Everything about Kevin Smith totally explained
Kevin Patrick Smith (born
August 2,
1970) is an
American screenwriter,
writer,
film director,
actor and
comic book writer. He is also the founder of
View Askew Productions. Smith's films are often set in his home state of
New Jersey, and while not strictly sequential, do feature crossover plot elements, character references, and a shared
canon: the
View Askewniverse.
Personal life
Smith was born in
Red Bank,
New Jersey, the son of Grace, a homemaker, and Donald Smith, a
postal worker. He has an older sister, Virginia, and an older brother, Donald Smith, Jr. He was raised in a
Catholic household and attended
Henry Hudson Regional High School in Highlands,
The New School for Social Research in
New York and the
Vancouver Film School, where he met
Scott Mosier, his producer in every movie that he's made. He majored in film, but dropped out halfway through his studies, electing to take a partial tuition reimbursement in order to help finance his first film. Smith is married to
Jennifer Schwalbach Smith. He named his daughter Harley Quinn after
character Harleen "Harley Quinn" Quinzel from . Although Smith was raised Catholic he's said on
Back To The Well, the Clerks II documentary, that now he only goes to mass on the day before he starts production of a movie, and the day before it premieres. He never smoked until his debut film,
Clerks, where he used the cigarettes as a prop, but never actually inhaled. In fact, he's said that prior to filming
Clerks, he was a staunch non-smoker. Today, he does smoke regularly. Smith's weight has always been a defining characteristic, and has gained him unwanted media attention.
Work as director
His first film,
Clerks, was shot for the sum total of $27,575 in the same convenience store where Smith worked. It went to the Sundance Film Festival in 1994, where it won the Filmmaker's Trophy and was picked up by Miramax before the fest's end. In May of 1994, it went to the Cannes International Film Festival where it won both the Prix de la Jeunesse and the International Critics' Week Prize. Released in November 1994 in two cities, the film went on to play in fifty markets, never playing on more than fifty screens at any given time. It was a critical and financial success, earning $3.1 million.
Initially, the film received an NC-17 rating from the
MPAA, solely for the graphic language. Miramax hired Alan Dershowitz to defend the film, and at an appeals screening, a "jury" consisting of members of the National Association of Theater Owners reversed the MPAA's decision, and the film was given an R rating instead.
Smith's second film didn't fare as well as his first.
Mallrats received a critical drubbing and earned merely $2.2 million at the box office, despite playing on more than 500 screens. The film marked Jason Lee's debut as a leading man. While it later found its audience on home video, earning the title "cult classic", Smith has said of the movie "It was a six million dollar casting call for
Chasing Amy."
Widely hailed as one of Smith's best films,
Chasing Amy marked what
Quentin Tarantino called "a quantum leap forward" for Smith. Starring
Mallrats alumni
Jason Lee,
Joey Lauren Adams and
Ben Affleck, the $250,000 film earned $12 million at the box office and wound up on a number of critics' year-end best lists, and won two Independent Spirit Awards (screenplay and supporting actor for Lee).
Smith's next film,
Dogma, had an all-star cast and found itself mired in controversy. The religious-themed comedy, which starred a post-
Good Will Hunting Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, Chris Rock, Salma Hayek, Alan Rickman, Linda Fiorentino, and Smith regulars Jason Lee and Jason Mewes, raised the ire of the Catholic League due largely to a reference about the Virgin Mary having post-Jesus intercourse with her husband, Joseph. Smith received over ten thousand pieces of protest/hate mail (some of which were showcased on the film's official website) and three death threats.
The film debuted at the 1999 Cannes International Film Festival, out of competition. Released on 800 screens in November of 1999, the $10 million film earned $30 million.
After the controversy surrounding
Dogma, Smith said he wanted to make a movie that couldn't be attacked for its content. Focusing the spotlight on two characters who'd appeared in supporting roles in his previous four films,
Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back featured an all-star cast, with many familiar faces returning from Smith's first four films. The $20 million film earned $30 million at the box office and received mixed reviews from the critics. It was meant to be the film that closed the book on the "Askewniverse" - the Jersey-based, interconnected quintet of movies written and directed by Smith.
Jersey Girl was seen as a post-
Gigli Bennifer movie (also starring George Carlin and Liv Tyler) that was meant to mark a new direction in Smith's career took a critical beating. Budgeted at $35 million, it earned only $25 million.
