Commentary
David Jackson
Jay and Silent Bob are back.
Or maybe they never really left. Maybe they’ve just been hanging out in front of the Quick Stop this whole time.
In any case, the two biggest stars in the View Askewniverse (played by Jason Mewes and writer/director Kevin Smith) are returning to the big screen in “Jay and Silent Bob Reboot.”
However, there’s a catch. Because the movie will not be widely released, there are only two ways to see it: a special release for two days only (Oct. 15 and 17) in a limited number of theaters around the country (the closet one in our region is Regal Riverstone Stadium 14 in Coeur d’Alene), or by catching the “Jay and Silent Bob Reboot Roadshow” Jan. 15 at the Fox Theater in Spokane, where Smith and Mewes will be on-hand to answer questions after watching the film with the audience.
The 1994 movie “Clerks” was the big bang in the Askewniverse, a fictional universe created by writer Kevin Smith who was unknown at the time of the film’s release. Filmed entirely in black and white, the movie became a cult classic and introduced viewers to Jay and Silent Bob, whose preoccupations in life included sex, drugs and, well, that’s about it.
After “Clerks,” viewers followed Jay and Silent Bob as they set off on several half-baked (pun intended) adventures including stopping two fallen angels from entering a church (“Dogma”) and going to Hollywood to stop a movie from being made because kids were bad-mouthing it on the internet (“Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back”).
The plot for “Jay and Silent Bob Reboot” promises to be as pointless as “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back.” Hollywood has decided to remake “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back” so the two stars must travel across the U.S. to prevent it from being made, again. As Smith himself said on several social media outlets, it’s “literally the same … movie all over again.”
But complex storytelling isn’t what created the following for these movies. Plain and simple, these are movies about life. There’s nothing deep about them. Is the dialogue sophomoric at times? Absolutely. Is it oftentimes rude, crude and disgusting? Yes to all three. But they’re fun to watch.
The films have been interesting enough to attract some pretty big names to their rosters, including Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, Jason Lee, Chris Rock, Salma Hayek, Shannon Elizabeth, Tracy Morgan and Rosario Dawson.
The Askewniverse went relatively silent after the last of the six stories, “Clerks 2,” was released in 2006. That changed with the recent 1-2 punch Smith threw at his fans: the release of “Jay and Silent Bob Reboot” and the development of “Clerks 3.”
So, in anticipation of seeing what Smith has lined up for us, I offer a quiz about the six movies that comprise the View Askewniverse (“Clerks,” “Mallrats,” “Chasing Amy,” “Dogma,” “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back,” and “Clerks 2.”) Answers to these questions only take into account these six movies and not others that Smith has written and directed.
Answers: