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View Askew NewsBites™

April 8th, 2003 @ 11:05 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Greg Easton, Reechie, Earl Pratt, Kasey Rasmussen, Kevin Apgar, Mike Brindamour, Steve Shakoske, Chris Nelmes, John Couture, Ken Larson, TV's Grady, Dave Turnbull, Moog

  • By far, today’s most popular submission: It would appear that some US soldiers have borrowed an idea from Brodie’s handbook of etiquette: Yes, that’s right, they stinkpalmed Geraldo. Story courtesy of Pioneer Press.
  • Kevin’s been quoted today at the IMDB regarding Jay Mewes’ current situation and the documentary that he’s taking part in, and we couldn’t agree more with his sentiment:
“I’m all for Jay trying to put his life together. I’ve been taking a tough love approach with Jay, telling him I wouldn’t hang out with him or work with him until he cleaned up. If the idea of a camera following him around impedes his drug use, that’s great. But at the same time it does seem kind of exploitative.”
  • Speaking of Jay, a London resident sent us this Mapquest link to a street in the Capitol that View Askew fans (and Jay himself) might want to get a picture taken next to if they’re even in town. See for yourself!
  • And finally today, in the latest issue of Creating Screenwriting, Chris Rock mentions Kevin when asked whom he might use to take a look at his writing for suggestions:
“Early editorial feedback came from Rock’s old SNL friend Adam Sandler. ‘He thought things were pretty funny and had a seuggestion or two, and now he’s even got a joke in the movie. Kevin Smith will probably still get a little call, as will Keenan Ivory Wayans,’ said Rock.”

View Askew NewsBites™

February 3rd, 2003 @ 8:14 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by MikeRetro, Dan Wally, Martin, Rick Welch, Matthew, Matthew Maust, Darren Hubbard

  • We received a lot of mail on this today — Apparently Comedy Central has started to air the Clerks cartoon episodes regularly now, after that Christmastime marathon. Check your local listings for mini-marthons of the show all week long.
  • Comicscontinuum.com presented an edited transcript from Ben Affleck’s press conference for Daredevil. In the interview, Kevin was brought up:
QUESTION: Can you talk a little bit about Kevin Smith’s influence on your life and career?

BEN AFFLECK: Kevin is the reason why Good Will Hunting got made. Kevin is the reason I have a career playing leading roles and not being stuck playing obnoxious bad-guy bullies. Kevin believed in me after Mallrats and cast me in the lead of Chasing Amy. We were doing Chasing Amy and he told Miramax – who had already passed on Good Will Hunting initially – that they should read the script. And that’s the reason we got it made there.

Kevin has always been a big believer in me. I really owe the guy a big part of my career, if not the whole thing. Don’t tell him that because he’ll ask for money.

He’s also seen as the godfather of the comic-book/movie connection. Here’s a guy, he’s such a comic-book enthusiast, he owns a comic-book store, he worked for Avi (Arad) writing Daredevil and he’s a filmmaker. And he was a natural for Mark (Steven Johnson, Daredevil director) to go to.

In some ways, when you do something like this, taking on a character that’s already been done, you kind of seek people’s blessings – the people who had already worked on it. Kevin did a great run of Daredevil and the people like Frank Miller, the kind of people Mark and I wanted to please with this because they represent the hardcore fans and the base support core group.

And Kevin was very enthusiastic, brokered my connection with Mark and has been like a champion of me doing this. Very encouraging. Came in and sat and watched early cuts of the movie and gave feedback.

And is in the movie. And, actually, isn’t nearly as bad of an actor in this movie than he is in his own movies. (Laughs). True, it’s like he needs a guest director to come in and direct him. So he doesn’t bug his eyes out so much. It’s like a weird Al Jolson performance in his own movies. He’s grounded in this one.

  • Want more Affleck? Okay, you ASKED for it! Arena magazine published a HUGE interview with Affleck this month…Conducted by none other than Kevin Smith. This baby’s HUGE, so we couldn’t transcribe, but clicking the scans above should give you large, readable copies of each page. Just go on through them in order. Enjoy.
  • Finally today, the very memorable line “Nothing Can Kill The Grimace” makes it into this strangely compelling Flash movie. Catch ya next time.

