Archive for November 15th, 2006

Commentary…

November 15th @ 6:37 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Alright folks, how are ya? Time to catch up on an especially busy November here at News Askew — The Clerks II disc surprised us with its astounding amount of content, so much in fact that we’re just finishing the final areas in watching it. The disc play-by-play and review’s being written up as well right now, so you can expect it before the week is out. We want to ensure that we bring you the best look at this disc on the web, so sit tight for that.

With November 28th bringing the biggest View Askew DVD release date EVER, we’re excited and busy, ramping up coverage of what’s sure to be a good month of press, promotion, signing events, and of course watching all these discs themselves. Stay with us here at News Askew for full coverage and the latest news regarding Clerks II, Now You Know, and Evening Harder.

But there’s quite a bit going on in ADDITION to DVD talk, so let’s kick into today’s update:

Stash Westwood Event: NOVEMBER 28TH!

November 15th @ 6:36 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Kevin reveals that NOVEMBER 28TH, RELEASE DAY will be the day of the large signing event for the new DVDs at Stash Westwood. With three View Askew discs out that day, Kevin’s celebrated by inviting “Now You Know” and “Clerks II” stars Jeff Anderson and Trevor Fehrman to join him for the event. The event begins at 4 PM on Tuesday the 28th, but we’re recommending that you get there EARLY to secure a spot in line. With the holidays coming up, we’re expecting a HUGE turnout, larger than ever really. Admission is FREE but you’re required to purchase NOW YOU KNOW right there in person, that day — Which you should be doing anyway with two of the film’s stars in attendance. And of course you’ll likely ALSO want to pick up Clerks II on DVD that day to get the guys to sign that as well. There’s a max of FIVE ITEMS that you can have signed, just so the line keeps moving and everyone gets a turn. Might we suggest picking up a few extra items to have personalized for Christmas gifts for that Askew fan in your life? Stash swag always goes great in the stocking or under the tree.

Kevin’s official announcement is at Myspace and reads as such:

Secret Stash DVD SIGNING, West Coast Style!

Last time we had a signing at one of our Stashes, it was just me.

This time, I’m bringing some friends…

If you loved Randal and Elias, how the fuck can you not be here? So far, it’s just Jeff, Trevor and me. Who knows who might be added later (probably Mewes, maybe others…)? But here’s your chance to pick up the “Clerks II” and “Evening Harder” DVD’s, as well as Jeff Anderson’s directorial debut, “Now You Know” (also starring Jeff and Trevor) – and get ‘em all signed! Just in time for fucking Christmas, no less!

All info can be found here.

Just a heads-up: back in August, at the East Coast signing, we had a bit of a crowd…

Video from the August East Coast Stash signing.

Fair warning: while I doubt we’ll have 2000 folks showing up for this signing as well (it ain’t summer, and we ain’t on the East Coast), it’d still be a good bet to get there as early as possible.

You’ve got a little less than two weeks. Start making travel plans!

With all these west coast events, it sure is an exciting time to be an Askew fan in California — Of course, if you’ve got the means, travelling out is always encouraged, as the fanbase has become quite the tight-knit community and a fun bunch to hang with. Make a day or a long weekend out of it, and make your plans NOW as this is just a couple of weeks away!

Interview: “Back to the Well”!

November 15th @ 6:36 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Quick Stop Entertainment gets an in-depth interview with documentary masterminds Zak Knutson and Joey Figueroa, who filmed all those beloved “Train Wreck” shorts and the upcoming “Back to the Well” documentary which we watched earlier this week and LOVED (review coming as a part of our Clerks II DVD coverage). This is one of those really lengthy ones, so grab a sandwich and click over to read (as well as watch a preview of “Well”). A few select passages are ahead:

ZAK: Rosario had no problems whatsoever. Rosario was like, “Oh, you guys are doing that?” And she jumps right in front of the camera. And Jay was kind of the saving grace. Jay loved that camera. Without Jay we wouldn’t have half the Train Wrecks we did. And you know, Brian and Jeff, and just everybody, was just outstanding.

QUICK STOP: The biggest misconception people might have about the documentary, compared to the Train Wrecks, is that the documentary is just a duplicate of what they saw in the Wrecks…

JOEY: Well, yeah. Everybody, just from reading stuff online and on the message boards and stuff, had the inclination that it was gonna be just a bunch of Train Wrecks pasted together. And we kinda let that fly. We’re like, “That’s cool that they’re gonna think that, because hopefully it’s gonna be a nice surprise when they see it’s something totally different.” We wanted to do something a little more in depth. Because if it was just gonna be pasted together Train Wrecks, why not just watch all the Train Wrecks back-to-back?

ZAK: We really wanted to give them… Joe and I were kinda there to see all this stuff that we put in the documentary. Even when we weren’t doing the documentary. Like, we start out basically with the end of Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. We go into Jersey Girl. We go into Green Hornet. Because Clerks 2 was kinda being bounced around throughout that entire time. So we kinda wanted to say, “Look, this is when it really started to roll.” Because at one point Kevin closed the book on the View Askewniverse. Now he’s going back into it. And after working with these guys for the last five years, there was a lot of story there to be told, that we just didn’t want to deal with Train Wrecks. We wanted to actually get in there and do some stuff. Like the fact that Scott left. Scott was really having issues with being a producer, and there were other things in his life that he wanted to do, and it’s the exact opposite of Kevin. You know Kevin – that’s all he wanted to do, is make movies and write. So there was all this stuff in there that we really wanted to get into and show, and kinda show the relationship between Kevin & Scott, because Kevin takes a lot of the spotlight, but Scott’s really the one who helps push Kevin, and when Kevin is on the fence about a joke or on the fence about a story or something like that, Scott’s the one that he goes to. Scott is kinda the unsung creative partner in the entire thing.

ZAK: Out of the footage we shot, Joe and I figured we can probably do three more documentaries. Out of the stories, out of everything else, we could do three more documentaries. Like, we’ve already made jokes about, but one day it might be true, on the Clerks 2 10th anniversary DVD, doing an entirely new documentary out of the footage. Like, it’s totally possible. And it wouldn’t be a crappy documentary, either. It’d be really good. We just had to pick the stories that we felt were relevant at the time to telling the story. We’ve got so many others that we can go into. We can totally do another DVD just out of the footage that we have, as a supplemental, or as the one that stands alone five years from now. It’s a wellspring that I don’t think anybody has really thought about. And the other cool thing about the internet that I didn’t bring up, is you’re able to address stuff as it happens. If something happens at 11:00 that morning… this happened once or twice, where we wanted to get something on the net immediately. Kevin would say, “I want to put something on the net right now.” We would shoot his intro at 11:00, and by 4:00 I was uploading it to the server so that it could be up for 5:00 when people got home from work. That’s something that you don’t have with the newspaper. Something you don’t have with a regular article. It’s something that you can go all-out, boom, and it’s automatic. You can address something as it happens.

QUICK STOP: So I guess the big question would be to ask, what’s next?

JOEY: Well, we had some stuff going on where Kevin threw us this idea of shooting an in-depth documentary for the Chasing Amy 10th anniversary release. That’s kind of in a holding pattern right now for reasons we really shouldn’t even be talking about.

ZAK: We’ve got two projects with Kevin. This is the official one. We have two projects with Kevin that we would… actually more like three… that we’re talking about doing right now, but we’ve got to wait for things like money and contracts and all that kinda stuff, and then there’s a couple other people that we just started talking to, because they’re really pleased at the way the documentary’s turned out, and the Train Wrecks. So we’re trying to get it out there, and we’re trying to get it together. We just got our website up, that Ming from View Askew is helping us out with, and we’re trying to get that up and get that running.

JOEY: It’s a temporary site right now but Ming’s kinda diving into it pretty soon. He’s been real busy with all these screenings and whatnot.

ZAK: And then it’s basically putting together packages and trying to get in touch with filmmakers to say, “You got movies coming up – we can help you. And it’s not gonna cost you an arm and a leg, and you’re gonna be extremely pleased and happy with it at the end of it, and your movie will make more money because of it.”

QUICK STOP: What’s the URL again?

ZAK: Oh, it’s chopshopentertainment.com

Here’s some direct links to all the “Back to the Well” clips now available — Enjoy!

New Views & Reviews From DVDTalk!

November 15th @ 6:35 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Karla, Kasper Jorgensen, Mark Dunderdale

  • DVDTalk has posted their capsule reivew on the disc all of us are waiting to spin up — “Evening With Kevin Smith 2: Evening Harder”. It’s a mixed, generally positive review of the content (not overly lengthy). Here’s their final verdict:
Though the stories aren’t as hilarious as those heard on the first collection, and there are some serious momentum killers in the audience, this set remains an easy way to find plenty of laughs, as Smith remains a raconteur par excellence. He’s one of the few people I could listen to speak for four hours, only to jump back and listen to him again, thanks to a very folksy manner and a genuine sense of humor. The DVDs look and sound very good, though the extras are slim compared to most Smith productions. Fans of the Jersey Boy will absolutely want to check this one out, and likely own it, as there are quite a few spins one could get out of it.

We’ll have our full review as soon as we can get our hands on a copy of the dang thing. Our Sony pleas have sadly met deaf ears thus far. Some folks have even claimed an early arrival of their disc set, which some venues mistakenly advertised with a November 7th release date.

DVDTalk Radio ALSO scored an exlusive audio interview with Kevin to promote the latest discs, which runs an ironic 37 minutes in length:

On our latest episode of DVD Talk Radio, DVD Talk Editor Geoffrey Kleinman sits down at talks with Kevin Smith about the DVD Release for Clerks II and An Evening With Kevin Smith II – Evening Harder. Kevin Smith talks about his experience with Clerks 2, why he’s so passionate about connecting and communicating with his fans and critics, a top secret Showtime Series and DVD collecting. Listen to our interview with Kevin Smith using our Online DVD Talk Radio Player or Download the complete interview with Kevin Smith (37 min 27MB).

The interview covers Kevin’s thoughts on the good reception for Clerks II, the horror flick, working with family, “Manchild”, Tarantino, and much more.Click HERE to snag the entire thing in MP3 format for your listening enjoyment.

Kevin On “Manchild”…

November 15th @ 6:35 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Kevin popped up at Myspace to make a lengthy post explaining how he got involved in Showtime’s pilot for Manchild and reveals, among other things, that the show will be quite different than its UK original. Here’s Kevin:
I am a “Manchild”

So it looks like I’m gonna be doing a TV pilot…

Hollywood Reporter “Manchild” story.

But, oddly enough, it’s not a show I’ve created; it’s a show I’ve simply been cast in. And, like anything in life, there’s a story behind it.

A few weeks back, Brent Morely – one of the agents at Endeavor – called to say “There’s this Showtime pilot I want to send you to take a look at, because I think you’d dig the sensibility.”

Every few months, scripts get sent my way from various studios looking for a rewrite or comedic punch-up, but I haven’t done one since “Coyote Ugly” – probably because, after all my work on that script, they hired a director who, naturally, wanted to bring his writer aboard the project, and almost all of my stuff got shit-canned. Generally, the scripts just sit on a pile near my desk for close to a year before they hit the trash – which isn’t a statement on the scripts themselves as much as as statement about my lack of interest in rewrite gigs.

When it hit the pile, the “Manchild” script caught my eye because a) the script was very slim, and b) the cover letter said nothing about rewriting. I was directed to read with an eye toward the role of “Paul”.

An acting gig? Were they kidding? I’m not an actor.

