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The Latest Script News From Kevin…

May 15th @ 8:09 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Here’s the latest we’ve learned from Kevin regarding the feature film plans starting late this year. This is always one of the most exciting times for us, when Kevin starts putting pieces together and leaking small details out here and there. We’ve gathered together some details from recent posts of his. Here’s where things stand as of today:
  • Kevin is anxious for the Weinstein brothers to see the new script, though Harvey leaves for Cannes today or tomorrow. It will be some time until he reads it due to Cannes. The script’s current with Kevin’s production exec, Carla. The official first draft came in at 113 pages (which normally translates to around 113 minutes of screentime, by Hollywood standard).
  • We know we have this untitled comedy in the pipeline, as well as “Red State”. That leaves the very mysterious 10th View Askew film which Kevin promises us will be something special. We NOW know that film will not be a comedy, or a horror film, from this post:

    “Like “Red State” (once it’s done), it’ll be completely different than any film I’ve ever done before. I.E. – not a comedy.”

So what genres does that leave? Action? Drama? SciFi? MUSICAL? Would “Ranger Danger” be considered a SciFi or a comedy? Hmmmm…

Also, due to the busy weekend, there was no time to sit with Scott and record a new episode of the highly entertaining SModcast. Kevin promises that he and Scott will be back with a new episode next week.

Latest On Comedy, “Red State”…

May 13th @ 4:20 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Kevin Smith, Brad & Chris

  • Kevin posted a brief update to the comedy script saga this weekend:
So I spent the next two days trimming the length down to 120 pages, then turned it over to Mosier.

First test passed: Mosier loved it.

Gonna make some more trims in the first thirty pages, and turn it in to the Brothers Weinstein on Monday, hopefully.

As we all know from the past, Mosier is always Kevin’s go-to guy for testing out a script. The fact that he dug it is a fantastic sign — Sounds like this one’s on the fast track, for sure. Last we heard, the plan was still to film “Red State” first, but who knows if the projects might get flipped after this news. Cinematical reports this same news and also ponders the shooting schedule. We think it can be done without a problem, though as we all know, plans change.

/Film also rehashes what they know so far reminding us of the winter filming location due to the comedy’s requiring snow, and that Rosario is still the only star mentioned. Stick around — We’ll keep you up to date.

Graves Interview: Zak Knutson

May 13th @ 4:20 pm | 1 Comment » | Scooped by Chris Graves

  • Our guest correspondent Chris Graves once again conducts a compelling interview with one of the many members of the View Askew family — This time, it’s Clerks II’s “sexy stud” himself Zak Knutson, the co-founder of Chop Shop Entertainment. The interview covers everything from his documentary work, Chop Shop’s goals, and even his early acting days:
AN INTERVIEW WITH ZAK KNUTSON

BY CHRIS GRAVES

CHRIS GRAVES: For those who do not know, what is your background and how were you introduced to the world of View Askew and Kevin Smith?

ZAK KNUTSON: I was working on a television series called FREAKY LINKS for Fox. The show was horrible and was going to be cancelled any day. The assistant coordinator on the show got a job offer to work on, what was then called, V.A. # 5 (JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE BACK). All that I knew about it was that it was a Kevin Smith movie and Ben Affleck and Matt Damon were in it and it was going to be 5 months of work. Which means a lot if you work in the world of film production. She brought me onto the show and I struck up a great relationship with Kevin’s assistant and mother-in-law, Gail, and the post production supervisor, Monica Hampton. Gail got me through production and Monica hired me as the visual effects assistant for the post production phase after another guy bailed out to work on another gig. Lucky me…they seemed to like me for some reason.

CG: Can you tell me about Chop Shop Entertainment? What was the basis for it’s creation and will you eventually expand into producing feature films instead of just documentaries and behind the scenes material?

ZK: Chop Shop was officially formed for CLERKS 2. Joey Figueroa and I had wanted to do this for a long time. We’ve known each other for about 12 years. I’m a big DVD geek. I love extra features and director commentaries. When we did the CLERKS X DVD, Joey and I had such a great time working on it that we wanted to continue it. I want to get something straight out there for people though, we (Joey and I) were basically crew for that doc and DVD. Phil Benson was really the brains behind doing SNOWBALL EFFECT. We put in our 2 cents, but it was really Phil Benson’s baby. Joe and I learned so much though, we wanted to do the same thing for the CHASING AMY DVD. We shot some stuff for it, but it’s been wrapped up in the Miramax/Disney/Weinstein Company break-up.