Clerks II marked one more trip into the Askewniverse, Smith resurrected the Dante and Randal characters from his first film and looked in on them ten years later. Roundly criticized before its release, the film went on to win favorable reviews as well as two awards (the Audience Award at the Edinburgh Film Festival and the Orbit Dirtiest Mouth Award at the Mtv Movie Awards). It marked Smith's third trip to the Cannes International Film Festival, where
Clerks II received an eight minute standing ovation. The $5 million dollar film, starring Jeff Anderson, Brian O'Halloran, Rosario Dawson, Jason Mewes, Jennifer Schwalbach and Smith himself - reprising his role as Silent Bob - earned $25 million.
Frequent casting
Forthcoming films
Zack and Miri Make a Porno
In March of 2006, Smith announced he was working on a new, non-Askewniverse comedy.
Zack and Miri Make a Porno, starring
Seth Rogen and
Elizabeth Banks, started shooting on January 18, 2008 in
Monroeville, Pennsylvania, and wrapped on March 15, 2008. The movie is now entering post-production.
Red State
Smith announced at the Wizard World Chicago 2006 convention that his next project would move in a different direction, and would be a horror film. In April 2007, Smith revealed the title of the horror movie to be
Red State and said that it was inspired by preacher
Fred Phelps, or as Smith claimed, "very much about that subject matter, that point of view and that position taken to the absolute extreme. It's certainly not Phelps himself but it's very much inspired by a Phelps figure." He plans to shoot
Red State back-to-back with
Zack and Miri Make a Porno. It has been recently posted on Kevin Smith's website that he's already finished the script for both films. In a recent blog update, Smith stated that
Harvey Weinstein has passed on
Red State.
Ranger Danger and the Danger Rangers
Another planned project for Smith is
Ranger Danger and the Danger Rangers. He has described the project as "My stab at a comic-book/sci-fi movie. It's in the vein of
Flash Gordon, something I've noodled with a couple of years. Now I feel we're mature enough filmmakers to tackle it". In an April 2007 post on his blog, he mentioned that he's "planning something special" for his tenth movie.
Clerks: Sell Out
Another project that has long been in the works is, the feature-length animated film done in the style. The fate of this project is currently unknown.
Acting roles
Silent Bob
As an actor, Smith is known for his role as
Silent Bob in
Clerks,
Mallrats,
Chasing Amy,
Dogma,
Jay And Silent Bob Strike Back, and
Clerks II. He made a cameo appearance in the horror film
Scream 3, and was featured along with Jason Mewes in several Degrassi episodes, including a special, Jay and Silent Bob Do Degrassi (also as a fictional version of himself).
Other roles
From 1995 to 1997, Smith played small roles in the View Askew movies
Drawing Flies,
Vulgar, and "
Big Helium Dog".
In 2001, he appeared in friend Jeff Anderson's
Now You Know. In 2003, Smith appeared in a cameo role as coroner Jack Kirby in the film
Daredevil. In 2006, he voiced the Moose in the CGI cartoon
Doogal.
In 2007, Smith appeared in three films as an actor. He had his first starring role in a film he didn't write or direct, co-starring as Sam in the film
Catch and Release, starring
Jennifer Garner. The performance earned him many favorable critical notices. Later that year, he'd a small part as a hacker called The Warlock in the fourth installment of the
Die Hard franchise,
Live Free or Die Hard for which he again received strong critical notices. At year's end, he appeared briefly in friend and fellow writer-director
Richard Kelly's Southland Tales, in which he played the legless conspiracy theorist General Simon Theory. That same year, Smith also did voicework for the CGI film
TMNT as a diner chef.
Smith has also done small roles on television in shows such as
Law & Order,
Veronica Mars,
Joey, "", and
Yes, Dear.
Comic writer
A life-long
comic book fan, Smith's early forays into comic books dealt with previously established View Askew characters, and were published by
Oni Press. He wrote a short Jay and Silent Bob story about Walt Flanagan's dog in
Oni Double Feature #1, and followed it with a
Bluntman and Chronic story in
Oni Double Feature #12.
He followed these with a series of
Clerks comics. The first was simply
Clerks: The Comic Book, which told of Randal's attempts to corner the market on
Star Wars toys. The second was
Clerks: Holiday Special, where Dante and Randal discover that Santa Claus lives in an apartment between the Quick Stop and RST Video. Third was
Clerks: The Lost Scene, showing what happened inside Poston's Funeral Parlor. (This issue was later animated and included as an extra on the 10th Anniversary
Clerks DVD.)
Smith has written a comic mini-series
Chasing Dogma, which tells the story of Jay and Silent Bob between the films
Chasing Amy and
Dogma. He has also written the trade paperback
Bluntman and Chronic, published by
Image, which purports to be a collection of the three issues of the series done by Holden McNeil and Banky Edwards (of
Chasing Amy). It includes a color reprinting of the story from
Oni Double Feature #12, purported to be an early appearance by McNeil and Edwards.
These stories have all been collected in
Tales From the Clerks (Graphitti Designs, ISBN 0936211784), which also includes a new "Clerks" story. They were previously collected by Image Comics in three separate volumes, one each for
Clerks,
Chasing Dogma and
Bluntman and Chronic.
Smith makes occasional mention of his desire to do a comicbook one-shot of Bartleby and Loki (from
Dogma) and the story behind how they got kicked out of heaven, as well as a comic-only sequel to
Mallrats called
Mallrats 2: Die Hard in a Mall announced all the way back in August 1998. In 1999, he won a
Harvey Award, for Best New Talent in comic books.
Marvel and DC Comics
Smith began a lengthy association with
Marvel Comics in 1999, taking over as the writer of the Marvel Comic
Daredevil. His run, which lasted eight issues, was plagued by delays (which artist
Joe Quesada publicly took responsibility for, though it was a sign of things to come). His tenure on
Daredevil was controversial among Daredevil fans. Some fans accused Smith of
misogyny in his handling of
Karen Page's death, and others objected to the killing of long-time Spider-Man foe
Mysterio in a non-Spider-Man series.
John Byrne and
Howard Mackie (then-current writers on the
Spider-Man titles) would bring the character back to life (however, because of the delays in his
Daredevil run, Mysterio's return to life in the pages of Spider-Man was published before the issue of Daredevil which featured Mysterio's death was published).
Kevin Smith followed this by jumping to
DC Comics, producing a 15-issue tenure on
Green Arrow that saw the return of Oliver Queen from the dead and the introduction of
Mia Dearden, a teenage girl who would become Speedy after Smith's run had ended.
Smith returned to Marvel for two mini-series: and . The former is six issues long, but the final three issues were delayed for three years. The delay in part was due to Smith's movie production schedule (in this case, work on
Jersey Girl and
Clerks II) causing him to shelf completion of the mini-series until the films were completed.
He was announced as the writer of an ongoing
Black Cat series and Amazing Spider-Man' in early to mid-2002. However, because of the fatal delays on
Evil That Men Do and
The Target, the plan was switched so that Smith would start a third Spider-Man title (originally planned for then-ASM writer
J. Michael Straczynski), and even this plan was eventually abandoned and the title (by then known as
Marvel Knights Spider-Man) launched, in 2004, by
Mark Millar instead.
While the
Spider-Man/Black Cat mini-series was ultimately completed,
Daredevil/Bullseye: The Target remains unfinished, with one issue published.
As of May 2007, Marvel and Kevin Smith have indicated that there are no plans for the mini-series to ever be completed. The
Black Cat series has been quietly "forgotten", with no comment on it since the original SM/BC hiatus, and thus while no official announcement has been made on its abandonment, it's extremely unlikely to ever happen.
Other projects and media appearances
Executive Producer
Smith was co-executive producer for the 1997 movie
Good Will Hunting, assisting friends Matt Damon and Ben Affleck with making and marketing their film. After Damon and Affleck received Academy Awards for their screenplay, critics alleged that Smith himself was responsible for the script, a rumor which Smith vehemently denies. Rumors also persisted that
William Goldman had written the entire script as well, which Goldman denies. On an episode of "SModcast" in 2007, he also revealed that he was invited to direct the film, but ultimately turned the offer down, citing an insecurity he'd at the time with directing something that he hadn't himself written.
Smith (with Mosier) executive produced four, $40,000.00 films between 1995 and 1997. They are
A Better Place,
Drawing Flies,
Big Helium Dog, and
Vulgar.
In 2005, he served as executive producer on the Steve James documentary
Reel Paradise. In 2006, he was the executive producer on the Sundance documentary
Small Town Gay Bar, directed by Malcolm Ingram.
