kevin
smith
One of the most unique voices to emerge during the American independent
filmmaking renaissance of the 1990s, Kevin Smith was born in New
Jersey on August 2, 1970. Smith later attended the New School for
Social Research's creative writing program, dropping out after administrators
contacted his parents to report that their son had been caught launching
water balloons out of his dormitory window. He subsequently enrolled
in the Vancouver Film School, but again ended his stay after just
four months. Returning home to New Jersey, Smith accepted a job
in a local convenience store and began plotting his next move. Inspired
by the success of director Richard Linklater's 1991 low-budget hit
Slacker, he contacted former film-school comrade Scott Mosier, and
together the duo began discussing producing their own feature.
After rounding up just over 27,000 dollars -- collected from
parents, credit-card advances, and the sale of Smith's beloved
comic book collection -- they shot Clerks, a hilariously scabrous
look at American consumer culture steeped in Smith's own experiences
behind the cash register. Shooting each night in the same convenience
store where the director worked by day, they completed production
in just three weeks and began promoting the feature on the festival
circuit. In 1994, Clerks debuted at the Sundance Film Festival,
becoming the breakout hit of the event. Suddenly Smith, with his
flair for raunchy yet heavily stylized dialogue, colorful characterizations,
and keen cultural perceptiveness, was the toast of the indie community,
swiftly acquiring Creative Artists Agency representation and a
distribution deal with Miramax.
After winning a court battle to replace the often-vulgar movie's
NC-17 rating with a more commercially palatable "R,"
Clerks hit the arthouse circuit, where it recouped its initial
investment many times over and became a critical smash. Soon Smith
was at work on the 1995 comedy Mallrats, the second chapter in
his self-described "New Jersey trilogy." Despite reprising
a number of characters from the previous film -- including the
director's own onscreen alter ego, Silent Bob -- Mallrats was
both a commercial and critical disaster, and while members of
his avid cult audience remained enthusiastic, he publicly "apologized"
for making the movie at the 1995 Independent Spirit Awards ceremony.
In 1997, Smith resurfaced with Chasing Amy, the final film in
the trilogy and his most mature effort to date. Unlike its predecessor,
the film won wide critical acclaim, with many critics praising
Smith's insightful exploration of love and loss.
In 1999, Smith was back in the spotlight with Dogma, a film centering
on the last living descendent of Jesus Christ, a woman named Bethany
(Linda Fiorentino) who works as a clerk in an abortion clinic.
Unsurprisingly, the film, which had its world premiere at the
Cannes Film Festival, garnered more than its share of controversy
even before being released theatrically. Dogma's distributor,
the Disney-owned Miramax Pictures, announced that they would not
release the picture and intended to sell it to another distributor.
They did so, as Smith all the while maintained that the film --
which also starred Alanis Morrisette as God -- was about the importance
of faith, rather than an attempt to ridicule it.
Scaling down his themes somewhat, Smith dedicated his next film,
Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, to the stoner duo who appeared
on the sidelines in each of his first four efforts. Prepped for
a wide, late-August 2001 release, the 20-million-dollar road comedy
seemed affable in terms of overall concept, until a sneak preview
left representatives of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation
(GLAAD) up in arms over the film's derogatory language and recurring
gay-sex jokes. Stopping short of issuing an apology, Smith again
defended his right to portray uncouth characters: Jay and Silent
Bob's homophobia, he argued, further illustrated their idiocy.
Unconvinced, Smith's detractors compelled him to tack on a closing-credit
anti-defamation comment and make a 10,000-dollar goodwill donation
to the Matthew Sheperd Foundation. Little of this mattered to
critics or fans, as JASBSB garnered mixed-to-poor reviews and
decent (if precipitous) opening weekend box-office totals, proving
that Smith had indeed cultivated a core audience.
After a turn in front of the camera in 2003's Daredevil, Smith
returned to directing with 2004's Jersey Girl. The film had plenty
of buzz surrounding it because it was one of two films starring
uber-couple Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez slated for release.
However, when the other film Gigli became a failure of nearly-Ishtarian
proportions and the celebrity-duo called off their wedding, that
buzz turned into a stigma. Attempting to remove some of the Gigli-residue
on the film, Smith retired to the editing room and excised much
of Lopez's role in the film. Nonetheless, Jersey Girl was largely
panned and was a box-office failure.
Looking for a hit in the wake of Jersey Girl, Smith opted for
a return to the film that started it all and began work on a sequel
to Clerks.
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