View Askew NewsBites™

July 1st, 2002 @ 7:54 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Laker Jim, Kevin Eldridge & Matt Wright

  • At the Fletch Won page, Kevin was quoted with a few answers to the status of Fletch Won becoming a movie. Most of it’s been said before, but it’s interesting to see him say that they most certainly NEED Chevy on board:
Are you still as interested in doing Fletch as you first were?

As long as Jason Lee is playing Fletch, then yes.

Are you waiting for Chevy to die to avoid any controversy?

No – we’ll need Chevy for the flick.

If Fletch Won is indeed two years away, will Jason’s age impact playing a young Fletch on his first case? (He’d be 34). Chevy was 40 when he made Fletch in ‘85.

Yeah, but Lee still looks like a kid.

At what point would you ever pass it off to another director?

If Miramax says no to Lee starring.

  • We’ll start off today’s newsbites with a couple from the latest “Previews” catalog. First, on page 224, there’s a listing for “Monkey Man: Unleashed” #1 (of 3), by Brian Lynch & D. J. Coffman, published by “Angry Naked Comics.” Sounds like you can expect Lynch’s comic to be in shops nationwide around August/September. But comics retailers order VERY conservatively these days, so if you want the comic, let your local retailer know! Make sure they get some in for ya. Retailers will be placing their orders with Diamond no later than July 13.
  • Also, on page 498: Ron Mann’s 1988 documentary “Comic Book Confidential” is being released on DVD — “with an introduction by director Kevin Smith”! This is the first we’ve heard of this — if we find out more, we’ll let ya know.
  • Finally today, Movie Poop Shoot is featured in Yahoo’s Picks this week! They say, and we quote:
Supplemented by daily news, loads of user feedback, and other weekly takes, this site is sure to become a required read for pop-culture buffs.

Amen to that! If you haven’t gotten over there yet, stop on by, and see what you’re missing! Catch you next time.

View Askew NewsBites™

March 18th, 2002 @ 3:50 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Allan Sears, Steve Rhodes, YtseJim, Chris Harrison

  • Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back has been confirmed as rental only in the UK. The DVD (with no features) and VHS will be available to rent from May 27th. The film will not be available to buy in the UK until October 2002 at the earliest.
  • WiggyWorld’s has a new poll: This onel asks which animated film are you looking forward to the most. Clerks: Sell Out is an option and is currently winning. The site can be found HERE.
  • Dogma composer Howard Shore is appearing on NPR’s “Fresh Air” today. The Real Audio feed should be upby this evening.
  • Mallrats alum Claire Forlani appeared on Europe’s MTV Top 20 and revealed she’ll be playing the role of med student Kate in Terminator 3.

See “The Flying Car” & Talk Back!

February 28th, 2002 @ 7:42 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Mike, Geoff & Matt

  • We’d like to thank all of the generous folks who are offering mirrors of “The Flying Car”, the new short from Kevin which debuted on The Tonight Show last night. We’ll have our own capture and mirror online later, these files below all represent the different captures done by other folks, so quality, size, and format will vary. Here’s what we’ve got:

“THE FLYING CAR” Starring Brian O’Halloran & Jeff Anderson

Mirror #1 (MPEG Video, from Videotape, 48.5 Megabytes)
Mirror #2 (Streaming Quicktime 5.0, 7.5 Megabytes)
Mirror #3 (Windows Media, Digital Feed, 7 Megabytes)

Again, we’ll have a mirror up here early this afternoon as well. Until then, thanks to the folks above for their help, andfeel free to use our talkbacks section of this post to discuss your thoughts on the short.

Kevin On Leno TONIGHT!

January 16th, 2002 @ 6:53 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • That’s right, folks, Roadside Attractions PART 2 happens tonight on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, where Kevin himself will take you on a tour of some fun area attractions in this great land of ours. The last one was a blast, so don’t miss this one. The Tonight Show airs at 11:30 EST. Here’s Kevin on that and another piece of news that so many of you have been writing in about lately:
Tonight’s “Tonight”

I’m in L.A. for the “Tonight Show” taping. At 11:30, you can check out the second installment in the “Roadside Attractions” segments. Tune in, if you can.

