hurt making that decision.

Smith’s latest film is a tale of growing up, but not necessarily from the point of view of a 6-year-old Jersey girl. With sort of a “when life hands you lemons …” motif, Smith still manages to entertain by having his characters develop fully within the story without pushing a fairy tale ending down your throat. All of the characters come full circle and are better for the experiences they had throughout the film, and so does the audience. If you examine his previous films, “Jersey Girl” isn’t typical Kevin Smith fair. This is more reminiscent of the life-lessons-learned quality that earned “Chasing Amy” so much acclaim.

When this film does hit DVD, it will join the rest of its family on my shelf, right next to “Jay and Silent Bob Strikes Back,” “Dogma,” “Chasing Amy,” “Mallrats” and “Clerks.” It just shows once again how life has its ups and downs and how sometimes growing up is a back and forth process.

The Creative Screenwriting Interview!

March 16th @ 7:41 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Mysterio, Matt

  • The latest issue of Creative Screenwriting features a brand new, in-depth interview with Kevin (as well as a classic photo that dates back 10 years or so). We’ve now got the scans of that article for ya right here, so click away and enjoy. In it, Kevin talks about budgets, musical numbers, the inspiration for the new flick, the screenwriting process, and a lot more.

View Askew NewsBites™

March 16th @ 7:41 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Sean Kennedy, Alonso Duralde, Alex, Daniel Zelter, David Seiden, Stephanie Gordon, Corey, Chris, MJR

  • We hate even giving this ink, but in today’s column, gossiper Cindy Adams has displayed the best in ignorant journalism, by deciding to put down “Jersey Girl” without even seeing a frame of the film. It’s like one of us criticizing a new CD before we’ve even heard a note. Shame on you, Ms. Adams. Next time you decide to so publicly bash something, how about seeing it first? Then feel free to weigh in. If you’ve got a moment, and you’ve seen the film, why not send an intelligent (read: no swearing or threatening, please) to Adams or the Post and let them know what YOU thought of it.
  • You’ll find a handful of brand new clips from Jersey Girl online at Cinemovies. It’s a french site, but never fear, the clips ARE in English. These are some really fun scenes from around the center of the movie, which we’d consider spoilers only if you want a few of the jokes ruined. As always, we recommend waiting to see the entire flick, but if you can’t make it, there ya go.
  • Dogma composer Howard Shore will be conducting the US Premiere of the Lord of the Rings Symphony with the Columbus Symphony Orchestra on March 26 and 27. Tickets range from $35-55 and are selling out VERY quickly. To buy online, surf HERE or you can call 614-228-8600.
  • We figure you might be getting your fill of Jersey Girl news, so here’s an interesting little tidbit for you. Back in Wizard #50, in October 1995 (that’s right, almost 10 years ago), they had an article stating that a Green Hornet feature film was on the way in 1996. Want to see what they had planned? Read on:
‘Green Day’

Cameras will roll on the highly anticipated Green Hornet movie before Christmas, and it will be a Universal release for summer 1996, according to Dark Horse Executive Vice President of Entertainment Todd Moyer.

“We’re going out to directors right now and will be making the movie before the end of the year,” declared Moyer from the set of another Dark Horse comic film in progress, Barb Wire. “The next step is to start a rewrite [by script writer Rich Wilkes] and get this show on the road.”

Moyer promised a reinvented Green Hornet mythos that “won’t come out as a rip-off of Batman.”

“We’ll be playing up the whole East-West duality of Green Hornet and Kato. We’ve take the Britt Reid character and turned him into a real hard-boiled type. He’ll be balls to the wall; swinging across cables and shooting guns. Kato will be a much stronger character who will be well-versed in the mystical Chinese arts. Fireballs will fly out of his hands, and we’ll have a scene where Kato runs across the tops of moving cars. The idea is to have a lot of fun with this.”

Fireballs, ‘eh? Well, it’ll sure be interesting to see how, if at all, Kevin’s version compares. Maybe this blurb will give him some ideas (or some ideas to AVOID!).

  • A new article in The Advocate meets up with directors Kevin Smith & Guin Turner to discuss the decade since their “Clerks” and “Go Fish” features (respectively) appeared. We’ll have some scans of this for you shortly, but in the meantime, you can read some outtakes from the piece HERE.
  • This is sort of public knowledge now, but we figured we’d share the piece with ya anyway. Jersey Girl cameo spoilers ahead, don’t read if you don’t wanna
    know the surprise. This comes to us from the Sun-Times:
Guess he really isn’t up for moonlighting anymore. That’s why Bruce Willis didn’t even return director Kevin Smith’s phone calls when it came to making a cameo in “Jersey Girl.”

Smith needed an A-list star to play himself — and part of the plot includes a publicist played by Ben Affleck saying something about him that isn’t very nice.

Smith first went to Willis figuring that he’s a Jersey guy at heart still. “Originally, I wrote the role for Bruce Willis, and offered it to him, but there was only one problem. I never heard back from Bruce Willis.

“So, I said to Ben, ‘Why don’t you try to contact Willis.’ Ben was like, ‘I can because I know him because we [starred together in] ‘Armageddon.’ ”

But even Ben couldn’t get through. “Bruce didn’t call him back either,” Smith marvels. Finally, one month shy of filming, Smith offered the role to Will Smith.

“It worked because Will was the Fresh Prince and rapping. …And he was in ‘Bad Boy,’ but I always knew him as DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince,” Smith said.

  • Keep your eyes on MTV News, which runs at 10 to the hour, ever hour. They’re occasionally airing Kevin’s segment regarding “Jersey Girl” and “Green Hornet”.
  • Clerks gets a quick name drop at the end of this NCAA Final Four article that appeared at Yahoo Sports.