Archive for March 14th, 2006

Is “Tony” The First Day Victim?

March 14th @ 9:57 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris, Mike Klimek


“Tony”
  • Check out the antics of 1st Assistant Director Tony Steinberg in this new selection of footage from the Mooby’s set of Clerks 2. The camera loves Tony, and Tony loves the camera, as he goes about his day to day duties performing his important role of keeping the action in order for Mr. Smith. This is the latest in our continuing series of “Train Wreck” shorts, brilliantly filmed and edited by our own Zak Knutson and Joey Figueroa. Watch the latest and all that came before, EXCLUSIVELY at Clerks2.com!

Vulgarthon: NEW Surprise Flick For Day Two!

March 14th @ 9:56 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • On the fence about buying Day Two Vulgarthon tix? Well how about this…A program change! Seems that a super top secret film WILL be shown on Day ONE, but on day two, a DIFFERENT top secret flick will screen on the second day, and it’ll be one that one see theaters for months! Feel free to make your predictions! Tickets are still available for Red Bank, Day Two, featuring great films, guests, and of course, that super secret film that will be DIFFERENT than the film we see on Day One. Get your tickets now for the historic Vulgarthon’s return to Red Bank! It’s gonna sell out. Trust us.

IGN Presents: “A Brief History Of Clerks”!

March 14th @ 9:56 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Jay

  • Our resident editing genius, Mattt Potter (the dude who puts together those brilliant compliations that play round-the-clock in The Stash), has put together an excellent new bit of business to catch newcomers up to the world of Clerks. Perfect timing, and something to pass on to everyone you know, especially if they haven’t seen the original Clerks for some reason. This should catch everyone up on the world of Dante and Randal, as well as some of the Askewniverse at large (movie tie-ins, the websites, comics, and the like)…as well as refresh your memories before you step into the theater to view Clerks 2 (August 18, all over the place). Here’s what IGN has to say:

“A Brief History Of Clerks”

If Kevin Smith didn’t exist, then geeks the world over would have to create him – probably involving some hetero Weird Science-esque alchemy involving copies of Star Wars, a few dozen comic books, New Jersey tap water, a roll of film, and a box of Choc-o-diles.

Considering the technology was lost after creating Kelly LeBrock in the mid-80’s, it’s a good thing that Kevin Smith does exist – much like Santa Claus and that urban legend about Wendy’s chili.

Since his breakthrough debut with a little black & white indie named Clerks, Smith has continued to expand his interconnected View Askewniverse into a lucrative merchandising empire via flicks like Mallrats, Chasing Amy, Dogma, Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back, and on TV with the killed-too-soon Clerks animated series. Oh, and he also did Jersey Girl – a small, heartfelt film that’s actually quite good if you give it a chance… It’s got George Carlin, for cripes sake.

The long-awaited sequel to Smith’s debut flick, Clerks II, arrives in theaters August 18th (check out the video blogs at www.clerks2.com, and Kevin and the fine folks at View Askew decided to send over an exclusive Clerks II primer.

Basically, it’s a brief overview of the Clerks universe, meant to get both newbies and fans alike up to snuff before the sequel hits screens this August.

Also, don’t forget about our next bit of A/V sweetness – the one where Kevin decided to participate in an video Q&A session with all-comers. This is the first in a series, so by all means continue to send in your questions by clicking here.

(Before we hit the video, a special thanks to View Askew’s Mattt Potter…)

You can download this beauty in both Quicktime and Windows Media formats (small and large sizes). The IGN site has the hookup! The actual article page also collects a bunch of previous IGN stories on Kevin and the Askewniverse, so be sure and scroll down to see more good stuff that you might have missed in the past. And give this video a watch — We’re betting you’ll learn a new thing or two about View Askew history.

WATCH Kevin Speak At the ISAs!

March 14th @ 9:55 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris


2006 Independent Spirit Awards

  • It’s one thing to listen, but even cooler to watch — We’re happy to present the crowd-shocking, hilarious speech that Kevin gave at this year’s ISAs in Divx format. You’ll need your Divx player or VLC to watch it. Enjoy!

View Askew NewsBites™

March 14th @ 9:54 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Michael Hopkinson, Dave Beynon, Megalion, Adam Halkuff, Eric Fortune, James Allen Eakins, Paul Simon

  • Kevin gets a few quotes in a new article from Time Magazine titled “Can This Man Save The Movies? (Again?)”. The piece discusses the advent of digital technology in filmmaking, pondering if it will one day completely replace film. Here’s Kev’s bits, though the entire article is quite good:
…And indie imp-guru Kevin Smith (Clerks, Chasing Amy) notes, “There is a Panasonic camera, the 100, that gives a picture that’s about as good-looking as 16-mm or 35-mm film. The kids today who are making their do-it-yourself features are doing it with high-definition video. If I was shooting Clerks today, I’d probably use that camera.”

Smith wanted to use a digital camera for Clerks II, the sequel to his 1994 debut hit, but his director of photography didn’t feel comfortable with the process. “A lot of directors and directors of photography are resistant to put down what they’re familiar with,” Smith says. Besides the shock of the new, there’s the love of the old. “Most people in film have a great affection for film stock, for the medium. And they feel that moving in a digital direction is kind of leaving their history behind. It’s more sentimental than anything else.”

Finally, film degenerates, the way a vinyl record does under a stylus or a videocassette does with frequent use. “With film you have degradation problems,” Smith says, “where the stock starts breaking down. Frames get lost when they cut reels together.” The digital look will stay fresh for the life of the theatrical run.

Some blame the shrinking theater audience on the narrowing gap between a movie’s premiere in theaters and its debut in video stores–from six months a few years ago to about four months or less today. “With the window getting smaller and smaller,” says Smith, “people don’t want to leave the house. The audience is being trained that they don’t have to run out to the theater to see something.” For many viewers, especially adults, the kids who see the big blockbusters and the critics who review the little indie films have essentially become focus groups that help them decide whether they should see a movie–when it comes out on DVD.

The genius of late 20th century entrepreneurism was to get people to pay a lot for things they were used to getting cheap (coffee) or free (water). A quarter-century ago, Hollywood made most of its money from showing films in theaters. Now the biggest bucks come from DVDs and pay TV. Producers also got something for nothing by packaging recent and old TV shows for the DVD market. All those revenue streams give folks more reasons to stay home, encased in their all-media cocoons, in some cases chained to the desktop deity that can never get enough attention. Just as the computer helps them do many things that used to take them out–work, shopping, buying books, renting movies–so will it soon allow them to download movies to watch on it. As Smith notes, “It’s tough to cram three or four people in front of a computer to watch something. But no doubt Steve Jobs is working on this.”

Whatever is lost on the smaller screen, DVD has become, in Smith’s words, “historically the final record of your movie. That’s the one people watch over and over.” Rodriguez has said that the “real versions” of his movies are the extended, unrated ones on DVD.

  • Don’t forget, UK’ers — The absolutely brilliant, ahead of its time Clerks Animated Series begins airing IN ORDER on ITV4 TOMORROW (Wednesday) night at 10:30 PM. Catch it on air and urge all your pals to do so as well.
  • Ascribe reports that Jason Lee is up for a Prism Award, for “Best Performance in a Comedy Series”. The Prism Awards honor outstanding accomplishments in the accurate depiction of drug, alcohol and tobacco use and addiction in film, television, interactive, comic books, music, and video entertainment.

  • And hey, while we’re talking about Lee, how about a nice new photo of Jason with his wife Beth Riesgraf from this year’s Independent Spirit Awards?