Next month, we’ll be skipping the “Roadside Attractions” for the short we shot last month, “The Flying Car.”

I know this is belated, but thanks, all, for making this year’s Vulgarthon a whole mess of fun (yes – that was a puke joke). We all had a blast on this end, and from the feedback, it would seem you all had a blast as well. You’re a good bunch of folks, folks.

And on the subject of the boy…

What can you do, y’know? It’s Mewes. At least he’s consistent.

Thanks, Kevin…And again, just so you all know (or a reminder), there’s just certain stuff here that we don’t do at the site, and that’s post about other folks’ personal problems. Over the years, we may not have learned much, but we do like to let our family have some privacy in their personal affairs. Plus, it’s obvious that you all find out what you need to at other outlets, regardless, you don’t need to read it here as well. Thanks for understanding.

View Askew NewsBites™

December 18th, 2001 @ 7:18 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by TVsGrady, Sean, Jonathan, Jim, Sean M, Mike & Will

  • Congrats to the View Askew DVDs…All 4 of them have made the list of the Top 100 DVDs of all time according to a member of the widely read Home Theater Forums.
#98 – Clerks
#56 – Chasing Amy
#27 – Dogma
#16 – Mallrats

Well deserved!

  • Filmforce.com have a poll today, asking what is the best “stoner” movie of all time is. Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back is currently battling with “Half Baked” for the top spot. Vote HERE!
  • According to the flick’s official website, “Now You Know”’s Jeff Anderson will appear on the Tonight Show sometime this month.
  • J&SBSB is trailered on the video of Scary Movie 2. They changed the music and it’s reportedly worse than the music in the updated Dogma trailer (if you can believe that).
  • In the Netherlands, J&SBSB’s release has been pushed back to January 17th. Posters are being spotted around theaters, though, so it looks like it’s having a rather visible release.
  • And last, but not least, but a Northern Ireland student radio station is interviewing (or interviewed) Bryan Johnson & Walt Flanagan. The interview was to take place at 5 PM GMT (whatever that converts to), but you can check out their station, XLFM, online via this web feed. Hopefully, if you missed it, they’ll archive it. Later!

Vulgarthon: SOLD OUT – Possible Second Day?

November 3rd, 2001 @ 4:26 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Kevin Smith

  • Kevin has reported that tickets to the Monday, January 7th Vulgarthon have SOLD OUT (in around 2 and a half hours). However, those of you that didn’t get tickets might be in luck, as, if there’s enough interest, they’re going to hold a second event, Tuesday, with the exact same lineup. In order for this event to be held, though, Kevin would like to know if there’s enough interest. Here’s his post:
The phone lines will not stop ringing. Some of you are pissed because you’re ticket-less. There is chaos and a loud wailing and gnashing of teeth.

So…

We’re thinking of adding another day. This would mean that on Tuesday the 8th (the next day), we’d host ANOTHER Vulgarthon. Same exact show, no differences. It would allow us to accommodate another 430 of you.

So who’d be in? Is this worth the effort. A simple “YES! *nt*” or “NO! *nt* in the subject line will suffice.

Remember – it’d be on a Tuesday. January 8th, to be precise. Based on your feedback (that means you too, LURKERS; come out of hiding and let us know if you want in), we’ll make a decision about adding a day. Two hundred responses will win the day (and please don’t respond if you already have tickets). Results will be posted this Tuesday.

Keep in mind, this had no affect (or is that effect?) on those who have purchased tickets today. You’re all set. This is just for those who DIDN’T get tickets, but would still like to go to Vulgarthon.

The polls are open…

NOW!

Stop by the View Askew WWWBoard to express your interest in a second day!

Kevin On Short Film, Red Bank Benefit, New Script & More!

October 18th, 2001 @ 7:58 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Kevin Smith

  • Wow! This one came in outta nowhere…As Kevin likes to sometimes do, after being silent for quite some time, he’s dropped in with a HUGE update on stuff. Not only does his new short premiere this Saturday night at the Concert for New York City (see story below), but he’s also announcing his hosting duties of another big benefit project in Red Bank, AND has the latest for you all on the “Jersey Girl” script. Great, great stuff. Here’s Kevin:
There’s a star in your midst, folks…

…and his name is gramp.