When GREEN HORNET was happening, Joe and I came up with the idea for webisodes and a possible doc on the DVD. Doing that stuff on our off time while we would have been shooting in Prague. We thought that we could then turn that footage into a calling card for getting more work and possibly forming, what would now be, Chop Shop Entertainment. With CLERKS 2, we had over a year to prep for it. We got Kevin and Scott Mosier involved, and pitched them ideas that they liked. We didn’t want to do just the standard studio EPK stuff. We wanted our work to be worthy of a Kevin Smith DVD. We wanted to make stuff that the fans would love and take it to the next level. That next level was the TRAIN WRECK Webisodes. We want to do that same thing for other filmmakers and other studios. We want to take DVD content and internet webisodes to a level of great entertainment marketed to it’s target audience.

We do DVD content and documentaries, but we also wanna do television and feature films. We wanna produce all kinds of content. We wanna do it all. We’ve got some things working, but I don’t wanna jinx it. You will know as soon as I know.

CG: I’ve read that you started out as an actor in the early 1990’s, appearing on such shows as THE FRESH PRINCE OF BEL-AIR, COACH, and THE JOHN LARROQUETTE SHOW. What were your experiences like on those television programs?

ZK: Acting is great. I really enjoy it, but it’s really difficult to make a decent living at it without becoming a manic depressive. I learned a lot from working on COACH. Craig T. Nelson was a great teacher for young actors. He was pretty quiet on set, but you just needed to watch the guy and you could pick up the smallest things about timing and how to hit jokes to get that extra laugh out of it. He could also make it be dramatic without being cheesy (tough for a sitcom). Plus, the most professional guy I had worked with up until that point. That guy has done it all, and is still doing it. He’s Mr. Incredible for fuck-sake. I am nowhere near as talented as some of those guys that I worked with. But I hope that I learned things from them that I can use with other people.

CG: When and why did you decide to branch off from acting and start working behind the scenes on television and film productions?

ZK: On set as an actor, I found myself paying more attention to what was going on behind the camera. It was fascinating. I knew nothing about that stuff until I walked onto a set for the first time. I was a virgin that turned into a whore, as far as production goes. Lights, cameras, rigging crews, grips, gaffers. and sound. I just wanted to learn it all. I got obsessed. I decided one day that I was gonna work “behind the scenes” and learn as much as I could. So, I got a gig as a Set PA on the movie SPEED. I spent 4 months on the 105 freeway with Sandra Bullock and never looked back. As much as I have learned, the more I realize I don’t know shit, and Scott Mosier reminds me of it…ALL THE FUCKING TIME!!! It’s one of the things I like about making movies. Your always able to learn something you didn’t know before about the process.

CG: I thought that the CLERKS 10th anniversary documentary, THE SNOWBALL EFFECT, was by far one of the best ever done on a film and filmmaker. Whose idea was it to make it and are there any interesting pieces of footage left out of the finished documentary, besides what was on the deleted scenes section of the dvd? In your opinion, could THE SNOWBALL EFFECT be turned into a PRIVATE PARTS / MAN ON THE MOON kind of biographical feature film, with the rest of the View Askew history that came after CLERKS included as well?

ZK: SNOWBALL EFFECT was Phil Benson’s idea. I was his assistant on JERSEY GIRL, and when he told me about it, I beat him over the head to do it and to bring me on to work on it. I saw CLERKS in the theater when it came out. I was stoned and drunk and it opened my eyes to indie film. I thought that story should be told and the DVD was the best place to do it. That being said, I don’t think that there are any real stories that we left out that aren’t on the DVD.

SNOWBALL being done as a PRIVATE PARTS kind of movie I don’t think would really do anything that the documentary hasn’t already done. I think SNOWBALL answers all of the questions and tells the story the best possible way, from the mouths of all that were involved. I don’t know about the fans but I would rather see Kevin work on an original story from his imagination than see something that he has already lived and told before in movie form. I wanna watch RANGER DANGER!!!

CG: What is your relationship like in terms of working with SPIDER-MAN star James Franco? You’ve co-produced as well as filling in other positions on two movies he’s written and directed, THE APE and GOOD TIME MAX. How did this collaboration come about?

ZK: Dave Klein, the director of photography from CLERKS, CHASING AMY, and CLERKS 2, hired me for the line producing gig on THE APE, which James Franco directed. Dave told (Scott) Mosier that he was looking for a cheap line producer. Mosier told him to talk to me cause we were on the end of the JERSEY GIRL post production. I met with Dave and Vince Jolivette at Dave’s house. I promptly told both of them that I have no experience doing this, there will be times that I won’t know what the fuck I’m doing, but I work cheap and you won’t find anyone who will work harder for you than me. Those bastards bought it and hired my big green ass.