Currently Smith is serving as executive producer on the indie film,
Diary of a Junkie. A mockumentary written, directed, and starring new comer Brandon Bennett
Diary takes a look at the life of a junkie, who lives in an abandoned hotel and works as a janitor during the day to support his habit. The project is currently being delayed due to budget issues. The project has gained attention via myspace due to Bennett's realistic portrayal of a drug addict.
Hired Screenwriter
In 1997, Smith was hired by
New Line to rewrite
Overnight Delivery (1998) which was expected to be a blockbuster teen movie. Smith's then-girlfriend
Joey Lauren Adams almost took the role of Ivy in the movie instead of the female lead in
Chasing Amy. Eventually she lost out to
Reese Witherspoon, and
Overnight Delivery was quietly released directly to video. Kevin Smith's involvement with the film was revealed on-line, but remains uncredited. He has said that the only scene which really used his dialogue was the opening scene, which includes a reference to long-time Smith friend
Bryan Johnson.
For a time, Smith worked on a script for a
Superman movie. He did a couple of drafts but his script was dropped when
Tim Burton was hired to direct. Burton brought his own people to work on the project. Smith still sees the whole experience on working on the Superman project as a positive one though, since, in his own words he was well paid and it was a lot of fun. In the end, neither Smith's nor Burton's vision for Superman was filmed. Years later Smith noted the similarity between a scene in one of his comics and a scene in Burton's remake of
Planet of the Apes.
In the 2007 Direct-to-DVD animation release of, Smith has a cameo as an onlooker in a crowd. After Superman defeats The Toyman's giant mechanical robot, Smith scoffs, "Yeah, like we really needed him to defeat that giant spider. Heh.
Lame!" This was an obvious reference to a giant spider that producer
Jon Peters of the
Superman movie wanted Smith to put in the movie when he was attached, that was later put into another movie tied to Peters called
Wild Wild West.
In 2004, Smith wrote a screenplay for a new film version of
The Green Hornet. The project however died after Smith's longtime producing partner Scott Mosier said he didn't want to produce something with such a big budget, and without Mosier producing, Smith no longer wanted to direct the movie and the script was thrown out. A new screenplay for the movie has been written by (and will star) Smith's "
Zack and Miri Make a Porno" lead Seth Rogen.
Fletch Won
In 2002, Smith pressed his bosses at Miramax to pick up the rights to
Gregory McDonald's
Fletch series. Smith hoped to helm a movie adaptation of
Fletch Won, with the intention of making it more faithful to the original novel than the popular
Chevy Chase films. Smith hoped to cast View Askew regular
Jason Lee in the title role but this proposal was nixed by Bob and Harvey Weinstein. Smith spoke to
Zach Braff about the possibility of taking the role, which he eventually accepted. In October 2005, Smith abandoned the project.
Other films
Smith was featured in
This film isn't yet rated - a documentary about the MPAA and how they sometimes unfairly give out ratings. Smith's interview was in reference to
Clerks originally receiving an NC17 rating and
Jersey Girl an R.
Commercials
During the Mid 1990's Smith directed and starred in a series of commercials for, along side
Jason Mewes, in which they reprised their roles as
Jay & Silent Bob. In 1998 he directed best friend
Jason Mewes as "Gary Lamb - Ground Activist" in a series of
Nike commercials. That same year, he also shot commercials for Diet Coke. Two years later, he directed "Star Wars" toy commercials for Hasbro. He has also directed and starred in commercials for
Panasonic. In 2004 he also shot a
public service announcement for the
Declare Yourself organization. These advertisements brought
Jay and Silent Bob out of their "semi-retirement."
Documentary Films
Smith has appeared in 2
Q&A documentaries titled
An Evening with Kevin Smith and . The first is a collection of filmed appearances at American colleges, while the sequel was shot at two Q&A shows held in
Toronto and
London. Both DVD sets were released by Sony Home Video.
Smith appears with Marvel Comics guru Stan Lee in "Marvel Then & Now: An Evening With Stan Lee and Joe Quesada, hosted by Kevin Smith". The film is similar in tone to the Evening With Kevin Smith series. Proceeds from the sale of the film benefit the
Hero Initiative, a charitable organization that aids ill or aging comic book creators.