That’s right! Our own, beloved senior poster is nothing short of brilliant in the short we shot for the big “Concert for New York City” that’s happening on the 20th (and being simulcast on VH1). There are some other, familiar View Askew faces in the four minute piece who’d be hard to miss, as well (including Marvel Head Honcho, Joe Quesada); but right now, I just wanted to give the shout-out to gramp. He was the true discovery of the project.

I’m told the short’ll play in the second hour of the show, which features performances by folks like Bowie, the Who, Paul McCartney, Billy Joel, Elton John, Macy Gray, Janet Jackson, Melissa Etheridge, the Backstreet Boys, Jerry Seinfeld, Jim Carrey, etc.

How did I get involved? The Powers That Be invited me, Scorcese, Woody Allen, and Spike Lee to make short flicks about why we love NYC.

I’ll repeat that list…

Scorcese, Allen, Lee… Smith?

Great company, yes; but you know it just insures that my short will be the worst (although, some would say that was a given, regardless of the roster). But, hey – being the worst on THAT list is a pretty big honor, I say.

But while I’ll be at Madison Square Garden on Saturday for that shindig, tonight and tomorrow night, I’ll be emcee-ing a pair of concerts a little closer to home. The Alliance of Neighbors of Monmouth County – a local charity benefiting the families of the 160 Monmouth County residents killed in the WTC Bombing – is throwing two shows in Red Bank at the Count Basie Theater (tickets are already sold out), featuring a host of local acts and music legends, bookended by the Big Two from our neck of the woods: Bon Jovi and Bruce Springsteen.

I was at the sound check last night, sitting no more than fifteen feet from the Boss as he performed “My City on Fire” and “Thunder Road”, and within spitting distance of the Bon Jovi boys as they rehearsed their choir-backed rendition of “Keep the Faith.” This goes without saying, but both sounded phenomenal (and you haven’t heard Springsteen until you’ve heard him in a 1400 seat theater with only twenty people in it).

Also on deck for the show: Joan Jett, The Smithereens, and a host of others. If you live in Jersey and you want to check it out, Friday night’s show is being simulcast, live, on Comcast cable, starting at 8:30pm. I’ll be the fat guy in the sleeveless, hooded sweatshirt, introducing the talent.

I’m 115 pages into “Jersey Girl”, with maybe another thirty to forty to go (the first drafts are always the longest). Would’ve been done by now, but the short flick thing kinda came out of nowhere and took about a week, all in.

As for the script thus far: the few folks who’ve read it (Jen, Mosier, Affleck, Jon Gordon and Gina Gardini at Miramax) seem to think it’s the best thing I’ve ever written. But, then, what’re they going to say? “Wow – you really ARE a one-hit wonder, Kev.” Or “Perhaps you retired Jay and Silent Bob a little too soon?” Regardless, it was nice to hear the feedback.

My opinion of the scipt?

I love it.

But man, is it different than anything we’ve done before.

I’ll check back after the show Saturday night, to see what you think of the short.

Tribune: “‘He’s one of us”

August 28th, 2001 @ 5:22 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • This Chicago Tribune piece is just so damn good that we figured we’d bump it up to a headline and put a local copy here for all of you to read. This is one of the best pieces on Kevin we’ve read lately, and really sums up how focused he is on fans like us. Check it out:
‘He’s one of us’

Kevin Smith, a.k.a. `Silent Bob,’ is no slacker when it comes to fans

Robert K. Elder, Tribune staff reporter
Published August 28, 2001

More than 2,000 people are waiting outside the speaking hall in Rosemont, but the 700 inside aren’t budging.

Many of the fans at the Wizard World comic book convention have sat through three panel discussions in the same room for a chance to see Kevin Smith — writer/director of “Chasing Amy,” “Dogma” and the new “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back,” and writer of comics such as Daredevil and Green Arrow — and they aren’t about to give up their spots.