So while Jen was sitting on the bedroom couch reading a book with Harley, I sat on the other end of the couch and started leafing through the “Manchild” script, curious as to why anyone would think of me in conjunction with this show.

Then, I laughed. Out loud (or “LOL’ed” in the parlance of this medium).

Jen’s head immediately snapped up from the kid’s book and she stared at me, agog.

“Really?!” she asked, stupefied.
“It was a pretty funny line,” I explained.

Her reaction was based on the fact that I rarely laugh at anything on the page. Sure, I can split my sides at something like “Arrested Development” or the latest Carlin album (or “Borat”, I’m promised; I haven’t seen it yet); but when it comes to scripts, it’s rare that I react aloud at all (even at my own shit).

So I go back to reading, and within a few minutes, I laugh aloud again.

And again.

And again.

It was a truly funny script. And the part they’d earmarked for me to look at was a really funny character in a script full of funny stuff.

So I called Agent Brent back and said “I’d do this, sir. In a heartbeat.”

I met with the show creators, Robb and Mark Cullen (”Lucky” and “Heist”), as well as Darren Starr (show producer) and Stephen Gyllenhaal (show director and father of Jake) a few days later, found them all to be good guys, and suddenly, we were off and running.

We shoot the pilot in December, after I finish this other, two-day acting gig on a feature. If Showtime digs the pilot, we go to series two months or so after that. With twelve eps a season, it means I’m out of the directing game (which should please some folks) for only about four months out of the year.

I don’t know how Showtime will position the show (if they pick it up), but it’ll be a nice addition to their schedule alongside “Weeds”. It’s frank, crude, honest and funny: kinda like the flicks I do, if all the characters had high-paying jobs. While it’s based on the BBC show of the same name, from what I understand (never having seen the original), the Cullens kept the premise and title and re-built everything else. The original was compared to “Sex and the City”, so it makes sense that Darren is involved.

The only daunting aspect is that I’m surrounded by real, honest-to-goodness actors (James Purefoy, John Corbett, Paul Hipp). Thankfully, I got my first taste of acting beside real actors (the Silent Bob stuff barely counts) in “Catch & Release” (in theaters this January), so I’ve already got a bit of experience feeling inferior all the time (shit – I’ve got a lifetime of experience in that department, to be honest).

It should be an interesting exercise that, if the show works as well as the script, will turn into a sweet side-gig for me. At the very least, I’ll learn a thing or two about acting; at the most, I’ll have something to do four months out of every year, and be proud as punch to be involved with one really insightful and fucking funny show.

To say I never imagined something like this for myself is a gross understatement; this gig really, really comes out of the blue for me. But when someone hands you something as engaging and hysterical as the pilot for “Manchild” and says “We’d like you to be a part of it”… Jesus, saying no isn’t an option.

Hopefully, y’all will tune-in when (and if) we go on air.

We’ve got very high hopes for the series, as well as confident that Showtime, normally very good about giving shows like this a chance to find an audience, will pick this one up for 2007. We’re excited at the notion that Kevin will be a regular on an ongoing series, and of course will be watching this one unfold very closely. Being a big fan of “Weeds” and it’s delicate balance of comedy and drama, this one’s bound to be a winner and WOULD make an excellent companion piece as Kevin suggests.

Kevin’s “Top 8″…

November 15th @ 6:34 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • The Myspace system, for the uninitiated, allows uses to select their “Top 8” friends, who display on their front page. Kevin has a couple flicks at the top of his at the moment, one starring Jason Mewes that we’ve actually not yet heard of, and another which we’ve been promoting screenings of as we hear. Kevin’s got more on the topic:
So I’ve been getting some queries as to the first two slots of my top eight, and why they’re there.

“Fuck: A Fuckumentary” is this really fun and informative doc by Steve Anderson that examines the etymology of the word… well, “fuck”. It’s playing now in big cities across the country and worth a watch if you’ve ever wondered how we collectively settled on the term for myriad uses. Also worth a watch just to see venerable newsman Sam Donaldson extol the word’s virtues.