In April, 2008, Genius Productions will release a third Q&A DVD, which was filmed during Smith's Q&A on his 37th birthday, August 2nd 2007, at the Count Basie Theater in Red Bank, NJ.
SModcast
On
February 5 2007 Smith and
Scott Mosier began
podcasting. Their podcast is named the
SModcast (Smith-Mosier podcast), and is presented by Quick Stop Entertainment. As of
May 18,
2008, there have been 50 SModcasts.
Opie and Anthony regularly air SModcast episodes during the weekends on their channel,
XM 202.
There have been several episodes with
guest stars filling in for Scott Mosier. These include Kevin's wife,
Jennifer Schwalbach Smith, in episodes 20, 22 and 23, as well as Kevin's friends
Jason Mewes (Episodes 16, 36, 44),
Walt Flanagan (Episodes 13, 14, 24, 25, 34, 35, 50),
Malcolm Ingram (Episodes 14, 24, 25) and
Bryan Johnson (Episodes 26, 33, 34, 35).
Scott Mosier returned on SModcast 27 after a five week absence, having taken a trip to
Mexico with his wife, travelling to
Scotland for the Edinburgh Film Festival, and falling ill on his way home.
SModcast 37 served as a milestone in the history of the program (37 being an important/popular number in the
View Askewniverse; particularly in the film '
Clerks') . To celebrate this, Smith and Mosier recorded their longest SModcast to date, lasting an incredible 'one hour and forty-four minutes'; twice the length of a normal episode.
After the 44th episode, SModcast took an 11 week hiatus. This was due to the fact that Smith and Mosier were in production of their latest film
Zack and Miri Make a Porno. Smith has posted a blog telling that production has finished, and they were simply waiting for the equipment to arrive back to LA for them to continue SModcast.
On April 6th, Smodcast returned after an 11 week hiatus.
Opie and Anthony Show
Kevin Smith is a frequent guest on the
Opie and Anthony Show. He has made several in-studio appearances and sometimes calls in unannounced. His most notable appearance featured an on-air argument between himself and movie critic
Joel Siegel after Siegel made a scene of walking out on a screening of
Clerks II.
KROQ's Kevin and Bean Show
Kevin Smith is a frequent guest on the LA based Kevin and Bean show. In 2007 Kevin became the show's decider as the ultimate authority. His decisions have ranged from who is hotter
Kristen Bell or
Hayden Panettiere (he choose Bell as she isn't a child and will appear in a Princess Leia costume in the upcoming movie Fanboys) to who is the ultimate Batman (
Michael Keaton). These decisions along with other appearances on the show are available as a podcast on itunes.
Print
Smith has been a regular contributor to UK-based Arena Magazine.
In 2005, Miramax Books released Smith's first tome,
Silent Bob Speaks, a collection of previously published essays (most from Arena) dissecting pop culture, the movie-making business, and Smith's personal life.
His second book,
My Boring-Ass Life: The Uncomfortably Candid Diary of Kevin Smith, published by
Titan Books, was another collection of previously published essays (this time blogs from Smith's website www.silentbobspeaks.com) and reached #32 on the
New York Times Best Sellers List.
Television
Clerks: The Animated Series
In 2000, Smith and Mosier teamed up with television writer
David Mandel (
Seinfeld and
SNL) to develop an animated television show based on
Clerks. This was an idea Smith had been kicking around since the production of
Mallrats and, after pitching it to nearly every major television network,
ABC TV picked it up for airing in March 2000.
After being delayed to May, aired only two episodes, out of order, before being cancelled as a result of poor ratings. The six produced episodes were released on DVD in 2001, marking one of the first occasions in which a very short-lived TV series found success in the DVD format.
After the series was cancelled Smith planned on turing it into a major motion picture. While that film was never made, Smith has stated that what would have been the
Clerks animated film became
Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back.
Other appearances
Smith also appeared in an
MTVu show titled
Sucks Less With Kevin Smith. The show gives college students ideas for things to do on the weekends. Smith also played the role of Paul, a cynical married man, in a
Showtime television series pilot, "Manchild", filmed in December 2006. However, it wasn't picked up by the network.
After an August, 2001 appearance on "
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" to promote "Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back", Smith returned to the show for monthly segments as a correspondent. The "Roadside Attractions" segments featured Smith traveling to random locations around the country and showcased places like Howe Caverns in upstate New York and the Fish Market in Seattle. While five of these segments were included on the
Jersey Girl DVD, twelve or more were aired on the actual show. Smith regularly appeared on the program to introduced the pre-taped bits.