Dave told me later that I was the only person he ever interviewed that basically told him “don’t hire me cause I don’t know shit, but I’m a hard worker”. Dave and Vince became really good friends of mine during that shoot, and Vince brought me on for GOOD TIME MAX, which is at the Tribeca Film Festival right now.

My job was to try to be able to get James and Dave everything they needed to shoot the film crew and equipment-wise. GOOD TIME MAX was a bitch of a shoot. It was alot of those horrible independent film shoot story you have ever heard about. We shot that flick on the tightest of tight budgets and it looks better than it should. I still don’t know how we pulled it off. Dave and James really did a nice job pulling it all together. James has come a long way as a director since we did THE APE, and you don’t really wanna piss off The Goblin when it’s his cash your fucking around with. James finances all of those films out of his own pocket. That guy puts his money where his mouth is, something that he believes in. I admire him for doing that. Something that can’t be said for most young actor/directors out there. James is also a really talented actor. If anyone gets the chance, watch FREAKS AND GEEKS on DVD and JAMES DEAN. You can see the guy do his stuff outside of the SPIDER-MAN machine.

CG: How was the experience like providing the voice for both The C.L.I.T. in JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE BACK and Julie Dwyer’s father in the THE LOST SCENE cartoon from the CLERKS 10th anniversary dvd?

ZK: I love me some voice over work. You don’t have to shower or shave. The C.L.I.T. was just something that I recorded in the offices of JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE BACK and was just happy to be asked to do it. Julie Dwyer’s dad was cool for me cause I saw CLERKS when it was in theaters, and it was kinda like I got to play a part in the original CLERKS.

CG: If and when there might be a CLERKS 3, will the Sexy Stud finally be legally married in New Jersey to Kinky Kelly? How did you get approached for this role and has it haunted you yet since the CLERKS 2 theatrical release?

ZK: I think that Kinky Kelly and The Sexy Stud would be living in Mexico because of the relaxed laws on inter-species erotica. Plus its a decent place for those two to make a living for obvious reasons. It would have to be somewhere in Baja though. The water is warm and the drinks are cold.It really hasn’t haunted me. I do get recognized sometimes, but its usually in 7-11’s for some reason. I get free drinks sometimes when I go out with my friends. Being 6′4, I think I scare the shit out of most people that might wanna fuck with me. Most people are pretty nice though and just wanna hand shake and say a kind word. I don’t have any problems with that.

CG: What was your fondest memory from behind the scenes of CLERKS 2? Is there a favorite TRAIN WRECK video of yours? And will the remaining TRAIN WRECK footage be used for the CLERKS 2 10th anniversary dvd?

ZK: My fondest memory just being able to hang out with my friends everyday for almost a year and make a movie about it. When we shot the flick in Buena Park, Joe and I lived at our best friend Jon’s house, which was like 5 miles away. Both of us grew up in Orange County, so it was cool shooting in your own back yard. The Burger King we shot in was right next to a union that my aunt worked in for 30 years. I used to go to that place as a kid to play Pac Man. I never in my life figured that one day I would be there in leather acting like I was fucking a donkey.

My favorite TRAIN WRECK would have to be the Cannes standing “O” bit. Just because it was so special.

The Weinstein Company has about 3 hours of TRAIN WRECKS that weren’t put on the DVD (sorry about that). They will probably use them for future releases of the DVD. They live forever on the net and Youtube though.

CG: Do you have any new projects coming up?

ZK: We just finished some webisodes for, THE ART OF TRAVEL. Quick Stop Entertainment is putting the webisodes up. It’s a cool little movie with a great crew behind it. We have alot of stuff in the fire at the moment but nothing that is ready to be announced yet. Hopefully, soon…. (wink wink)

CG: What is your favorite View Askew/Kevin Smith flick (CLERKS 2 excluded)?

ZK: CHASING AMY. It used to be MALLRATS, but the older I get the more I fall in love with CHASING AMY. I think it’s a pretty great fucking flick.

CG: And finally, do you hope to be included in some aspect, be it acting and/or behind the scenes, with the next three (the horror flick RED STATE, the still untitled Rosario Dawson romantic comedy, and the ever mysterious “special” tenth View Askew movie) Kevin Smith films?