“Netherbeast Incorporated” is a flick that’s in post-production right now. I know very little about it (a teaser trailer is available here), except that my boy Mewes is in it, and he asked me to put it in my Top 8 to drum up some Friends for it, well in advance of its theatrical release. If you love Jason Mewes (and if you’re reading this, how the fuck could you not?), hit up”Netherbeast Incorporated” with a Friend Request.

Also not represented in my Top 8 (I don’t think they have a MySpace page) is a flick that’s currently in theaters which could use your support.

“Come Early Morning” is the directorial debut of Joey Lauren Adams – she who essayed the role of Alyssa in “Chasing Amy” – that’s been receiving some really strong reviews, thanks in no small part to Ashely Judd’s performance (and Joey’s assured directing). In a world in which male directors outnumber female directors by a massive margin, give “Morning” a look-see and help kickstart a much-deserving chick filmmaker’s career.

And while I’m on the subject of hawking shit…

Buy TALES FROM THE CLERKS right HERE! It’s nearly as heavy as a phonebook (so it’ll prop open doors nicely) and is as awesome as it is thick (unlike my cock).

View Askew NewsBites™

November 15th @ 6:34 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by James Webb, Britt Schramm, Travis, Frank Stevens, Glen Flanders

  • Weinstein and Blockbuster! This just in from Variety — In an unprecedented deal, Weinstein Co. films will be EXCLUSIVELY available for rental ONLY through Blockbuster Video starting this January — That means that you Netflix memebers, Hollywood Video members, and the like will NOT be able to rent any future Askewniverse stuff unless you get it from Blockbuster. Interesting, no? In return, Blockbuster will offer front-of-store placement and other marketing exposure for Weinstein titles. Genius Products stuff (Clerks II, Now You Know) will not be affected by this deal, which gives them exclusive rental rights to their titles for 3 years.

In an interesting follow-up, we heard that the “Passion of the Clerks” subtitle has now been removed from the Blockbuster computer system (as informed by a BBV employee).

  • Just to keep our archives complete — Here’s a scan we mentioned earlier in November that just came in. A blurb with Kevin from SPIN Magazine about his favorite music (and guilty pleasures). Click it for a closer look.
  • Jason Lee’s psuedo-band “Phish Tahko” made IGN’s Top 10 TV Shows list with stiff competition like The Brady Six and Zack Attack from Saved by the Bell. Thought it’d be worth mentioning. They say:
Earl Hickey, before he discovered the concept of karma and reformed his wicked ways, didn’t always do the smartest things. So it wasn’t exactly inspired for him, along with his brother Randy and their friend Ralph, to form a band, seeing as how they weren’t all that talented. However, that didn’t really concern them, as all they really wanted to get out of it was sex from some random, local girls, and in that respect, the band was a success (though that doesn’t work out as well for Earl, who ends up sleeping with Ralph’s considerably older mother instead). Their first show was Phish Tahko’s one and only performance, until the day Earl decides to make amends to Tom, the old man they’d originally picked as their lead singer, only to kick him out. For one night only, the reunited Phish Tahko once again rocks the socks off the Crab Shack, as they do a less than memorable, but certainly energetic, version of The Edgar Winter Group’s “Frankenstein.” And yes, we are aware — as we’re sure the Earl producers are — that, as an instrumental piece, “Frankenstein” requires no lead singer.
  • And finally, in the weird news of the day, a Dutch hip-hop crew called “De Jeugd van Tegenwoordig” have a new single out called “Voor jou” — A spoof, of RNB songs. The video, by Michiel Krop and Stijn Windig from Lemonade Animation, features cameos of both Jay and Silent Bob in inaction form. You can look for them on YouTube. Jay skates by about 2 minutes in, Dark Knight Bob appears on a motorcycle early on. Thanks for flying with us today!