From July 2006 on, Smith has guest reviewed on the television show
Ebert & Roeper three times, in place of the recovering
Roger Ebert. These spots have been notable for the arguments between Smith and
Richard Roeper over certain films, with Smith often citing Roeper's poor review of
Jersey Girl to discredit his review of the film at hand. On his most recent appearance Smith compared
Craig Brewer's
Black Snake Moan to the works of
William Faulkner.
In early 2005, of the Canadian-made television show. In the episodes, Smith, portraying a fictionalized version of himself, visited the school to work on the (fictional) film
Jay and Silent Bob Go Canadian, Eh!. Smith wrote all his dialogue for the shows he appeared in. All three episodes were collected on a DVD entitled "Jay and Silent Bob Do Degrassi". Smith and Mewes also appeared in 2 more episodes the following season, when they returned to Degrassi for the Toronto premiere of the fictional
Jay and Silent Bob Go Canadian, Eh! movie.
In addition to appearing on
Degrassi: The Next Generation, Kevin Smith is an avid fan of the original
Degrassi series,
Degrassi Junior High and
Degrassi High and references to the original are present in some of his early films.
Smith directed the pilot for a CW network show called
Reaper. Tv.com's summary of the show is "A twenty-something slacker finally scores a job as the devil's bounty hunter." He describes it as "less
Brimstone or
Dead Like Me and more like
Shaun of the Dead than anything else". He also goes on to say that the reason he took the job is that he's always wanted to direct something he didn't write, but never had an interest in doing it on the big screen. He has since said he'll never do it again.
At the 2007
San Diego Comic-Con, it was announced that Kevin Smith would write and direct an episode of the
Heroes spin-off, . Smith is the first director officially announced for the series. However, the project has been indefinitely postponed due to the
2007 Writers Guild of America strike.
Smith has also cameoed in the second season premiere of the sitcom
Joey, where he played himself, on an episode of
Law & Order in 2000 (episode "Black, White and Blue" playing Tony's wife's nephew),
Duck Dodgers (2003 as
Hal Jordan, voice only) and
Yes, Dear (2004, as himself and Silent Bob). Smith appeared in the second episode of season two of
Veronica Mars, playing a store clerk. He stated on his webpage that
Veronica Mars is some of the best television work ever produced.
In the third season of the
HBO series
Entourage,
Michael Bay and Kevin Smith are directing and writing
Aquaman 2. In reality, Smith wrote a script for the
Superman Lives movie, while Bay was attached to direct a separate Superman movie. In
Entourage, the characters awkwardly react with obvious disappointment at Smith's involvement. Smith has speculated that, that jab and another from season 2 may have been motivated by a book he was involved in, in 1995 where he criticized
Rob Weiss and his movie
Amongst Friends. At his 37th birthday Q&A in August 2007, Smith assured the audience that he wasn't offended by the jibe, but rather that he's always tickled when his name is mentioned on television shows. He said that whether the comments are positive or negative, his reaction is "The magic box said my name!"
Secret Stash
Smith owns and operates
Jay and Silent Bob's Secret Stash in
Red Bank, New Jersey, a comic book store largely dedicated to merchandise related to his films and comics. The current location is its second. The store was moved to a defunct ice cream parlor on Broad St. after Smith sold the Monmouth St. property. The New Jersey location is managed by Smith's long time friend
Walt Flanagan, who appears frequently in Smith's films. A second Secret Stash in the Westwood section of Los Angeles was opened in September 2004 and was managed by long-time associate Bryan Johnson, who has appeared in Smith's films as Steve-Dave. Smith had announced that he'd close after his lease expired and Johnson wanted to resign, but eventually relocated to Laser Blazer, a DVD store in Los Angeles.
On the Internet
Kevin has also become well known for his relationship with his fans, and states in the closing credits of
Clerks II that he "spends way too much time on the internet". One of the first filmmakers to use the internet to reach (and build) his audience, Smith opened The View Askewniverse (www.viewaskew.com) in late 1995.
Smith has an online blog, "My Boring Ass Life", that chronicles his life and work. Often brutally transparent, his blog has exposed celebrities and the inner workings of Hollywood, as well as given fans a peek into the Smith household. The majority of the site's contents were published in print as "My Boring Ass Life".