“He’s a typical guy, but he’s got this hard-core, dedicated following,” says Wizard Con organizer Jim McLauchlin during the melee.

Comic book conventions, in large part, are about communing with fantasies — getting closer to the people behind Spider-Man, Batman and other superfolk.

As odd as it sounds, Smith — wearing jeans shorts and a faded gray sweatshirt — is a flesh-and-blood superhero to them: He makes movies, he writes comic books, he got married and had a daughter whom he and his wife named after a Batman character (Harley Quinn Smith, age 2) (this sentence as published has been corrected in this text).

But as Smith’s cult status rises and his life changes, it has become hard for him to connect with fans.

After his panel discussion is over, Smith begins to walk the floor, where he is mobbed by admirers and seems obsessively compelled to please everyone. He poses for pictures, signs endless autographs, and videotapes intros to people’s Web sites — almost anything he is asked. When security guards ask him if he wants to move on, he says, “No, I can’t leave now.” (Later, Smith comments: “I don’t feel right about leaving people there with stuff unsigned; it wouldn’t feel right. Catholic guilt.”)

“The artist throws art out to an audience to communicate — you’re throwing a message out there to see if anyone understands, listens, agrees,” Smith says. “You do it essentially, I believe on one level, to ensure that you are not alone in the world. And to have so many people say, ‘I get it,’ — there is no downside to that whatsoever.”

He continues: “And to having people go beyond ‘I get it,’ to ‘I know it, live it and can quote it back to you. Here are notes on how to make it better’–that invaluable.”

Smith, himself an ardent comic book fan, rose to fame with his low-budget 1994 smash movie “Clerks.” He financed the $27,575 effort by selling his prized comic collection and maxing out his credit cards. Today, Smith owns his own comic book store in his native Red Bank, N.J., but he still goes to conventions, only on the other side of the stage.

“He’s one of us,” says Chris Joslin, 23, of Bloomington, a fan waiting in line outside to see Smith. “He worked in a convenience store, then made movies, but he still connects with his fans.”

During his two-hour panel, the perpetually laid-back Smith regales the crowd with behind-the-scenes movie anecdotes and sets them rolling in the aisles with off-color jokes.

Among the strange questions he responds to without complaint are these: “I invited you to my bar mitzvah, why didn’t you come?” “Do you have a stalker? If not, I have a lot of free time.”

Later, in a quiet moment, Smith actually reflects on the latter question.

“The relationship that I have with those cats — I’ll never have a stalker. A stalker is cultivated out of somebody not being available and they want to get close,” Smith says. “You can find me on the Net, you can go down to the comic book store — sometimes I’m there — I’m at comic book shows all the time. I am way available, I’m always around.”

On his Web site, www.ViewAskew.com, Smith spends hours daily reading fan feedback, posting news and writing about his passions: family, film and comics. (In addition to writing superhero books, Smith also pens his own Clerks and Jay and Silent Bob comics.) His not-so-secret e-mail address receives an average of 200 e-mails each morning, most of which Smith says he feels obligated to reply to.

Smith’s wife, Jennifer Schwalbach, says she was unprepared for the intensity of her husband’s cult following when she married him two years ago. At the San Diego International Comic Convention in July, Schwalbach had to be lifted out of the crowd by security guards after fans rushed her for movie tickets. “They are so harmless, and the sweetest people — but enthusiastic,” she says.

She has adjusted, having come to an understanding about her husband’s relationship with his audience. “He’s just a normal guy. He hasn’t changed since he worked at the Quick Stop. And people who have been following from that point are in love with him for not changing.”

His life has changed

But at age 31, Smith has changed. True, he still loves comic books, still has the sense of humor and ear for dialogue. But it has been almost a decade since Smith worked at the convenience store, and his life experience no longer reflects that of his audience. He’s one of them, and he’s not — a fact that Smith is coming to terms with.

“The trick is to never let that, the real life, intrude too far on what they perceive you to be. I made good, but it doesn’t really represent who we are now,” Smith says.