ZK: Fuck yeah. Chop Shop wants to be involved in all of Kev’s movies. I would love to act in another one of Kevin’s movies. I hope he would consider using me again as an actor, but this time with clothes on and without the donkey. My mother has been through enough hell already. I’d love for her to be able to see a movie I’m in without having to cover her eyes and then have to go to church afterward to pray for my soul. But being in RED STATE, the comedy, or the mysterious 10th flick would be pretty fucking cool. Especially if Chop Shop can do the DVD and internet webisodes. It would be pretty damn cool.

Zak’s a great talent, and we certainly hope to see him used in future View Askew projects as well. Thanks again to Chris for conducting the interview, and to Zak for taking the time to answer so insightfully. Chris will be back with another exclusive interview soon.

View Askew NewsBites™

May 13th @ 4:19 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Jarrett Brown, Alonso Duralde, Jake, Robb Johnston

  • MTV and Orbit Gum are giving fans the opportunity to vote for the movie with the dirtiest mouth. Jay’s fantastic turn in Clerks II heads up one of the top 4 nominations, and you can apparently vote as much as you’d like! Kevin’s also asking for support via the blog, so don’t just listen to us — Listen to the MAN! Vote! The winner will be announced live at the MTV Movie Awards on Sunday, June 3rd, 2007.
  • Ah, the press. Must be another one of those slow news weekends, as tabloidy StarPulse.com ran the headline “Kevin Smith Says That Bruce Willis Threatened To Quit ‘Die Hard’ For Him”, a product of re-interpreting a story Kevin told to Vanity Fair to suit their own purposes. You can read the full blurb over at this site. You can read Kevin’s response to this over at his blog, which also mentions a ridiculous pan of “Chasing Amy” — Which we still feel is the best film Kevin’s made, not to mention one of the best independent films of all time. We’re with ya, man.
  • Kevin’s going to be receiving an honorary degree from his former Community College in New Jersey later this month according to their website:
Former Brookdale student and award-winning filmmaker/actor Kevin Smith and WWII veteran George Waple will be receiving Honorary Associate of Letters degrees during the May 20 graduation ceremony.

Commencement begins at 2 p.m. in the Collins Arena. With more than 1,500 graduates, the class of 2007 is Brookdale’s largest ever–and the most ever in NJ State history.

Much deserved, for sure. Congrats, Kevin!

  • Barnes and Noble honors Clerks and advertises the Clerks X DVD in their latest ad citing the “Best Indie Films”. The scan’s right here.
  • Check out a new fansite for Kevin Smith and Jay Mewes HERE. Thee site’s plans include a media gallery and fan art areas, though it looks to be just getting started.
  • The Brodie inaction figure stars in this YouTube video vs. a Street Fighter figure. It’s our favorite version, too, the one with the dixie cup. Will he be victorious, one-handed? See ya next time…

Red Bank Basie Q&A – More Details!

May 9th @ 8:43 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Via his blog, Kevin’s posted the direct ticket order link for the big birthday Q&A at Red Bank, NJ’s historic Count Basie Theater:
Who wants to come to my birthday party?

That’s right: I’m doing a Q&A on my 37th (”Thirty seven?!?”) birthday, in the same town I was born: Red Bank, New Jersey!

The last Q&A I did at the Basie was the longest I’ve ever done: eight hours. If you’re an east coaster, and remotely interested in my bullshit, you’ve gotta be there. If you’re not an east coaster, I’ll make it worth the trip.

You can also call 732-842-9000 if you prefer the phone. Prices are $75/$59.50/$39.50/$25 they are available to the public NOW. Call immediately to ensure you get the section you desire most.

This is set to be one of the biggest parties/events in View Askew history, with the theater’s capacity, the homeland aspect, and, of course, Kevin’s 37th birthday. We hope to see MANY of you there. With Kevin’s above comments, we’re guessing “He’s gonna bust the record!” (”Last Starfighter”-style…)

One Script Down, One To Go…

May 9th @ 8:43 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • It’s a very historic day, as Kevin’s finished the script to one of the two flicks he’s planning to film and bring us next year — That yet-unnamed comedy! Here’s Kevin, who wanted to stop by the board online so we could all be the first to know:
Finished a script a few minutes ago. The comedy. 146 pages. I’ll spend tomorrow taming it down to 120 pages or so. It’s really funny, really dirty, and really touching stuff. Granted, I’m biased.

Now, onto “Red State”…

Well, not now. First I’m gonna sleep. Then, I’ll take some down-time to work on this current bad boy before launching into the “Red State” script.

Exciting news, as this is a HUGE milestone and he seems to have finished it rather quickly, as well — We hear it’s something really unique and special this time, too. Stay tuned for more on this project, we have a feeling we’ll have LOTS of coverage on it in the coming months.