He posts almost daily at his web board where he posts new information about his films, and interacts with the fans.
Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back's fictional website MoviePoopShoot.com became real in 2002, converting into an entertainment website covering movies, music, comics, toys, and video games. It is now Quick Stop Entertainment (www.quickstopent.com) - the home of SModcast.
Also under the Askew Internet banner: News Askew (www.newsaskew.com) - a daily collection of news items relating to Smith, his films, and the people he's worked with.
He remains very active on MySpace and Facebook as well.
Fan gatherings
Smith regularly holds fan gatherings - usually in the Red Bank, New Jersey area.
Trailer Trash (1995) was the first of these. Held at the Count Basie Theater as a benefit for the theater and hosted by Smith and Mosier, it consisted of two hours of old film trailers. This is largely held to be the first "Board" event - as Smith used his then-nascent website to spread the word about the benefit.
The "Chasing Amy" gala (1997), however, set the formula that'd be followed for over a decade to come. Loyal posters on the message board at www.viewaskew.com were invited to an early screening of "Chasing Amy" at the now-defunct Middletown Multiplex. Afterwards, there was a get-together at the Broadway Grill on Broad Street in Red Bank, and Walt Flanagan opened Jay and Silent Bob's Secret Stash after hours for an autograph signing.
In 1998, View Askew held the first in a long series of private film festivals called Vulgarthon at the Clearview Cinemas in Red Bank, New Jersey. The sold-out event featured screenings of all of Smith's films that'd been released up to that point, as well as smaller films Smith either financed or had a hand in producing. The event was subtitled "Five Flicks, Forty Bucks".
Vulgarthon was held every other year after that, always in Red Bank (except in 2005 when it was held in Los Angeles). These events usually have fans flying in from different countries to attend. To date, there have been five Vulgarthons. The most recent, Vulgarthon 2006, featured screenings of the then-yet-to-be released
Clerks II. Besides Smith himself, guests have included
Brian O'Halloran,
Jason Mewes,
Ben Affleck,
Jason Lee,
Jeff Anderson,
Joey Lauren Adams, and Smith's wife
Jennifer.
In 1999, Smith held a one-off "Dogma" screening, benefiting the Diabetes Foundation.
In August of 2007, Smith held a Birthday Prom that was board-inspired and populated as well. For the last year, Smith has been having board-based poker games and tournaments, in which members from his website's message board roll cards with Smith, Mewes, and others, usually at Jay and Silent Bob's Secret Stash in Red Bank (though, a few times, at Smith's own house). The longest game lasted from 7pm to noon the next day.
Various appearances
In July 2005, at a Q & A in
Vancouver, BC, Smith was awarded an honorary degree from the Vancouver Film School, where Smith was a student for four months before dropping out. Smith also has a street named after him in Paulsboro, New Jersey (where he filmed
Jersey Girl), "Kevin Smith Way". The road leads to Paulsboro High School, where Smith used the auditorium for several scenes in the movie.
On
May 20,
2007, Smith received an Honorary Associate of Letters degrees during the ceremonies surrounding the Commencement of the Class of 2007 of
Brookdale Community College.
Smith's longest Q&A session took place
April 2,
2005 at the
Count Basie Theatre in
Red Bank, New Jersey. The sold-out event was over seven hours long, took place from 8 pm through 3 am (which due to
daylight saving time, was actually 4am). Following the Q&A, he opened
Jay and Silent Bob's Secret Stash for a meet and greet with the numerous remaining audience members, which ended around 6:30 am. Smith then hopped a plane and did another Q&A at the Raue Center For The Arts in
Crystal Lake, Illinois that night. Planned for 2 hours, it lasted just over 5 hours, ending a little after 1 AM Central time.
In August 2006 Kevin Smith, with the support of the Netflix Rolling Roadshow, brought Clerks back to Red Bank, New Jersey. Originally slated to be at the "Quick Stop" in Leonardo, NJ, the town board declined to grant the necessary permits for the show to go as planned. The show went forward in the Red Bank Marine Park in Red Bank a few blocks from the Secret Stash comic book store, where an estimated 3000 people gathered for the event. An impromptu Q&A led off the event with Smith taking questions from the crowd while introducing members of the original cast of "Clerks" (most being friends and family from Red Bank).
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