![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| Your account | Today's news index | Weather | Traffic | Movies | Restaurants | Today's events | ||||||||
|
|
Tuesday, August 31, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.
Movies By Anthony Breznican
LOS ANGELES Kevin Smith is making another convenience-store run. The writer-director of "Dogma," "Chasing Amy" and "Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back" says he has begun work on a sequel to "Clerks," his homemade indie classic from 1994. That $27,000 movie, shot at night in a store where Smith worked, chronicled the adventures of Dante and Randal, two guys who talk about life, death, sex and movies while working at neighboring stores. The sequel picks up 10 years later. "It's about what happens when that lazy, 20-something malaise lasts into your 30s. Those dudes are kind of still mired, not in that same exact situation, but in a place where it's time to actually grow up and do something more than just sit around and dissect pop culture and talk about sex," Smith said during an interview at his Hollywood office. "It's: What happened to these dudes?" A new 10th-anniversary DVD of "Clerks" debuts Sept. 7, and Smith said working on that three-disc set inspired him to write about what became of those characters.
"It's funny, it's very raw, insanely foul-mouthed. In many ways it's the antithesis of 'Jersey Girl,' " Smith said, referring to his recent PG-13 comedy with Ben Affleck as the widowed father of a little girl. Smith is also writing the screenplay for a movie version of "The Green Hornet" but no longer thinks he will direct it. The "Clerks" movie has moved to the top of his to-do list. He said he called Jeff Anderson, who played the combative video-store worker Randal, and Brian O'Halloran, who was the besieged-by-strangeness convenience store employee Dante, to run the idea by them first. "Jeff was actually very protective of 'Clerks, " Smith said. "Jeff was like, 'Are you sure you want to do this? That movie means a lot to people, and do you want to go back?' I thought about it honestly, and it would seem chicken to not give it a shot just because I'm afraid of [messing] with the first film." So far, he said he has gotten only positive responses from the people who have read the script, so he decided to move forward with it. Both O'Halloran and Anderson are signed on, and Jason Mewes will return as stoner Jay, the "hetero life-mate" of Smith's stoic Silent Bob. "I'm sure there will be naysayers who say, 'Oh my God, it's an opportunistic grab at a buck,' but it's not. We're doing it for nothing," Smith said. "We're going to do it insanely inexpensively. The budget will be somewhere between 250 grand and $5 million." The original was shot pre-dawn, and most of the actors worked for free and then went straight to their day jobs with little or no sleep. "This time around we'll afford ourselves the luxury of nice 12-hour days," Smith said. "And people can get paid."
Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
seattletimes.com home
Home delivery
| Contact us
| Search archive
| Site map
| Low-graphic
NWclassifieds
| NWsource
| Advertising info
| The Seattle Times Company