View Askew NewsBites™

May 9th @ 8:43 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Justin McGill, Matt B, Greg Andrew, Tim Alsop, Drew, Matt Booker, Kilroy, Maleah Dust, Alonso Duralde

  • Rumors state that in an upcoming Vanity Fair article, Bruce Willis will reveal that he’s upset about Fox’s plans to cut Live Free or Die Hard to a PG-13 rating. This wouldn’t surprise us at all now, especially given the huge success of Spidey 3 last weekend, though it would be a real shame to see a toned down McClane onscreen. We’re guessing this might have an effect on some of Kevin’s monologue as well, to be honest, and of course the immortal line (which we’re guessing they’ll bleep out with a cutaway). Sure, it’ll all be restored for a “Special Edition” DVD but that’s just not the same. Let’s hope that Fox come to their senses or this is just all a big rumor out of control. It just wouldn’t feel like Die Hard without the freedom and realism that the R rating allows. Cross your fingers.
  • Clerks appears at number 36 on Empire Online’s “50 Greatest 18 Rated Movies”. The 18 rating is the UK’s equivalent of our R-rating here, generally:
Clerks (1994)

Director: Kevin Smith
Starring: Brian O’Halloran, Jeff Anderson, Jason Mewes, Kevin Smith

“Whispers In The Wind… To Each His Own… Ass-Worshipping Rim-Jobbers… Cum-Gargling Naked Sluts… and, uh, oh yeah, All Holes Filled With Hard Cock…” That’s just edited highlights of videostore owner Randall’s (Jeff Anderson) lengthy rental VHS order, all loudly read out in front of a poor mother and her little kid, who just wants a copy of Happy Scrappy Hero Pup. It’s wonderfully typical of Kevin Smith’s brazen, unrestrained and gut-bustingly lewd humour – which is at its finest in this, his lo-fi debut. Back over to Dante (Brian O’Halloran) and Randall: Dante: “My ex-girlfriend is catatonic after fucking a dead guy. And my present girlfriend has sucked 36 dicks.” Randall: “37”…

  • IFC.com is doing a month-long look at the best examples of cinematic swearing. Clerks was naturally the first movie selected.
  • A WWWBoard post reveals Kevin’s delight in comedian Russel Simmons’ inclusion of Clerks 2 in his list of favorite films. Some very high praise, indeed, for one of the funniest laugh-out-loud films in a long time.
  • Art imitating…art? After his turn as Marshal Willenholly in J&SBSB, could Will Ferrell really be starring in a ‘Land of the Lost’ movie? This Entertainment Weekly article confirms he’s attached to the upcoming big-screen version, now in search of a director. Can’t wait to see what they do with the big budget version of the Sleestaks. We say, keep ‘em cheesy!
  • The band “This Is My Honesty” has likely got an Askew fan on board – The second song on their Myspace page catalog is titled “Hell Hath No Fury Like A Woman Scored For Sega”. Nice one, guys.
  • Those posters we ran back in the Monday update are the Japanese Chirashi handbills that were given out at Japanese Cinemas, with cinema directions and times on the back. We recognize these now and believe at least one of them exists in the archives somewhere (The Jay & Bob set look quite familiar). Thanks to Matt for the clarification.
  • Seems our beloved Brian Lynch may be joining the Joss Whedon-verse very soon, running the “Angel Season Six” series of comics — This from the Ain’t It Cool rumor mill:
Is it true we’ll soon be seeing an “Angel Season Six” in the funnybooks?

We will, but Whedon has indicated that the new “Angel” series will not receive the same level of commitment he’s lending the new “Buffy” adventures. He has designated comic-book vet Brian Lynch to serves as the “Angel Season Six” “showrunner.”

View Askew NewsBites™

May 7th @ 12:26 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Chris

  • Sorry for the lack of updates over the last couple of days. Looks like the switching of our scoops email address didn’t go as smoothly as its gone in the past. So what I’ll do here is run through a bunch of interesting items that finally came through in our emails accounts this morning…
  • Kevin’s pilot episode of REAPER is receiving some great interest from the CW according to Zap2It.com.
  • Kevin receives and honorable mention on this list of celebrities who should have their own tv shows.
  • Movies.com has named DOGMA the 12th most controversial movie of all time in their latest story.
  • Cartoon Network’s ROBOT CHICKEN will be airing a special Star Wars themed episode on June 19th and we’re sure our readers will spot a sly Clerks reference in this preview for the show.
  • Two new articles on Kevin’s upcoming RED STATE feature film have been making the rounds on the Lansing State Journal and the Billings Gazette websites.
  • According to Moviehole, it looks like the seemingly neverending saga of Fletch won has finally come to an end.
  • And Finally, here’s some interesting posters scooper Luke Pinion found online for some of Kevin’s films.

