Kevin Smith Films
Bearded, wearing glasses and a perennial long wool coat on top of
shorts and a shirt, Kevin Smith became the idol of aspiring
filmmakers everywhere when his independent feature "Clerks"
(1994)--made for $27,575--won art prizes and a contract with the
Creative Artists Agency (CAA). Raised in New Jersey, Smith had
dropped out of The New School for Social Research's creative writing
program when the school administration called his parents to
complain their son was throwing water balloons from his dorm window.
Seeing an ad in the Village Voice for the Vancouver Film
School, he matriculated for four months before dropping out once
again. Unsure of his next move, Smith took a job as a clerk at a
convenience store in Leonardo, NJ.
In 1991, he saw "Slacker", Richard Linklater's comedy about
shiftless youth. Inspired by both the feature and the possibility of
low-budget moviemaking, Smith contacted former film school classmate
Scott Mosier. In late 1992, Smith wrote the script for "Clerks", a
somewhat plotless slice-of-life look at life from behind the counter
at a convenience store. With Smith directing, Mosier producing and
moneys raised from Smith's former college tuition fund, the sale of
his extensive personal comic collection, plus loans from Mosier's
parents and credit cards, the duo made "Clerks" in 21 nights,
filming in the very Quick Stop in which Smith was working by day. A
screening at the Independent Feature Film Market conjured a buzz for
their efforts, and "Clerks" went on to become the toast of the
Sundance Film Festival in January 1994, sharing the Filmmaker's
Trophy with Rose Troche's "Go Fish".
The quirky "Clerks" earned Smith an agent at Hollywood's CAA
powerhouse and a distribution deal with Harvey and Bob Weinstein of
Miramax. More acclaim and awards followed at the Cannes Film
Festival, but the MPAA ratings board determination that it should
receive an 'NC-17' for language delayed the commercial release of
the film. Enlisting Harvard law professor and noted attorney Allen
Dershowitz in their cause, Smith and Mosier appealed the decision,
and the film eventually got its 'R' rating and a release in late
1994. Playing in a limited number of theaters, many of them
art-houses, "Clerks" grossed more than $1 million and garnered
critical acclaim. By then, Smith was already at work on his next
effort, "Mallrats" (1995), a look at youth at a mall over the course
of a weekend. Funded by distributor Gramercy for $5.8 million,
"Mallrats" earned lukewarm critical notices and an anemic box
office.
Returning to his indie routes, Smith made the
critically-acclaimed "Chasing Amy" for $250,000. The film, about the
unlikely relationship between a bisexual woman and a comic book
writer, grossed $12 million for Miramax and spelled redemption for
the filmmaker. He and Mosier also urged the Weinsteins to buy the
Ben Affleck-Matt Damon script for "Good Will Hunting" (both 1997)
from Castle Rock for $800,000 and shared co-executive producing
credit for what became Miramax's highest grossing picture (as of
1998). Smith merged his passions for film and comics when he wrote a
screenplay for "Superman Lives" which Tim Burton was assigned to
direct. Conflicts with Warner Bros. and Burton, however, relegated
it to the trash heap. He departed from the boy-girl relationship
format of his previous movies for "Dogma" (1999), a
semi-controversial religious satire about two fallen angels trying
to re-enter Heaven starred Linda Fiorentino, Damon and Affleck and
featured George Carlin, Chris Rock, Salma Hayek and Bud Cort, among
others. His next effort was a lighthearted romp starring his
recurring side characters Jay & Silent Bob (played by Jason Mewes
and Smith himself, the sidekicks had appeared in each of Smith's
films in roles of varying importance) in the antic "Jay & Silent Bob
Strike Back" (2001). In the film--which was visually junky but had
several amusing sequences and classic Smith dialogue--the
writer-director brought back many of the characters from his
previous films (what he calls the View Askew universe, after his
production company), including his close buddy Ben Affleck as both
Holden from "Chasing Amy" and a parody version of his movie-star
self.
The writer-director, always a dazzling racounteur and a canny
self-promoter, also had forays into television, turning his "Clerks"
into a short-lived animated series for ABC, which aired in 2000.
Beginning in 2002 Smith joined NBC's "The Tonight Show With Jay
Leno" on a recurring basis for short filmed comedy bits. Among the
more amusing were the collection of Smith's snarky road trips across
America visiting "Roadside Attractions" like giant balls of twine,
and short films like "The Flying Car" featuring the "Clerks"
characters yet again, trapped in traffic discussion what they would
do to have a flying car like the Jetsons.
Smith also put his career as a writer of comics firmly on track
with the debut of "Clerks (the Comic)" in 1998 (followed by comic
book adventures of Jay & Silent Bob) and his collaborations on
Marvel Comics' "Daredevil" and DC's "Green Arrow," though his track
record faltered in 2002 when his movie career reheated and he failed
to finish (as of 2004) his runs on the mini-series "Spider-Man:
Black Cat" and "Daredevil: Bullseye"--something fans always enjoy
skewering him about. Indeed, it was his collected paperback run of
"Daredevil" that lured his friend Affleck, another childhood fan of
the character, to pen a glowing introduction, which in turn inspired
Marvel Productions and 20th Century Fox to lobby successfully to
cast the actor as the blind superhero in the 2003 film. Smith also
had a cameo role, playing a morgue attendent named Jack Kirby, after
the prominent Marvel comic book artist. He also became one of the
first filmmakers to engage in regualr, near-direct dialogue with his
audience, communicating via the Internet through his web sites
MoviePoopShoot.com and ViewAskew.com.
During the media furor surrounding the "Bennifer" romance between
Affleck and Jennifer Lopez, Smith often found himself acting as an
unofficial spokesperson for the couple, given his closeness to
Affleck and the fact the couple were both appearing in his romantic
comedy "Jersey Girl" (2004). When the pair's previous film outing "Gigli"
(2003) was labled a bomb of epic proportions and the relationship
subsequently fell apart, Smith and his film's marketers made a
painstaking effort to point out that Lopez's role was pivitol but
brief in an effort to distance his film from the "Gigli"
catastrophe. Instead, "Jersey Girl" (which opened to mixed reviews
and unspectacular box office but came nowhere near the flop that was
"Gigli") focused on Affleck as a driven, urban p.r. exec who becomes
a widowed single dad stuck in the Jersey suburbs with his dad and
his daughter, and unexpectedly gets a second chance at love. Smith
threw out much of his juvenile humor (it would be his first film
without Jay & Silent Bob, for example) and attempted to tell a more
straightforward, romantic story, with mixed success.
-taken from Yahoo Movies-
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