Smith — now taking a break in his hotel room, flicking cigarette ashes into a half-filled glass of Coke — talks about fans who approach him almost everywhere he goes, asking if he wants to get high. Given the drug humor in his films, he thinks it’s understandable. Unlike his screen persona, Silent Bob, Smith doesn’t smoke pot or even drink, and hasn’t for years. “You’ve never seen someone so shocked when I tell them that I don’t get high,” Smith says.

“Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back,” Smith’s fifth film, which opened Friday, is the last live action film to feature the drug-dealing duo who have been constants throughout his career. Jay and Silent Bob have become MTV icons, 21st Century clowns whose comic books are on display on the convention floor and whose action figures are cased in protective plastic boxes.

Smith has been closer to his audience than most artists, a film school dropout with a cult audience whose films have been equal parts pop culture references, gleeful vulgarity and social commentary.

He has made personal films about sexuality (the boy-loves-lesbian drama “Chasing Amy”) and religion (”Dogma”), but not without controversy. A practicing Catholic, Smith came under severe fire for his theological exploration — which, among other things, suggested that Mary and Joseph had children after Jesus’ birth. The Catholic League’s denunciation of “Dogma” before its 1999 release incited a media frenzy and protests at the film’s opening. A handful of death threats followed and Smith’s mail was screened for six months, in what the director remembers as “a nightmare.”

A love letter to fans

“Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back,” Smith says, was a consciously light film, a love letter to fans who have been clamoring for the director to give the pair their own movie. “It’s offensive to no one except people who like intelligent films,” Smith joked during the panel.

But that’s not entirely true. The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) has attacked the film for what it perceives to be sophomoric humor and reinforcement of negative gay stereotypes. Although Smith doesn’t agree with GLAAD’s impression, he gave $10,000 to the Matthew Shepard Foundation and included GLAAD’s phone number in the closing credits of the film.

“I know the movie is not homophobic. I know that there is an abundance of gay jokes in the film, but none of them are at the expense of the gay community,” says Smith, whose brother is gay — a fact he didn’t reveal during the controversy.

“If you can make jokes about straight sex, why can’t you make jokes about gay sex?” Smith inquired of fans during a Q&A session.

Now it’s time to move on, Smith says, blowing cigarette smoke out of the car window on his way to a charity screening of the new film.

On his plate next is an animated movie, a sequel to “Clerks” called “Clerks Sell Out,” followed by a “Fletch” movie that rejuvenates the comic detective franchise with actor Jason Lee, and a more personal film about fatherhood starring Smith-alum Ben Affleck.

Whether his fans will move with him as he abandons a cast of characters they love weighs on the director’s mind.

“Sure, but I hope they grow along with us. Not to say that we’re children and we need to grow up, but because we’ve done stuff that’s had weight to it,” Smith says. “`Chasing Amy’ and `Dogma’ were serious films. I think they’ll come with us.”

Slackers in La-La Land

Kevin Smith says this may be the last live-action go-round for the Cheech and Chong-like duo who have been a running gag through all of his films. Here then is a fond look back at the scruffy screen careers of Jay and Silent Bob, two marginal men for their times:

Clerks (1994) Portrays a madcap day in the life of Quick Stop clerk Dante Hicks and his slacker friends and eccentric customers, including a video-store clerk with a spectacularly lame work ethic. Jay and Silent Bob make their first appearance as pot dealers rooted outside.

Mallrats (1995) Two slackers (notice the developing theme), with recently broken hearts try to renew their self-esteem among the bad-mannered regulars of a mall, who include Jay and Silent Bob.

Chasing Amy (1997) A comic book artist struggles with the complicated sexual history of his new artist sweetheart. Jay and Silent Bob appear again as models for the hero’s comic book.

Dogma (1999) Two fallen angels try to get back into heaven through a loophole in the Almighty’s laws. This time, Jay and Silent Bob are prophets and, as usual, Bob is silent except to deliver a key mot.

Scream 3 (2000) The boys have a cameo role as comic relief on a grisly studio lot in this non-Kevin Smith film. (Smith says he and Jason Mewes especially enjoyed the free shirt and $300 they got from Wes Craven for the gig.)

Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back (2001) The dynamic duo return yet again with a plot to destroy a Hollywood film based on their comic book lives.

You can also find this article online at the Tribune’s site HERE.

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