SModcast the 12th!

May 7th @ 12:26 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by brad

  • Our weekly dose of audio goodness has just arrived! Check out what this week’s episode has in store for us :
SModcast 12: A Fat Kenickie

In which our heroes tread the boards and let loose their inner-gay via a prolonged discussion about their Broadway experiences, hold their “Damned” nut, show a lack of respect for tenth grade Thornton Wilder, try to put Snoopy in the pound, get “Grease”-y, dramatize comic books, prevent Mewes from shanking a non-comics fan with a somewhat legal stiletto, fret where the Fourth Reich will emanate from, sort out Kevindia’s geopolitical impact on the continent of Mosieria, and overuse the term “moxie”.

As usual, you can download this week’s episode along with all the prior episodes from Quick Stop Entertainment.

Graves Review : Vincent Pereira

May 7th @ 12:25 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Vincent Pereira’s history with this site goes way back to our earliest beginings, so it was a real treat to catch up with what Vincent’s been up to in this exclusive interiew he recently conducted with Chris Graves…
AN INTERVIEW WITH VINCENT PEREIRA

BY CHRIS GRAVES

Chris Graves: For those who do not know, what is your background and how were you introduced to the world of View Askew and Kevin Smith?

Vincent Pereira: My background is I was a tall, quiet, angry, and introverted high schooler who was obsessed with horror flicks and who got a job stocking the shelves at the Quick Stop- albeit a tall, quiet, angry and introverted high schooler who was obsessed with horror flicks AND film and filmmaking since I was in grade school. So here I was, working at the Quick Stop after school as a junior in High School, when Kevin was hired to man the registers at both the convenience and video stores. At first, Kevin seemed almost as quiet, angry, and unapproachable as I was, and sometimes downright snotty (I still remember the day I had asked him to hold some new action movie for me because my dad wanted to see it, but Kevin went ahead and rented it off to a customer instead, and when I confronted him about it a little bit annoyed his response was, “What am I, your mother?”), but before too long we cut through all that bullshit and developed a rapour overour mutual love of David Lynch’s TWIN PEAKS, and a friendship was born.

CG: How did you come to be known as the unofficial “View Askew Historian”?

VP: I think it’s because I have a good memory and recall of minutia that other folks normally forget. I tend to pay attention to little details and soak them in and most people don’t do that, I suppose.

CG: What was your first reaction to Mr. Smith when you met at the Quick Stop? And what was your favorite flick (Slacker excluded) that the two of you saw at the Angelica Theater, after working at the store all those years ago?

VP: At first we didn’t really get along, but then we realized that the Thapers (the owners of the Quick Stop) were playing us off against each other. They would tell me that Kevin was complaining to them that I wasn’t working hard enough or whatever, so I figured him to be a snitch. Turns out it wasn’t the case, he didn’t give a shit what I did (or didn’t) do there, and after that we got on just fine.

As for our favorite film that we saw together at the Angelica, I dunno what Kevin’s was, but mine was probably Abel Ferrera’s BAD LIEUTENANT- although my car at the time was broken into while we were watching the film (a midnight screening). As I recall the thieves stole some of Kevin’s money, but they were kindly enough to leave his journal literally sitting on the hood of my car so at least he didn’t lose any of his written-down ideas and notes (some of which found their way not only into CLERKS but later CHASING AMY).

CG: Mr. Smith has said many times before that you were an integral part in getting Clerks made. What was your first reaction to the first draft of Clerks? Is it true that it didn’t seem like a comedy at all, but more like a weird David Lynch-esque drama?

VP: No, the script pages themselves were always comedic. It was the original concept that wasn’t a comedy, but more of a David Lynch-type film about a guy working the midnight to 6 AM shift at an all-night convenience store and the weird people he meets and how he gets through this strange night. Kevin had written a one-page synopsis for that, titled IN CONVENIENCE, but by the time he actually started writing script pages, the comedy just poured out.

He gave me a big bunch of pages that were only in temporary order- he was writing individual scenes with the characters at that point, not a point-A to point-B narrative as such. I loved the material, although it was obvious that some of it was unfilmable at his budget- specifically, a subplot involving the fired mop boy/sniper at the convenience store who takes refuge on a roof overlooking the local bank, and was to take shots at Dante when he goes there to deposit money for the Quik Stop, all while Randal watches the event unfold live on the television news in the Quik Stop…

Although said “angry mop boy” character was clearly based on me and I’d have loved to see myself so memorably immortalized in CLERKS, I swallowed my pride and pointed out to Kev that I doubted he’d ever be able to film something that complex on such a low-budget, so it was dropped. A few other dropped scenes included a bit with a JFK conspiracy nut who visits the video store, my favorite *EVER* unfilmed Kevin scene- “Scruples the Cat”- which wound up in different forms in several other of Kevin’s scripts only to be dropped from them as well, and a long scene where Dante carries an old ladies’ groceries home for her at night. The later was an incredibly funny scene, but again- doing an extended exterior nighttime shoot with a moving camera and pages of dialogue just seemed undoable given the CLERKS budget, so the scene was dropped early on.

CG: Any entertaining anecdotes about the filming of Clerks that might not of been shared yet? And what was your reaction to the film’s success?

VP: To be honest re: anecdotes, I can’t think of anything that hasn’t already been said. As for my reaction to the success, I know I’m supposed to say it was a shock or surprise, but for me at least it really was not. I knew the script was great, and I knew the cut of the film was really clever, incredibly well-written, and funny beyond belief, so when it kept going further and further- first, the Village Voice write-up, then accepted at Sundance, then Miramax buying it- my reaction was, duh. I figured good work was SUPPOSED to be rewarded, so everything that came to CLERKS didn’t surprise me at all, it made perfect sense. Things are supposed to happen the way they did with CLERKS- what surprises me is when really good films are NOT successful, or when bad ones are.

CG: What was the genesis of your film “A Better Place”? Where did the idea come from and what were your thoughts on the finished film, having work with a limited budget? Anything you would’ve done differently with a larger budget?

VP: The “genesis” was, Kevin filmed CLERKS when he was 22 and I was 20, so I put a goal in sight that I wanted to be shooting my own feature when I was 22, too. I had no idea what I wanted it to be, though, until one night in I believe the late summer or fall of 1993 when I caught a 20/20 (I believe) piece about the Jamie Bulger murder case in England- the todler who was picked up by two older boys at a mall then taken to nearby train tracks and murdered. Now, I had always been intrigued by stories of youthful killers- something about somebody that young doing something that devastatingly profound always resonated with and disturbed me. Seeing that piece about the Bulger case just brought all that back into my head, and it just hit me that THIS would be what I’d make a film about. Mind you, not a film about the actual case itself, but the case inspired me to reach deep within myself and expose all of that pent up teenage angst and rage I had growing up. So, inspired by the Bulger case, I took all that pent up rage and sat down and wrote 10-pages of what was to become A BETTER PLACE.

I remember giving those pages to Kevin a couple days later, and he responded really, REALLY favorably to them. Then, he went off on the festival tours for CLERKS and I went into deep thinking mode and the rest of the story germinated in my mind. Several months later, Kevin was home for a bit in between fest showings of CLERKS, and he came into RST Video one afternoon while I was working and basically said, “You know Vinnie, those pages you showed me were the start of something really good. If you finish it, I now have the means to finance it”, and that was that. I was given the kick-start I needed, and I went ahead and turned those opening pages into a first-draft script over the next six months, which I then took to the set of MALLRATS and handed over to Kevin and Scott, and the rest is history.

I’m very happy with the finished film. An interesting thing happens when you go from idea – to script – to screen: What ends up on screen is its own entity and isn’t identicle to what it is you originally had in your head… But then something magical happens- there’s a mood that permeates all three, so even though the final film is its own beast, it’s still connected and it still feels right. To me, that’s what matters- A BETTER PLACE feels right in its final form, despite the budget limitations and whatever technical flaws there may be. The mood and feel of the film match what I always had in mind, even if 100% of the images in my head didn’t make it on screen. I have no regrets and really like the film, and I truly think I’d still like even if it wasn’t “my baby”, so to speak.

CG: What have you been up to since the DVD release of “A Better Place”?

VP: Living my life, writing, etc. I worked for over a year and a half on an aborted attempt to adapt Clive Barker’s short story PIG BLOOD BLUES into a feature. When that fell apart, to be honest it put me into a pretty bad depression, and then my dad unexpectantly got sick and died only a few months later which made it worse. My personal life was thrown into a pretty big upheaval during that time. PIG BLOOD BLUES is now going ahead without me, albeit with some of my ideas in the final script for which I’ll be paid.

That’s the only concrete project I was working on- everything else has been personal stuff. Right now, though, I’m working on two very dark, very indie scripts. One started out as BROKEN BOY and I was on a roll with it last fall, but then I hit a snag and am not quite sure where to go with it in the final act. I have a few different ideas, I need to work them out in my head and see which works best dramatically and thematically.

The other is a fairly straight-forward dramatic thriller called THE TRAIL. It just popped into my head a couple weeks ago while I was bike riding along a 9-mile stretch of the Henry Hudson Trail which is right near where I live here in New Jersey. I’dalways thought it would be neat to do a film set along that stretch and on this particular day, something must have been right because the entire thing just popped into my head out of the blue and it’s all very simple and elegant in a way. I really think it will be my next project, it can be done on a very low budget and while it has a European sensibility to it and gets quite dark and violent, it could also be fairly commercial with the right audiences. The lead character has a lot of me in him, he’s kind of a dreamer and observer. And after that, when I come up with the appropriate final act for what is tentatively titled BROKEN BOY, I have a feeling that A BETTER PLACE, THE TRAIL, and BROKEN BOY (or whatever it ends up being called) will all fit together as kind of “youth violence” trilogy, or maybe the better description would be “troubled youth trilogy”. The stories of all three are completely different but share similar themes and sensibilities and they’re all very small, personal projects. I’m kind of jazzed about having them fit together in that way if these two new ones happen, which I hope they will.

CG: It is somewhat known that you are a horror movie fan. Did Kevin write a horror script for you to direct a few years ago? And what was your reaction to the news that Kevin’s next project would be a horror film?

VP: I’ve been a horror film fan for about as long as I can remember- in fact, my mom has saved pictures I drew in crayon when I was like 5 years old that were images from JAWS which I had seen on TV. Horror movies got me interested in movies in general, and by extension, they got me interested in filmmaking because I always wanted to know, “How’d they do that?”

When I was a senior in High School, I asked Kevin if he’d write me something to do as my major end of the year project for art class. My only stipulation was that I wanted it to be horror, and set in the old ruins out at the end of Sandy Hook. Kev came back with this intense, 80-page or so religious-themed horror epic inspired somewhat by Bergman’s THE SEVENTH SEAL that was WAY beyond my means at the time. I mean, the dialogue was just crazy brilliant, and there was no way I could have mounted that on VHS tape for my high school art class, so the script was forgotten and actually misplaced for several years.

Then, maybe 5 or 6 years ago, my dad found a print out of it among a bunch of my old high school notebooks in our basement. I re-read it and thought it might be worth it to try and turn it into a feature, and Kevin gave me his blessing to go ahead and see what I could do with it. It had to be re-written as some of the concepts and ideas had actually found their way into DOGMA, so I gave it a go. Although I had some ideas that I thought were good, in the end as I was never able to properly connect with it, so I hit a block and abandoned it.

As for RED STATE, I’m really looking forward to seeing what Kevin comes up with. The first writings of his that I ever read were always on the dark side, so for me at least this will be something of a return to that.

CG: What is “Autograph” and is it still in development?

VP: AUTOGRAPH is my “giallo” script, inspired by the early murder/mystery thrillers of my favorite filmmaker, Dario Argento. It’s basically my love letter to him, and to film as a medium. As for being “in development”, I guess in that I now have a draft of it that I flat-out love and would love to do as a future project. It took me a long time to write the first draft- 3 years!- and after that, I was kind of burned out on it. Scott Mosier gave me some great notes but I was so exhausted with just having finished it finally that I couldn’t muster the energy to impliment his notes, so at the time I asked a friend- Pete DeWolf- to do it for me. I have Pete my first draft script, along with Scott’s notes, and asked him if he could do anything with it. Pete was able to work with Scott’s notes and we did two more drafts of the script together, but it still didn’t seem quite right and maybe the time wasn’t right, so I put the script aside.

About two years ago, I dug it out again and started anew. With a couple years of hindsight I was able to approach the script from a fresh perspective and really tighten it up and make it work. I really love what I’ve come up with in these recent drafts- the plotline is basically the same as the first draft I wrote way back when, but the execution is so much better. I still think it’s too “big” for me to try to do just yet- it’s a fairly complex, commercial script, and after all, I only have one $50,000 budgeted angry indie feature to my name- but if THE TRAIL gets made and gets me some attention, AUTOGRAPH will definitely be in my future.

CG: Do you have any new projects coming up?

VP: Just the ones I’ve mentioned, hopefully something will happen with them.

CG: What is your favorite View Askew/Kevin Smith flick?

VP: CHASING AMY, so far.

CG: And finally, is there anything you’d like to add that maybe people haven’t heard yet, regarding the world of View Askew?

VP: Off hand, nothing really comes to mind.